No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
On countable chains having decidable monadic theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 March 2014
Abstract
Rationals and countable ordinals are important examples of structures with decidable monadic second-order theories. A chain is an expansion of a linear order by monadic predicates. We show that if the monadic second-order theory of a countable chain C is decidable then C has a non-trivial expansion with decidable monadic second-order theory.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Association for Symbolic Logic 2012
References
REFERENCES
[1]
Bés, A. and Cégielski, P., Weakly maximal decidable structures, RAIRO Theoretical Informatics and Applications, vol. 42 (2008). no. 1. pp. 137–145.Google Scholar
[2]
Bés, A. and Cégielski, P., Nonmaximal decidable structures. Journal of Mathematical Sciences, vol. 158 (2009), pp. 615–622.Google Scholar
[3]
Bés, A. and Rabinovkh, A.. Decidable expansions of labelled linear orderings, Logical Methods in Computer Science, vol. 7 (2011), no. 2.Google Scholar
[4]
Blumensath, A., Colcombet, T.. and Löding, C., Logical theories and compatible operations. Logic and automata: History and Perspectives (Flum, J., Grädel, E.. and Wilke, T.. editors), Amsterdam University Press. 2007. pp. 72–106.Google Scholar
[5]
Büchi, J. R., On a decision method in the restricted second-order arithmetic. Proceedings of the International Congress on Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science, Berkeley 1960. Stanford University Press, 1962, pp. 1–11.Google Scholar
[6]
Büchi, J. R., Transfinite automata recursions and weak second order theory of ordinals. Proceedings of the Internation Congress on Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science, Jerusalem 1964, North Holland, 1965, pp. 2–23.Google Scholar
[7]
Büchi, J. R. and Zaiontz, C., Deterministic automata and the monadic theory of ordinals ω2
, Zeitschrift für mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik. vol. 29 (1983), pp. 313–336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[8]
Elgot, C. C. and Rabin, M. O.. Decidability and undecidability of extensions of second (first) order theory of (generalized) successor, this Journal, vol. 31 (1966), no. 2. pp. 169–181.Google Scholar
[9]
Feferman, S. and Vaught, R. L.. The first order properties of products of algebraic systems, Fundamenta Mathematicae, vol. 47 (1959), pp. 57–103.Google Scholar
[10]
Gurevich, Y., Modest theory of short chains. I, this Journal, vol. 44 (1979). no. 4. pp. 481–490.Google Scholar
[11]
Gurevich, Y., Monadic second-order theories. Model-theoretic logics (Barwise, J. and Feferman, S.. editors). Perspectives in Mathematical Logic, Springer-Verlag. 1985. pp. 479–506.Google Scholar
[12]
Gurevich, Y., Magidor, M., and Shelah, S.. The monadic theory of ω2
. this Journal, vol. 48 (1983), no. 2, pp. 387–398.Google Scholar
[13]
Gurevich, Y. and Shelah, S., Modest theory of short chains. II. this Journal, vol. 44 (1979), no. 4. pp. 491–502.Google Scholar
[14]
Gurevich, Y. and Shelah, S., Interpreting second-order logic in the monadic theory of order, this Journal, vol. 48 (1983), no. 3. pp. 816–828.Google Scholar
[15]
Läuchli, H., A decision procedure for the weak second-order theory of linear order. Contributions to Mathematical Logic (Schmidt, H. A., Schütte, K., and Thiele, H.-J.. editors), North-Holland Publishing Company, 1968, pp. 189–197.Google Scholar
[16]
Makowsky, J. A., Algorithmic uses of the Feferman–Vaught theorem, Annals of Pure and Applied Logic, vol. 126 (2004), no. 1–3. pp. 159–213.Google Scholar
[17]
Rabin, M. O., Decidability of second-order theories and automata on infinite trees, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 141 (1969), pp. 1–35.Google Scholar
[18]
Rabinovich, A.. The full binary tree cannot be interpreted in a chain, this Journal, vol. 75 (2010), no. 4, pp. 1489–1498.Google Scholar
[20]
Shelah, S., The monadic theory of order. Annals of Mathematics, vol. 102 (1975), pp. 379–419.Google Scholar
[21]
Soprunov, S., Decidable expansions of structures, Voprosy Kibernet, vol. 134 (1988), pp. 175–179, (in Russian).Google Scholar
[22]
Thomas, W., Ehrenfeucht games, the composition method, and the monadic theory of ordinal words, Structures in Logic and Computer Science, A Selection of Essays in Honor of A. Ehrenfeucht. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, no. 1261, Springer, 1997, pp. 118–143.Google Scholar
[23]
Thomas, W., Languages, automata, and logic, Handbook of formal languages (Rozenberg, G. and Salomaa, A., editors), vol. III, Springer, 1997, pp. 389–455.Google Scholar
[24]
Thomas, W., Model transformations in decidability proofs for monadic theories, Computer science logic 2008 (Kaminski, Michael and Martini, Simone, editors). Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 5213, Springer, 2008, pp. 23–31.Google Scholar
[25]
Zeitman, R. S., The composition method, Ph.D. thesis, Wayne State University, Michigan, 1994.Google Scholar