Boldface Pointclass
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In the mathematical field of
descriptive set theory In mathematical logic, descriptive set theory (DST) is the study of certain classes of "well-behaved" subsets of the real line and other Polish spaces. As well as being one of the primary areas of research in set theory, it has applications to ot ...
, a pointclass is a collection of sets of
points Point or points may refer to: Places * Point, Lewis, a peninsula in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland * Point, Texas, a city in Rains County, Texas, United States * Point, the NE tip and a ferry terminal of Lismore, Inner Hebrides, Scotland * Point ...
, where a ''point'' is ordinarily understood to be an element of some perfect Polish space. In practice, a pointclass is usually characterized by some sort of ''definability property''; for example, the collection of all
open set In mathematics, open sets are a generalization of open intervals in the real line. In a metric space (a set along with a distance defined between any two points), open sets are the sets that, with every point , contain all points that are suf ...
s in some fixed collection of Polish spaces is a pointclass. (An open set may be seen as in some sense definable because it cannot be a purely arbitrary collection of points; for any point in the set, all points sufficiently close to that point must also be in the set.) Pointclasses find application in formulating many important principles and theorems from
set theory Set theory is the branch of mathematical logic that studies sets, which can be informally described as collections of objects. Although objects of any kind can be collected into a set, set theory, as a branch of mathematics, is mostly conce ...
and real analysis. Strong set-theoretic principles may be stated in terms of the
determinacy Determinacy is a subfield of set theory, a branch of mathematics, that examines the conditions under which one or the other player of a game has a winning strategy, and the consequences of the existence of such strategies. Alternatively and sim ...
of various pointclasses, which in turn implies that sets in those pointclasses (or sometimes larger ones) have regularity properties such as Lebesgue measurability (and indeed universal measurability), the property of Baire, and the
perfect set property In descriptive set theory, a subset of a Polish space has the perfect set property if it is either countable or has a nonempty perfect subset (Kechris 1995, p. 150). Note that having the perfect set property is not the same as being a per ...
.


Basic framework

In practice, descriptive set theorists often simplify matters by working in a fixed Polish space such as Baire space or sometimes Cantor space, each of which has the advantage of being
zero dimensional In mathematics, a zero-dimensional topological space (or nildimensional space) is a topological space that has dimension zero with respect to one of several inequivalent notions of assigning a dimension to a given topological space. A graphical i ...
, and indeed
homeomorphic In the mathematical field of topology, a homeomorphism, topological isomorphism, or bicontinuous function is a bijective and continuous function between topological spaces that has a continuous inverse function. Homeomorphisms are the isomorphi ...
to its finite or countable powers, so that considerations of dimensionality never arise.
Yiannis Moschovakis Yiannis Nicholas Moschovakis ( el, Γιάννης Μοσχοβάκης; born January 18, 1938) is a set theorist, descriptive set theorist, and recursion (computability) theorist, at UCLA. His book ''Descriptive Set Theory'' (North-Holland) is ...
provides greater generality by fixing once and for all a collection of underlying Polish spaces, including the set of all naturals, the set of all reals, Baire space, and Cantor space, and otherwise allowing the reader to throw in any desired perfect Polish space. Then he defines a ''product space'' to be any finite
Cartesian product In mathematics, specifically set theory, the Cartesian product of two sets ''A'' and ''B'', denoted ''A''×''B'', is the set of all ordered pairs where ''a'' is in ''A'' and ''b'' is in ''B''. In terms of set-builder notation, that is : A\ti ...
of these underlying spaces. Then, for example, the pointclass \boldsymbol^0_1 of all open sets means the collection of all open subsets of one of these product spaces. This approach prevents \boldsymbol^0_1 from being a
proper class Proper may refer to: Mathematics * Proper map, in topology, a property of continuous function between topological spaces, if inverse images of compact subsets are compact * Proper morphism, in algebraic geometry, an analogue of a proper map for ...
, while avoiding excessive specificity as to the particular Polish spaces being considered (given that the focus is on the fact that \boldsymbol^0_1 is the collection of open sets, not on the spaces themselves).


Boldface pointclasses

The pointclasses in the Borel hierarchy, and in the more complex projective hierarchy, are represented by sub- and super-scripted Greek letters in boldface fonts; for example, \boldsymbol^0_1 is the pointclass of all
closed set In geometry, topology, and related branches of mathematics, a closed set is a set whose complement is an open set. In a topological space, a closed set can be defined as a set which contains all its limit points. In a complete metric space, a cl ...
s, \boldsymbol^0_2 is the pointclass of all Fσ sets, \boldsymbol^0_2 is the collection of all sets that are simultaneously Fσ and Gδ, and \boldsymbol^1_1 is the pointclass of all analytic sets. Sets in such pointclasses need be "definable" only up to a point. For example, every singleton set in a Polish space is closed, and thus \boldsymbol^0_1. Therefore, it cannot be that every \boldsymbol^0_1 set must be "more definable" than an arbitrary element of a Polish space (say, an arbitrary real number, or an arbitrary countable sequence of natural numbers). Boldface pointclasses, however, may (and in practice ordinarily do) require that sets in the class be definable relative to some real number, taken as an
oracle An oracle is a person or agency considered to provide wise and insightful counsel or prophetic predictions, most notably including precognition of the future, inspired by deities. As such, it is a form of divination. Description The word '' ...
. In that sense, membership in a boldface pointclass is a definability property, even though it is not absolute definability, but only definability with respect to a possibly undefinable real number. Boldface pointclasses, or at least the ones ordinarily considered, are closed under
Wadge reducibility In descriptive set theory, within mathematics, Wadge degrees are levels of complexity for sets of reals. Sets are compared by continuous reductions. The Wadge hierarchy is the structure of Wadge degrees. These concepts are named after William W. W ...
; that is, given a set in the pointclass, its inverse image under a
continuous function In mathematics, a continuous function is a function such that a continuous variation (that is a change without jump) of the argument induces a continuous variation of the value of the function. This means that there are no abrupt changes in value ...
(from a product space to the space of which the given set is a subset) is also in the given pointclass. Thus a boldface pointclass is a downward-closed union of
Wadge degree In descriptive set theory, within mathematics, Wadge degrees are levels of complexity for sets of reals. Sets are compared by continuous reductions. The Wadge hierarchy is the structure of Wadge degrees. These concepts are named after William W. W ...
s.


Lightface pointclasses

The Borel and projective hierarchies have analogs in
effective descriptive set theory Effective descriptive set theory is the branch of descriptive set theory dealing with sets of reals having lightface definitions; that is, definitions that do not require an arbitrary real parameter (Moschovakis 1980). Thus effective descriptive ...
in which the definability property is no longer relativized to an oracle, but is made absolute. For example, if one fixes some collection of basic open neighborhoods (say, in Baire space, the collection of sets of the form for each fixed finite sequence ''s'' of natural numbers), then the open, or \boldsymbol^0_1, sets may be characterized as all (arbitrary) unions of basic open neighborhoods. The analogous \Sigma^0_1 sets, with a lightface \Sigma, are no longer ''arbitrary'' unions of such neighborhoods, but
computable Computability is the ability to solve a problem in an effective manner. It is a key topic of the field of computability theory within mathematical logic and the theory of computation within computer science. The computability of a problem is close ...
unions of them. That is, a set is lightface \Sigma^0_1, also called ''effectively open'', if there is a computable set ''S'' of finite sequences of naturals such that the given set is the union of the sets for ''s'' in ''S''. A set is lightface \Pi^0_1 if it is the complement of a \Sigma^0_1 set. Thus each \Sigma^0_1 set has at least one index, which describes the computable function enumerating the basic open sets from which it is composed; in fact it will have infinitely many such indices. Similarly, an index for a \Pi^0_1 set ''B'' describes the computable function enumerating the basic open sets in the complement of ''B''. A set ''A'' is lightface \Sigma^0_2 if it is a union of a computable sequence of \Pi^0_1 sets (that is, there is a computable enumeration of indices of \Pi^0_1 sets such that ''A'' is the union of these sets). This relationship between lightface sets and their indices is used to extend the lightface Borel hierarchy into the transfinite, via
recursive ordinal In mathematics, specifically computability and set theory, an ordinal \alpha is said to be computable or recursive if there is a computable well-ordering of a subset of the natural numbers having the order type \alpha. It is easy to check that \om ...
s. This produces that
hyperarithmetic hierarchy In recursion theory, hyperarithmetic theory is a generalization of Turing computability. It has close connections with definability in second-order arithmetic and with weak systems of set theory such as Kripke–Platek set theory. It is an importa ...
, which is the lightface analog of the Borel hierarchy. (The finite levels of the
hyperarithmetic hierarchy In recursion theory, hyperarithmetic theory is a generalization of Turing computability. It has close connections with definability in second-order arithmetic and with weak systems of set theory such as Kripke–Platek set theory. It is an importa ...
are known as the arithmetical hierarchy.) A similar treatment can be applied to the projective hierarchy. Its lightface analog is known as the analytical hierarchy.


Summary

Each class is at least as large as the classes above it.


References

* {{cite book , author=Moschovakis, Yiannis N. , title=Descriptive Set Theory , url=https://archive.org/details/descriptivesetth0000mosc , url-access=registration , publisher=North Holland , year=1980 , isbn=0-444-70199-0 Descriptive set theory General topology