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In [[mathematical logic]], an '''arithmetical set''' (or '''arithmetic set''') is a [[set (mathematics)|set]] of [[natural number]]s that can be defined by a formula of first-order [[Peano arithmetic]]. The arithmetical sets are  classified by the [[arithmetical hierarchy]].
 
The definition can be extended to an arbitrary [[countable set]] ''A'' (e.g. the set of n-[[tuple]]s of [[integers]], the set of [[rational numbers]], the set of formulas in some [[formal language]], etc.) by using [[Gödel number]]s to represent elements of the set and declaring a subset of ''A'' to be arithmetical if the set of corresponding Gödel numbers is arithmetical.
 
A function <math>f:\subseteq \mathbb{N}^k \to \mathbb{N}</math> is called '''arithmetically definable''' if the [[graph of a function|graph]] of <math>f</math> is an arithmetical set.
 
A [[real number]] is called '''arithmetical''' if the set of all smaller rational numbers is arithmetical. A [[complex number]] is called arithmetical if its [[real and imaginary parts]] are both arithmetical.
 
== Formal definition ==
 
A set ''X'' of natural numbers is '''arithmetical''' or '''arithmetically definable''' if there is a formula φ(''n'') in the language of Peano arithmetic such that each number ''n'' is in ''X'' if and only if φ(''n'') holds in the standard model of arithmetic. Similarly, a ''k''-ary relation
<math>R(n_1,\ldots,n_k)</math> is arithmetical if there is a formula
<math>\psi(n_1,\ldots,n_k)</math> such that <math>R(n_1,\ldots,n_k) \Leftrightarrow \psi(n_1,\ldots,n_k)</math> holds for all ''k''-tuples <math>(n_1,\ldots,n_k)</math> of natural numbers.  
 
A [[finitary]] function on the natural numbers is called arithmetical if its graph is an arithmetical binary relation.
 
A set ''A'' is said to be '''arithmetical in''' a set ''B'' if ''A'' is definable by an arithmetical formula which has ''B'' as a set parameter.
 
== Examples ==
 
* The set of all [[prime number]]s is arithmetical.
* Every [[recursively enumerable set]] is arithmetical.
* Every [[computable function]] is arithmetically definable.
* The set encoding the [[Halting problem]] is arithmetical.
* [[Chaitin's constant Ω]] is an arithmetical real number.
* [[Tarski's indefinability theorem]] shows that the set of true formulas of first order arithmetic is not arithmetically definable.
 
== Properties ==
 
* The [[complement (set theory)|complement]] of an arithmetical set is an arithmetical set.
* The [[Turing jump]] of an arithmetical set is an arithmetical set.
* The collection of arithmetical sets is countable, but there is no arithmetically definable sequence that enumerates all arithmetical sets.
* The set of real arithmetical numbers is [[denumerable]], [[Dense order|dense]] and [[order-isomorphic]] to the set of rational numbers.
 
== Implicitly arithmetical sets ==
 
Each arithmetical set has an arithmetical formula which tells whether particular numbers are in the set. An alternative notion of definability allows for a formula that does not tell whether particular numbers are in the set but tells whether the set itself satisfies some arithmetical property.  
 
A set ''Y'' of natural numbers is '''implicitly arithmetical''' or '''implicitly arithmetically definable''' if it is definable with an arithmetical formula that is able to use ''Y'' as a parameter.  That is, if there is a formula <math>\theta(Z)</math> in the language of Peano arithmetic with no free number variables and a new set parameter ''Z'' and set membership relation <math>\in</math> such that ''Y'' is the unique set ''Z'' such that <math>\theta(Z)</math> holds.
 
Every arithmetical set is implicitly arithmetical; if ''X'' is arithmetically defined by φ(''n'') then it is implicitly defined by the formula
:<math>\forall n [n \in Z \Leftrightarrow \phi(n)]</math>.
Not every implicitly arithmetical set is arithmetical, however. In particular, the truth set of first order arithmetic is implicitly arithmetical but not arithmetical.
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Arithmetical hierarchy]]
* [[Computable set]]
* [[Computable number]]
 
== Further reading ==
*Rogers, H. (1967). ''Theory of recursive functions and effective computability.'' McGraw-Hill. {{ISBN missing|date=September 2013}}
 
{{Number systems}}
[[Category:Effective descriptive set theory]]
[[Category:Mathematical logic hierarchies]]
[[Category:Computability theory]]

Revision as of 16:35, 25 February 2014

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