Luzin hypothesis
in set theory
The cardinality of the continuum is the cardinality of the set of all subsets of the countable ordinals, that is, . Luzin's hypothesis is compatible with the Zermelo–Fraenkel system of axioms of set theory and the axiom of choice. N.N. Luzin [1] considered this hypothesis as an alternative to the continuum hypothesis, that is, . Martin's axiom (cf. Suslin hypothesis) and the negation of the continuum hypothesis together imply the Luzin hypothesis. The negation of the Luzin hypothesis, , is also sometimes called the Luzin hypothesis. The Luzin hypothesis, denoted by (HL), or its negation, which is denoted by (LH), are used in the proof of a number of theorems in general topology. For example, (LH) is equivalent to one of the following assertions: any compact space of cardinality not exceeding the cardinality of the continuum has an everywhere-dense subspace that satisfies the first axiom of countability; any dyadic compact Hausdorff space of cardinality not exceeding the cardinality of the continuum is metrizable. The following propositions follow from (LH): any normal space that satisfies the first axiom of countability and the Suslin condition is collection-wise normal; any separable normal Moore space is metrizable.
References
[1] | N.N. [N.N. Luzin] Lusin, "Sur les ensembles analytiques nuls" Fund. Math. , 25 (1935) pp. 109–131 |
[2] | A. Mostowski, "Constructible sets ands applications" , North-Holland (1969) |
Comments
For the consistency of Luzin's hypothesis see also [a1].
References
[a1] | K. Kunen, "Set theory" , North-Holland (1980) |
Luzin hypothesis. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Luzin_hypothesis&oldid=32793