Generalized almost disjoint families and injective Banach spaces
Pith reviewed 2026-06-28 12:34 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
If the continuum hypothesis holds, the injective dimension of c0 is at least 3.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Under the continuum hypothesis the injective dimension of c0 is at least 3. The proof proceeds by first introducing almost disjoint families on topological spaces and then showing that, whenever the bounding number equals the continuum, an almost disjoint family of cardinality 2 to the aleph-1 exists on the Cech-Stone remainder of the naturals; this family is used to construct a long exact sequence that witnesses the required dimension.
What carries the argument
A generalized almost disjoint family on a topological space X, which extends the classical notion on the naturals and is used to produce long injective resolutions of c0.
If this is right
- Under the continuum hypothesis any injective resolution of c0 must have length at least three.
- When the bounding number equals the continuum there exists an almost disjoint family of size 2 to the aleph-1 on the Cech-Stone remainder of the naturals.
- The generalized notion of almost disjoint families on topological spaces is sufficient to produce new lower bounds in the homological theory of Banach spaces.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same construction might yield lower bounds for injective dimensions of other classical Banach spaces once suitable almost disjoint families are found on their associated remainders.
- If the continuum hypothesis fails the dimension of c0 could drop to 2, suggesting the exact value is sensitive to the underlying set theory.
- The generalized families may connect to questions about the structure of beta N minus N beyond the single application to c0.
Load-bearing premise
The proof requires both the continuum hypothesis and the existence of an almost disjoint family of size 2 to the aleph-1 on the Cech-Stone remainder when the bounding number equals the continuum.
What would settle it
A model of set theory in which the continuum hypothesis holds yet the injective dimension of c0 equals 2, or a direct computation showing that no almost disjoint family of the stated size exists on the remainder when the bounding number equals the continuum.
read the original abstract
A fundamental open problem in the homological theory of Banach spaces is the calculation of the injective dimension of the Banach space $c_0$. We make a contribution to the study of this problem by proving that, if the Continuum Hypothesis ($\mathsf{CH}$) holds, then the injective dimension of $c_0$ is at least 3. In the course of proving this result, we introduce the notion of an \emph{almost disjoint family} on a topological space $X$, generalizing the classical notion of almost disjoint families of subsets of $\mathbb{N}$, which we feel is of interest in its own right. We prove that, if $\mathfrak{b} = 2^{\aleph_0}$, then there exists an almost disjoint family of cardinality $2^{\aleph_1}$ on the \v{C}ech-Stone remainder of $\mathbb{N}$.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proves that if the Continuum Hypothesis holds, then the injective dimension of the Banach space c_0 is at least 3. The argument proceeds by introducing the notion of an almost disjoint family on a general topological space X (generalizing the classical notion on N), and by establishing that the assumption b = 2^aleph_0 implies the existence of such a family of cardinality 2^aleph_1 on beta N minus N; under CH the cardinal arithmetic hypothesis holds and yields the stated lower bound on injective dimension.
Significance. The result supplies a conditional lower bound for a long-standing open question in the homological theory of Banach spaces. The auxiliary construction of large almost disjoint families on the Čech-Stone remainder is of potential independent interest in set-theoretic topology and may find further applications. The paper explicitly credits the set-theoretic hypotheses and presents the main theorem as conditional rather than absolute.
minor comments (3)
- [Abstract] The abstract states the main theorem clearly but does not indicate the precise location in the text where the reduction from the almost disjoint family to the injective-dimension lower bound is carried out; a forward reference would help readers.
- [Definition section] Notation for the generalized almost disjoint family (Definition in the early sections) is introduced without an immediate comparison table to the classical case on N; adding such a table would improve readability.
- [Existence theorem] The proof that b = 2^aleph_0 yields an almost disjoint family of size 2^aleph_1 on beta N \ N is presented in a single block; breaking it into numbered steps or lemmas would make the dependence on the bounding number more transparent.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive assessment of our work and the recommendation for minor revision. The report contains no specific major comments to address point by point.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The derivation establishes a conditional lower bound on the injective dimension of c0 under CH by first defining generalized almost disjoint families on topological spaces (a new notion) and then proving, from the assumption b = 2^aleph0, the existence of such a family of size 2^aleph1 on beta N ∖ N; this family is then used to obtain the dimension bound. No step reduces by definition or by self-citation to the target conclusion, and the central argument is self-contained against the stated set-theoretic hypotheses.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Continuum Hypothesis (CH)
- domain assumption b = 2^aleph0
invented entities (1)
-
almost disjoint family on a topological space X
no independent evidence
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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