Remarkable cardinal
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
- π : M → Hθ is an elementary embedding
 - M is countable and transitive
 - π(λ) = κ
 - σ : M → N is an elementary embedding with critical point λ
 - N is countable and transitive
 - ρ = M ∩ Ord is a regular cardinal in N
 - σ(λ) > ρ
 - M = HρN, i.e., M ∈ N and N ⊨ "M is the set of all sets that are hereditarily smaller than ρ"
 
See also
References
- Schindler, Ralf (2000), "Proper forcing and remarkable cardinals", The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic, 6 (2): 176–184, doi:10.2307/421205, ISSN 1079-8986, MR 1765054
 
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