Countable union of countable sets vs countable product of countable sets

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the properties of countable unions and products of countable sets, specifically examining the differences between a countable union of countable sets and a countably infinite product of countable sets. Participants explore examples and reasoning related to these concepts.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant asserts that a countable union of countable sets is countable, while a countably infinite product of countable sets may not be countable.
  • Another participant illustrates the difference using the set X = ℕ, explaining that elements of the union of finite tuples can be represented in the countably infinite product, but there are additional elements in the product that do not correspond to the union.
  • It is noted that elements in the countably infinite product can include sequences that do not terminate in zeros, indicating a larger cardinality than the union of finite tuples.
  • One participant references Cantor's argument to support the claim that a countable product of the set {0,1} is uncountable, which adds to the complexity of the discussion.
  • Another participant expresses confusion regarding the contradiction mentioned, questioning the existence of a bijection between the union and the product.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree on the distinction between the countable union and the countably infinite product, but there is some confusion regarding the implications of this distinction and the existence of bijections. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the perceived contradictions and the nature of the mappings between these sets.

Contextual Notes

Participants rely on specific examples and reasoning without providing formal proofs, and there is an acknowledgment of the complexity involved in establishing bijections between the discussed sets.

snakesonawii
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I know that a countable union of countable sets is countable, and that a finite product of countable sets is countable, but even a countably infinite product of countable sets may not be countable.

Let X be a countable set. Then X^{n} is countable for each n \in N.

Now it should also be true that \bigcup^{\infty}_{n=1} X^{n} is countable. How is this different from X^{\omega}, which is uncountable?
 
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Ah, very good question. Let's take a look at this question with X=\mathbb{N}. You first mentioned

\bigcup{X^n}

The elements of these set are all the finite tuples. So examples include (1,2), (3,4,2000),... Of course, if you add zero's to the end, then you obtain an element of X^\omega. So (1,2) corresponds to (1,2,0,0,0,...) and (3,4,2000) corresponds to (3,4,2000,0,0,0,...).

So it is easily seen that every element of \bigcup{X^n} can be represented by an element of X^\omega. And it is also easy to see that such elements are exactly the elements ending with a trail of 0's. For example: (1,1,1,0,0,0,...) corresponds to (1,1,1)...

But, and here comes the clue: there are much more elements in X^\omega. For example: (1,1,1,...) does not come from an element of \bigcup{X^n}. Other examples are (1,2,3,4,...) or (2,7,1,8,2,...). This shows that there are a huge number of elements in X^\omega! And so X^\omega really is different than \bigcup{X^n}.

Of course, this is not a proof. But it merely gives an indication why the two sets are different...
 
micromass said:
Ah, very good question. Let's take a look at this question with X=\mathbb{N}. You first mentioned

\bigcup{X^n}

The elements of these set are all the finite tuples. So examples include (1,2), (3,4,2000),... Of course, if you add zero's to the end, then you obtain an element of X^\omega. So (1,2) corresponds to (1,2,0,0,0,...) and (3,4,2000) corresponds to (3,4,2000,0,0,0,...).

So it is easily seen that every element of \bigcup{X^n} can be represented by an element of X^\omega. And it is also easy to see that such elements are exactly the elements ending with a trail of 0's. For example: (1,1,1,0,0,0,...) corresponds to (1,1,1)...

But, and here comes the clue: there are much more elements in X^\omega. For example: (1,1,1,...) does not come from an element of \bigcup{X^n}. Other examples are (1,2,3,4,...) or (2,7,1,8,2,...). This shows that there are a huge number of elements in X^\omega! And so X^\omega really is different than \bigcup{X^n}.

Of course, this is not a proof. But it merely gives an indication why the two sets are different...

Yes, after thinking about it I came to the same conclusion. You can't put them in bijective correspondence because if you wanted to map the union onto X^\omega you could do so injectively by adding 0s but there's no way to make this mapping surjective.
 
i believe the standard cantor argument shows even a countable product of the set {0,1} is uncountable, i.e. the set of all sequences of 0's and 1's.
 
mathwonk said:
i believe the standard cantor argument shows even a countable product of the set {0,1} is uncountable, i.e. the set of all sequences of 0's and 1's.

Exactly, hence why this was a seeming contradiction.
 
Exactly, hence why this was a seeming contradiction.
What's the contradiction that you're referring to?

It's already been stated that the needed bijection doesn't exist. I'm not following you're argument...
 

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