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Borovik-Poizat rank and stability

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2014

Jeffrey Burdges
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, Rutgers University, Hill Center, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, U.S.A, E-mail: burdges@math.rutgers.edu
Gregory Cherlin
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, Rutgers University, Hill Center, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, U.S.A, E-mail: cherlin@math.rutgers.edu

Extract

Borovik proposed an axiomatic treatment of Morley rank in groups, later modified by Poizat, who showed that in the context of groups the resulting notion of rank provides a characterization of groups of finite Morley rank [2]. (This result makes use of ideas of Lascar, which it encapsulates in a neat way.) These axioms form the basis of the algebraic treatment of groups of finite Morley rank undertaken in [1].

There are, however, ranked structures, i.e., structures on which a Borovik-Poizat rank function is defined, which are not ℵ0-stable [1, p. 376]. In [2, p. 9] Poizat raised the issue of the relationship between this notion of rank and stability theory in the following terms: “… un groupe de Borovik est une structure stable, alors qu'un univers rangé n'a aucune raison de l'être …” (emphasis added). Nonetheless, we will prove the following:

Theorem 1.1. A ranked structure is superstable.

An example of a non-ℵ0-stable structure with Borovik-Poizat rank 2 is given in [1, p. 376]. Furthermore, it appears that this example can be modified in a straightforward way to give ℵ0-stable structures of Borovik-Poizat rank 2 in which the Morley rank is any countable ordinal (which would refute a claim of [1, p. 373, proof of C.4]). We have not checked the details. This does not leave much room for strenghthenings of our theorem. On the other hand, the proof of Theorem 1.1 does give a finite bound for the heights of certain trees of definable sets related to unsuperstability, as we will see in Section 5.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Symbolic Logic 2002

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References

REFERENCES

[1]Borovik, A. and Nesin, A., Groups of Finite Morley Rank, The Clarendon Press Oxford University Press, New York, 1994, Oxford Science Publications.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[2]Poizat, B., Groupes stables, Nur al-Mantiq wal-Ma'rifah, Villeurbanne, 1987.Google Scholar
[3]Shelah, S., Classification Theory and the Number of Nonisomorphic Models, North-Holland Publishing, Amsterdam, 1990, second edition.Google Scholar