Author
Blass, A
Brendle, J
Brian, W
Hamkins, J
Hardy, M
Larson, P
Journal title
TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY
DOI
10.1090/tran/7881
Issue
1
Volume
373
Last updated
2021-10-19T13:23:49.047+01:00
Page
41-69
Abstract
© 2019 American Mathematical Society. How many permutations of the natural numbers are needed so that every conditionally convergent series of real numbers can be rearranged to no longer converge to the same sum? We define the rearrangement number, a new cardinal characteristic of the continuum, as the answer to this question. We compare the rearrangement number with several natural variants, for example one obtained by requiring the rearranged series to still converge but to a new, finite limit. We also compare the rearrangement number with several well-studied cardinal characteristics of the continuum. We present some new forcing constructions designed to add permutations that rearrange series from the ground model in particular ways, thereby obtaining consistency results going beyond those that follow from comparisons with familiar cardinal characteristics. Finally, we deal briefly with some variants concerning rearrangements by a special sort of permutation and with rearranging some divergent series to become (conditionally) convergent.
Symplectic ID
1086551
Download URL
http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000514306000002&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=4fd6f7d59a501f9b8bac2be37914c43e
Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
January 2020
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