In set theory, the singular cardinals hypothesis (SCH) arose from the question of whether the least cardinal number for which the generalized continuum hypothesis (GCH) might fail could be a singular cardinal.
According to Mitchell (1992), the singular cardinals hypothesis is:
If κ is any singular strong limit cardinal, then 2κ = κ+.Here, κ+ denotes the successor cardinal of κ.
Since SCH is a consequence of GCH, which is known to be consistent with ZFC, SCH is consistent with ZFC. The negation of SCH has also been shown to be consistent with ZFC, if one assumes the existence of a sufficiently large cardinal number. In fact, by results of Moti Gitik, ZFC + ¬SCH is equiconsistent with ZFC + the existence of a measurable cardinal κ of Mitchell order κ++.
Another form of the SCH is the following statement:
2cf(κ) < κ implies κcf(κ) = κ+,where cf denotes the cofinality function. Note that κcf(κ)= 2κ for all singular strong limit cardinals κ. The second formulation of SCH is strictly stronger than the first version, since the first one only mentions strong limits. From a model in which the first version of SCH fails at ℵω and GCH holds above ℵω+2, we can construct a model in which the first version of SCH holds but the second version of SCH fails, by adding ℵω Cohen subsets to ℵn for some n.
Jack Silver proved that if κ is singular with uncountable cofinality and 2λ = λ+ for all infinite cardinals λ < κ, then 2κ = κ+. Silver's original proof used generic ultrapowers. The following important fact follows from Silver's theorem: if the singular cardinals hypothesis holds for all singular cardinals of countable cofinality, then it holds for all singular cardinals. In particular, then, if
\kappa
cf(\kappa)=\omega
The negation of the singular cardinals hypothesis is intimately related to violating the GCH at a measurable cardinal. A well-known result of Dana Scott is that if the GCH holds below a measurable cardinal
\kappa
\kappa
l{P}(\kappa)
\{\alpha<\kappa\mid2\alpha=\alpha+\}\inD
2\kappa=\kappa+
\kappa
\kappa
2\kappa>\kappa+
\kappa
\kappa
2\kappa>\kappa+
\kappa++
\kappa++
A wide variety of propositions imply SCH. As was noted above, GCH implies SCH. On the other hand, the proper forcing axiom, which implies
\aleph0 | |
2 |
=\aleph2
\kappa
\kappa
\kappa++