Additively indecomposable ordinal
In set theory, a branch of mathematics, an additively indecomposable ordinal α is any non-zero ordinal number such that for any , we have The set of additively indecomposable ordinals is denoted
From the continuity of addition in its right argument, we get that if and α is additively indecomposable, then
Obviously , since No finite ordinal other than is in Also, , since the sum of two finite ordinals is still finite. More generally, every infinite cardinal is in
is closed and unbounded, so the enumerating function of is normal. In fact,
The derivative (which enumerates fixed points of fH) is written Ordinals of this form (that is, fixed points of ) are called epsilon numbers. The number is therefore the first fixed point of the sequence
Multiplicatively indecomposable
A similar notion can be defined for multiplication. The multiplicatively indecomposable ordinals are those of the form for any ordinal α.
See also
Additively indecomposable at PlanetMath.