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Remarkable cardinal

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In mathematics, a remarkable cardinal is a certain kind of large cardinal number.

A cardinal κ is called remarkable if for all regular cardinals θ > κ, there exist π, M, λ, σ, N and ρ such that

  1. π : MHθ is an elementary embedding
  2. M is countable and transitive
  3. π(λ) = κ
  4. σ : MN is an elementary embedding with critical point λ
  5. N is countable and transitive
  6. ρ = MOrd is a regular cardinal in N
  7. σ(λ) > ρ
  8. M = Hρ, i.e., MN and N ⊨ "M is the set of all sets that are hereditarily smaller than ρ"

Equivalently, κ {\displaystyle \kappa } is remarkable if and only if for every λ > κ {\displaystyle \lambda >\kappa } there is λ ¯ < κ {\displaystyle {\bar {\lambda }}<\kappa } such that in some forcing extension V [ G ] {\displaystyle V} , there is an elementary embedding j : V λ ¯ V V λ V {\displaystyle j:V_{\bar {\lambda }}^{V}\rightarrow V_{\lambda }^{V}} satisfying j ( crit ( j ) ) = κ {\displaystyle j(\operatorname {crit} (j))=\kappa } . Although the definition is similar to one of the definitions of supercompact cardinals, the elementary embedding here only has to exist in V [ G ] {\displaystyle V} , not in V {\displaystyle V} .

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