In set theory, Cichoń's diagram or Cichon's diagram is a table of 10 infinite cardinal numbers related to the set theory of the reals displaying the provable relations between these cardinal characteristics of the continuum. All these cardinals are greater than or equal to , the smallest uncountable cardinal, and they are bounded above by , the cardinality of the continuum. Four cardinals describe properties of the ideal of sets of measure zero; four more describe the corresponding properties of the ideal of meager sets (first category sets).
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Let I be an ideal of a fixed infinite set X, containing all finite subsets of X. We define the following "cardinal coefficients" of I:
Furthermore, the "bounding number" or "unboundedness number" and the "dominating number" are defined as follows:
where "" means: "there are infinitely many natural numbers n such that...", and "" means "for all except finitely many natural numbers n we have...".
Let be the σ-ideal of those subsets of the real line which are meager (or "of the first category") in the euclidean topology, and let be the σ-ideal of those subsets of the real line which are of Lebesgue measure zero. Then the following inequalities hold (where an arrow from a to b is to be read as meaning that a ≤ b):
In addition, the following relations hold:
and .[1]
It turns out that the inequalities described by the diagram, together with the relations mentioned above, are all the relations between these cardinals that are provable in ZFC, in the following sense. Let A be any assignment of the cardinals and to the 10 cardinals in Cichoń's diagram. Then, if A is consistent with the diagram in that there is no arrow from to , and if A also satisfies the two additional relations, then A can be realized in some model of ZFC.
Some inequalities in the diagram (such as "add ≤ cov") follow immediately from the definitions. The inequalities and are classical theorems and follow from the fact that the real line can be partitioned into a meager set and a set of measure zero.
The British mathematician David Fremlin named the diagram after the Wrocław mathematician Jacek Cichoń.[2]
The continuum hypothesis, of being equal to , would make all of these arrows equalities.
Martin's axiom, a weakening of CH, implies that all cardinals in the diagram (except perhaps ) are equal to .