Abstract
Inspired by a mathematical riddle involving fuses, we define the "fusible
numbers" as follows: $0$ is fusible, and whenever $x,y$ are fusible with
$|y-x|<1$, the number $(x+y+1)/2$ is also fusible. We prove that the set of
fusible numbers, ordered by the usual order on $\mathbb R$, is well-ordered,
with order type $\varepsilon_0$. Furthermore, we prove that the density of the
fusible numbers along the real line grows at an incredibly fast rate: Letting
$g(n)$ be the largest gap between consecutive fusible numbers in the interval
$[n,\infty)$, we have $g(n)^{-1} \ge F_{\varepsilon_0}(n-c)$ for some constant
$c$, where $F_\alpha$ denotes the fast-growing hierarchy. Finally, we derive
some true statements that can be formulated but not proven in Peano Arithmetic,
of a different flavor than previously known such statements: PA cannot prove
the true statement "For every natural number $n$ there exists a smallest
fusible number larger than $n$." Also, consider the algorithm "$M(x)$: if $x<0$
return $-x$, else return $M(x-M(x-1))/2$." Then $M$ terminates on real inputs,
although PA cannot prove the statement "$M$ terminates on all natural inputs."
Publisher
Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe (CCSD)
Subject
General Computer Science,Theoretical Computer Science
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. A WALK WITH GOODSTEIN;The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic;2024-01-17