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Coloring trees in reverse mathematics

Abstract

The tree theorem for pairs (TT22\mathsf{TT}^2_2), first introduced by Chubb, Hirst, and McNicholl, asserts that given a finite coloring of pairs of comparable nodes in the full binary tree 2<ω2^{<\omega}, there is a set of nodes isomorphic to 2<ω2^{<\omega} which is homogeneous for the coloring. This is a generalization of the more familiar Ramsey's theorem for pairs (RT22\mathsf{RT}^2_2), which has been studied extensively in computability theory and reverse mathematics. We answer a longstanding open question about the strength of TT22\mathsf{TT}^2_2, by showing that this principle does not imply the arithmetic comprehension axiom (ACA0\mathsf{ACA}_0) over the base system, recursive comprehension axiom (RCA0\mathsf{RCA}_0), of second-order arithmetic. In addition, we give a new and self-contained proof of a recent result of Patey that TT22\mathsf{TT}^2_2 is strictly stronger than RT22\mathsf{RT}^2_2. Combined, these results establish TT22\mathsf{TT}^2_2 as the first known example of a natural combinatorial principle to occupy the interval strictly between ACA0\mathsf{ACA}_0 and RT22\mathsf{RT}^2_2. The proof of this fact uses an extension of the bushy tree forcing method, and develops new techniques for dealing with combinatorial statements formulated on trees, rather than on ω\omega.Comment: 25 page

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