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ERDŐS–LIOUVILLE SETS

Authors :
Taboka Chalebgwa
SIDNEY MORRIS
Source :
Bulletin of the Australian Mathematical Society. 107:284-289
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2022.

Abstract

In 1844, Joseph Liouville proved the existence of transcendental numbers. He introduced the set $\mathcal L$ of numbers, now known as Liouville numbers, and showed that they are all transcendental. It is known that $\mathcal L$ has cardinality $\mathfrak {c}$ , the cardinality of the continuum, and is a dense $G_{\delta }$ subset of the set $\mathbb {R}$ of all real numbers. In 1962, Erdős proved that every real number is the sum of two Liouville numbers. In this paper, a set W of complex numbers is said to have the Erdős property if every real number is the sum of two numbers in W. The set W is said to be an Erdős–Liouville set if it is a dense subset of $\mathcal {L}$ and has the Erdős property. Each subset of $\mathbb {R}$ is assigned its subspace topology, where $\mathbb {R}$ has the euclidean topology. It is proved here that: (i) there exist $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ Erdős–Liouville sets no two of which are homeomorphic; (ii) there exist $\mathfrak {c}$ Erdős–Liouville sets each of which is homeomorphic to $\mathcal {L}$ with its subspace topology and homeomorphic to the space of all irrational numbers; (iii) each Erdős–Liouville set L homeomorphic to $\mathcal {L}$ contains another Erdős–Liouville set $L'$ homeomorphic to $\mathcal {L}$ . Therefore, there is no minimal Erdős–Liouville set homeomorphic to $\mathcal {L}$ .

Subjects

Subjects :
General Mathematics

Details

ISSN :
17551633 and 00049727
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bulletin of the Australian Mathematical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7c2d87823f34149a0523ee8eaa11edd7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0004972722001009