Jump to content

Uniformization (set theory)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In set theory, a branch of mathematics, the axiom of uniformization is a weak form of the axiom of choice. It states that if is a subset of , where and are Polish spaces, then there is a subset of that is a partial function from to , and whose domain (the set of all such that exists) equals

Such a function is called a uniformizing function for , or a uniformization of .

Uniformization of relation R (light blue) by function f (red).

To see the relationship with the axiom of choice, observe that can be thought of as associating, to each element of , a subset of . A uniformization of then picks exactly one element from each such subset, whenever the subset is non-empty. Thus, allowing arbitrary sets X and Y (rather than just Polish spaces) would make the axiom of uniformization equivalent to the axiom of choice.

A pointclass is said to have the uniformization property if every relation in can be uniformized by a partial function in . The uniformization property is implied by the scale property, at least for adequate pointclasses of a certain form.

It follows from ZFC alone that and have the uniformization property. It follows from the existence of sufficient large cardinals that

  • and have the uniformization property for every natural number .
  • Therefore, the collection of projective sets has the uniformization property.
  • Every relation in L(R) can be uniformized, but not necessarily by a function in L(R). In fact, L(R) does not have the uniformization property (equivalently, L(R) does not satisfy the axiom of uniformization).
    • (Note: it's trivial that every relation in L(R) can be uniformized in V, assuming V satisfies the axiom of choice. The point is that every such relation can be uniformized in some transitive inner model of V in which the axiom of determinacy holds.)

References

[edit]
  • Moschovakis, Yiannis N. (1980). Descriptive Set Theory. North Holland. ISBN 0-444-70199-0.