Ordered field: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Richard Pinch
(subpages)
imported>Richard Pinch
(section heading name for Artin-Schreier theorem)
 
Line 17: Line 17:
It is possible for a field to have more than one linear order compatible with the field operations, but in any case the squares must lie in the positive cone.
It is possible for a field to have more than one linear order compatible with the field operations, but in any case the squares must lie in the positive cone.


A field ''F'' can be ordered if and only if -1 is not a sum of squares in ''F''.
==Artin-Schreier theorem==
A field ''F'' is '''formally real''' if -1 is not a sum of squares in ''F''.  The Artin-Schreier theorem states that a field ''F'' can be ordered if and only if it is formally real.


==Examples==
==Examples==

Latest revision as of 02:23, 23 November 2008

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

In mathematics, an ordered field is a field which has a linear order structure which is compatible with the field operations.

Formally, F is an ordered field if there is a linear order ≤ on F which satisfies

  • If then
  • For each element or ;
  • If and then

Alternatively, the order may be defined in terms of a positive cone, a subset C of F which is closed under addition and multiplication, contains the 0 and 1 elements, and which has the properties that

The relationship between the order and the associated positive cone is that

It is possible for a field to have more than one linear order compatible with the field operations, but in any case the squares must lie in the positive cone.

Artin-Schreier theorem

A field F is formally real if -1 is not a sum of squares in F. The Artin-Schreier theorem states that a field F can be ordered if and only if it is formally real.

Examples

  • The rational numbers form an ordered field in a unique way.
  • The real numbers form an ordered field in a unique way: the squares form the positive cone.
  • The complex numbers cannot be given an ordered field structure since both 1 and -1 are squares.
  • The quadratic field has two possible structures as ordered field, corresponding to the embeddings into R in which takes on the two possible real values.
  • No finite field can be ordered.