Every
well-ordered set is order-equivalent to exactly one
ordinal number. The ordinal numbers are taken to be the
canonical representatives of their classes, and so the order type of a well-ordered set is usually identified with the corresponding ordinal. Order types thus often take the form of arithmetic expressions of ordinals.
Examples of well-ordering Firstly, the order type of the set of natural numbers is . Any other model of
Peano arithmetic, that is any
non-standard model, starts with a segment isomorphic to ω but then adds extra numbers. For example, any countable such model has order type . Secondly, consider the set of
even ordinals less than : :V = \{0,2,4,\ldots;\omega,\omega + 2,\omega + 4,\ldots;\omega\cdot 2,\omega\cdot 2 + 2, \omega\cdot 2 + 4, \omega\cdot 2 + 6\}. As this comprises two separate counting sequences followed by four elements at the end, the order type is :\operatorname{ord}(V) = \omega\cdot 2 + 4 = \{0, 1, 2, \ldots; \omega, \omega+1, \omega+2, \ldots; \omega\cdot 2, \omega\cdot 2 + 1, \omega\cdot 2 + 2, \omega\cdot 2 + 3\}, ==Rational numbers==