transfinite number, cardinal or ordinal
number designating the magnitude (power) or order of an infinite
set; the theory of transfinite numbers was introduced by Georg Cantor in 1874. The cardinal number of the finite set of integers {1, 2, 3, …
n} is
n, and the cardinal number of any other set of objects that can be put in a one-to-one correspondence with this set is also
n; e.g., the cardinal number 5 may be assigned to each of the sets {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}, {2, 4, 6, 8, 10}, {3, 4, 5, 1, 2}, and {
a, b, c, d, e}, since each of these sets may be put in a one-to-one correspondence with any of the others. Similarly, the transfinite cardinal number ℵ
0 (aleph-null) is assigned to the countably infinite set of all positive integers {1, 2, 3, …
n, … }. This set can be put in a one-to-one correspondence with many other infinite sets, e.g., the set of all negative integers {-1, -2, -3, … -
n, … }, the set of all even positive integers {2, 4, 6, … 2
n, … }, and the set of all squares of positive integers {1, 4, 9, …
n2, … }; thus, in contrast to finite sets, two infinite sets, one of which is a subset of the other, can have the same transfinite cardinal number, in this case, ℵ
0. It can be proved that all countably infinite sets, among which are the set of all rational numbers and the set of all algebraic numbers, have the cardinal number ℵ
0. Since the union of two countably infinite sets is a countably infinite set, ℵ
0 + ℵ
0 = ℵ
0; moreover, ℵ
0 × ℵ
0 = ℵ
0, so that in general,
n × ℵ
0 = ℵ
0 and ℵ
0n = ℵ
0, where
n is any finite number. It can also be shown, however, that the set of all real numbers, designated by
c (for "continuum"), is greater than ℵ
0; the set of all points on a line and the set of all points on any segment of a line are also designated by the transfinite cardinal number
c. An even larger transfinite number is 2
c, which designates the set of all subsets of the real numbers, i.e., the set of all {0,1}-valued functions whose domain is the real numbers. Transfinite ordinal numbers are also defined for certain ordered sets, two such being equivalent if there is a one-to-one correspondence between the sets, which preserves the ordering. The transfinite ordinal number of the positive integers is designated by ω.
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