In mathematics, even and odd ordinals extend the concept of parity from the natural numbers to the ordinal numbers. They are useful in some transfinite induction proofs.
The literature contains a few equivalent definitions of the parity of an ordinal α:
- Every limit ordinal (including 0) is even. The successor of an even ordinal is odd, and vice versa.
- Let α = λ + n, where λ is a limit ordinal and n is a natural number. The parity of α is the parity of n.
- Let n be the finite term of the Cantor normal form of α. The parity of α is the parity of n.
- Let α = ωβ + n, where n is a natural number. The parity of α is the parity of n.
- If α = 2β, then α is even. Otherwise α = 2β + 1 and α is odd.
Unlike the case of even integers, one cannot go on to characterize even ordinals as ordinal numbers of the form β2 = β + β. Ordinal multiplication is not commutative, so in general 2β ≠ β2. In fact, the even ordinal ω + 4 cannot be expressed as β + β, and the ordinal number
- (ω + 3)2 = (ω + 3) + (ω + 3) = ω + (3 + ω) + 3 = ω + ω + 3 = ω2 + 3
is not even.
A simple application of ordinal parity is the idempotence law for cardinal addition (given the well-ordering theorem). Given an infinite cardinal κ, or generally any limit ordinal κ, κ is order-isomorphic to both its subset of even ordinals and its subset of odd ordinals. Hence one has the cardinal sum κ + κ = κ.
References
- Bruckner, Andrew M.; Judith B. Bruckner & Brian S. Thomson (1997). Real Analysis. pp. 37. ISBN 0-13-458886-X.
- ^ Salzmann, H., T. Grundhöfer, H. Hähl, and R. Löwen (2007). The Classical Fields: Structural Features of the Real and Rational Numbers. Cambridge University Press. pp. 168. ISBN 978-0-521-86516-6.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Foran, James (1991). Fundamentals of Real Analysis. CRC Press. pp. 110. ISBN 0-8247-8453-7.
- Harzheim, Egbert (2005). Ordered Sets. Springer. pp. 296. ISBN 0-387-24219-8.
- ^ Kamke, Erich (1950). Theory of Sets. Courier Dover. p. 96. ISBN 0-486-60141-2.
- Hausdorff, Felix (1978). Set Theory. American Mathematical Society. p. 99. ISBN 0-8284-0119-5.
- Roitman, Judith (1990). Introduction to Modern Set Theory. Wiley-IEEE. pp. 88. ISBN 0-471-63519-7.