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{{DISPLAYTITLE:\(\omega\)}}
The [[ordinal]] '''omega''', written \(\omega\), is defined as the [[order type]] of the natural numbers \(\mathbb N\). As a [[von Neumann ordinal]], it corresponds to the naturals themselves. Note that \(\omega\) is not to be confused with [[Uncountable|\(\Omega\)]], a common notation for a much larger ordinal.
==Properties==
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Revision as of 15:23, 28 August 2023
The ordinal omega, written \(\omega\), is defined as the order type of the natural numbers \(\mathbb N\). As a von Neumann ordinal, it corresponds to the naturals themselves. Note that \(\omega\) is not to be confused with \(\Omega\), a common notation for a much larger ordinal.
Properties
- It is the first infinite ordinal.
- It is the first limit ordinal.
- It is the first admissible ordinal.
- Using the von Neumann cardinal assignment, it is equal to \(\aleph_0\).
- It is the smallest ordinal \(\alpha\) such that \(1+\alpha=\alpha\). Every ordinal larger than it has this same property.
- It is the next ordinal after 0 that isn't a successor ordinal.
- It is additively, multiplicatively, and exponentially principal.