Course-of-values recursion: Difference between revisions

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In [[mathematics]], '''piecewise syndeticity''' is a notion of largeness of subsets of the [[natural number]]s.
 
A set <math>S \sub \mathbb{N}</math> is called ''piecewise syndetic'' if there exists a finite subset ''G'' of <math>\mathbb{N}</math> such that for every finite subset ''F'' of <math>\mathbb{N}</math> there exists an <math>x \in \mathbb{N}</math> such that
 
:<math>x+F \subset \bigcup_{n \in G} (S-n)</math>
 
where <math>S-n = \{m \in \mathbb{N}: m+n \in S \}</math>. Equivalently, ''S'' is piecewise syndetic if there are arbitrarily long intervals of <math>\mathbb{N}</math> where the gaps in ''S'' are bounded by some constant ''b''.
 
== Properties ==
 
* A set is piecewise syndetic if and only if it is the intersection of a [[syndetic set]] and a [[thick set]].
 
* If ''S'' is piecewise syndetic then ''S'' contains arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions.
 
* A set ''S'' is piecewise syndetic if and only if there exists some ultrafilter ''U'' which contains ''S'' and ''U'' is in the smallest two-sided ideal of <math>\beta \mathbb{N}</math>, the [[Stone–Čech compactification]] of the natural numbers.
 
* [[partition regular| Partition regularity]]: if <math>S</math> is piecewise syndetic and <math>S = C_1 \cup C_2 \cup ... \cup C_n</math>, then for some <math>i \leq n</math>, <math>C_i</math> contains a piecewise syndetic set. (Brown, 1968)
 
* If ''A'' and ''B'' are subsets of <math>\mathbb{N}</math>, and ''A'' and ''B'' have positive [[natural density| upper Banach density]], then <math>A+B=\{a+b:a \in A, b \in B\}</math> is piecewise syndetic<ref>R. Jin, [http://jinr.people.cofc.edu/research/banach.pdf Nonstandard Methods For Upper Banach Density Problems], ''Journal of Number Theory'' '''91''', (2001), 20-38</math>.</ref>
 
== Other Notions of Largeness ==
 
There are many alternative definitions of largeness that also usefully distinguish subsets of natural numbers:
 
* [[Cofiniteness]]
* [[IP set]]
* member of a nonprincipal [[ultrafilter]]
* positive [[upper density]]
* [[syndetic set]]
* [[thick set]]
 
== See also ==
*[[Ergodic Ramsey theory]]
 
== Notes ==
{{reflist}}
 
== References ==
* J. McLeod, "[http://www.mtholyoke.edu/~jmcleod/somenotionsofsize.pdf Some Notions of Size in Partial Semigroups]" ''Topology Proceedings'' '''25''' (2000), 317-332
* [[Vitaly Bergelson]], "[http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/~vitaly/vbkatsiveli20march03.pdf Minimal Idempotents and Ergodic Ramsey Theory]", ''Topics in Dynamics and Ergodic Theory 8-39, London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Series 310'', Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, (2003)
* [[Vitaly Bergelson]], N. Hindman, "[http://members.aol.com/nhfiles2/pdf/large.pdf Partition regular structures contained in large sets are abundant]", ''J. Comb. Theory (Series A)''  '''93''' (2001), 18-36
* T. Brown, "[http://projecteuclid.org/Dienst/UI/1.0/Summarize/euclid.pjm/1102971066 An interesting combinatorial method in the theory of locally finite semigroups]", ''Pacific J. Math.''  '''36''', no. 2 (1971), 285–289.
 
[[Category:Semigroup theory]]
[[Category:Ergodic theory]]
[[Category:Ramsey theory]]
[[Category:Combinatorics]]

Latest revision as of 11:06, 15 January 2013

In mathematics, piecewise syndeticity is a notion of largeness of subsets of the natural numbers.

A set is called piecewise syndetic if there exists a finite subset G of such that for every finite subset F of there exists an such that

where . Equivalently, S is piecewise syndetic if there are arbitrarily long intervals of where the gaps in S are bounded by some constant b.

Properties

  • If S is piecewise syndetic then S contains arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions.

Other Notions of Largeness

There are many alternative definitions of largeness that also usefully distinguish subsets of natural numbers:

See also

Notes

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References

  1. R. Jin, Nonstandard Methods For Upper Banach Density Problems, Journal of Number Theory 91, (2001), 20-38</math>.