In recursion theory, α recursion theory is a generalisation of recursion theory to subsets of admissible ordinals
. An admissible ordinal is closed under
functions. Admissible ordinals are models of Kripke–Platek set theory. In what follows
is considered to be fixed.
The objects of study in
recursion are subsets of
. A is said to be
recursively enumerable if it is
definable over
. A is recursive if both A and
(its complement in
) are
recursively enumerable.
Members of
are called
finite and play a similar role to the finite numbers in classical recursion theory.
We say R is a reduction procedure if it is
recursively enumerable and every member of R is of the form
where H, J, K are all α-finite.
A is said to be α-recusive in B if there exist
reduction procedures such that:
![{\displaystyle K\subseteq A\leftrightarrow \exists H:\exists J:[\langle H,J,K\rangle \in R_{0}\wedge H\subseteq B\wedge J\subseteq \alpha /B],}](/media/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/d30e65b38a31e35db21e45e5ac054ea335570f1d)
![{\displaystyle K\subseteq \alpha /A\leftrightarrow \exists H:\exists J:[\langle H,J,K\rangle \in R_{1}\wedge H\subseteq B\wedge J\subseteq \alpha /B].}](/media/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/40d6c1724df61643a40021d7666a1d30fbe3c351)
If A is recursive in B this is written
. By this definition A is recursive in
(the empty set) if and only if A is recursive. However A being recursive in B is not equivalent to A being
.
We say A is regular if
or in other words if every initial portion of A is α-finite.
Results in
recursion
Shore's splitting theorem: Let A be
recursively enumerable and regular. There exist
recursively enumerable
such that
Shore's density theorem: Let A, C be α-regular recursively enumerable sets such that
then there exists a regular α-recursively enumerable set B such that
.
References
- Gerald Sacks, Higher recursion theory, Springer Verlag, 1990
- Robert Soare, Recursively Enumerable Sets and Degrees, Springer Verlag, 1987