Under the assumption of sufficiently strong large cardinal axioms, some additional results of the theory are: • L(R) satisfies
ZF +
AD+. (In particular, it satisfies the
axiom of determinacy.) • Every
projective set of reals – and therefore every
analytic set and every
Borel set of reals – is an element of L(R). • Every set of reals in L(R) is
Lebesgue measurable (in fact,
universally measurable) and has the
property of Baire and the
perfect set property. • L(R) does
not satisfy the
axiom of uniformization or the
axiom of real determinacy. • R#, the
sharp of the set of all reals, has the smallest
Wadge degree of any set of reals
not contained in L(R). • While not every
relation on the reals in L(R) has a
uniformization in L(R), every such relation
does have a uniformization in L(R#). • Given any (set-size)
generic extension V[G] of V, L(R) is an
elementary submodel of L(R) as calculated in V[G]. Thus the theory of L(R) cannot be changed by
forcing. ==References==