Oscillations of sets of integers (Q1271891)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Oscillations of sets of integers
scientific article

    Statements

    Oscillations of sets of integers (English)
    0 references
    11 January 2000
    0 references
    This very rich paper extends the combinatorial notion of oscillation from the author's previous introduction of it on \({\mathbb N}^{\mathbb N}\) to \({\mathcal P}({\mathbb N})\). Applications are then given to filters (as spaces) and to the Cantor-Bendixson derivative. Consider this review a necessarily inadequate summary; there is much more in this paper than a review can encapsulate. First, some definitions: Let \(a, b \subset {\mathbb N}, n < m \in {\mathbb N}\). Define \(n \sim_{a,b} m\) iff either (1) \(n, m \in a \setminus b\) and the closed interval \([n,m] \cap b \setminus a = \emptyset\), or (2) \(n, m \in b \setminus a\) and the closed interval \([n,m] \cap a \setminus b = \emptyset\). Oscillation is defined by: osc\((a,b) = | a \Delta b/\sim_{a,b}| \). Which \(X \subset \mathcal P(\omega)\) satisfy: \(\forall i \in {\mathbb N}\) \(\exists a,b \in X \) osc\((a,b) = i\)? Section 2 takes up this and related questions. Section 3 turns its attention to \(X \subset [\omega]^{<\omega}\) and answers bounded versions of the question in section 2. E.g., for certain \(X\) you can guarantee that \(\forall i \in [2, 2k] \;\exists a,b \in X\) osc\((a,b) = i\). Section 4 exploits the results of section 2, and the easy fact that osc\((a,b) = 1\) iff either \(a \subset b\) or \(b \subset a\), to explore and exploit the topologies of filters as subspaces of \([\omega]^{\omega}\) under the topology exp\(({\mathbb N})\) (also called the Ellentuck topology. For example, certain filters \(F\) are generated by \(L\)-spaces \(A \subset \exp({\mathbb N})\). For another example, a selective ultrafilter contains a Luzin subset (in exp\(({\mathbb N}))\) iff it is generated by a set of size \(\omega_1\). Finally, section 5 examines spaces \(X\) for which it is possible to predict the Cantor-Bendixson sequence of derivatives of a set \(A \subset X\). In particular, for regular or \(\sigma\)-discrete metric spaces \(X\), when is there \(p\) and a continuous function \(f: [X]^p \rightarrow {\mathbb N}\) so that \(\forall A \subset X\) the length of the Cantor-Bendixson sequence on \(A\) can be read off from \(f[A^p]\)? This section relies on the results of section 3.
    0 references
    oscillation
    0 references
    \(\exp(\mathbb N)\)
    0 references
    filters
    0 references
    Cantor-Bendixson derivative
    0 references
    Ellentuck topology
    0 references
    selective ultrafilter
    0 references
    metric spaces
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers