A hyperring is like a ring but not with an underlying abelian group but with an underlying canonical hypergroup, hence it is a hypermonoid with additional ring-like structure. This means that addition in a hyperring is a multi-valued function. A hyperfield is a hyperring where every nonzero element has a multiplicative inverse.
From Viro 2010:
“Krasner, Marshall, Connes and Consani and the author came to hyperfields for different reasons, motivated by different mathematical problems, but we came to the same conclusion: the hyperrings and hyperfields are great, very useful and very underdeveloped in the mathematical literature… Probably, the main obstacle for hyperfields to become a mainstream notion is that a multivalued operation does not fit to the tradition of set-theoretic terminology, which forces to avoid multivalued maps at any cost. I believe the taboo on multivalued maps has no real ground, and eventually will be removed. Hyperfields, as well as multigroups, hyperrings and multirings, are legitimate algebraic objects related in many ways to the classical core of mathematics… I believe hyperfields are to displace the tropical semifield in the tropical geometry. They suit the role better. In particular, with hyperfields the varieties are defined by equations, as in other branches of algebraic geometry.”
A hyperring is a non-empty set equipped with
a hyper-addition (where is the set of non-empty subsets)
a multiplication
chosen elements
such that
is a canonical hypergroup;
is a monoid with identity element ;
and ;
;
(e.g. Nakassis 1987 Def. 4, Davvaz & Leoreanu-Fotea 2007 Def. 3.1.1; other authors require moreover that , e.g. Connes & Consani 2011 Def. 2.1, Jun 2015 Def. 2.2)
A homomorphism of hyperrings is a map such that
;
.
A hyperfield is a hyperring for which is a group and .
We can form many examples of hyperrings by quotienting a ring by some subgroup of its group of units such that for all . In more detail, an element of the hyperring is given by an equivalence class of elements of , where if and only if for some . Thanks to the condition , multiplication descends straightforwardly from to , while addition become multivalued: the sum of equivalence classes and is the set of all equivalence classes .
In particular, if is a hyperfield so is .
We say a hyperring is doubly distributive if obeys the familiar identity
Not every hyperring is doubly distributive (see the example of the triangle hyperring below): in general, we merely have
However, every hyperring obtained as a quotient of a ring by the above construction is doubly distributive.
The Krasner hyperfield is the set with multiplication given by
and with addition given by
is the quotient of the field of rational numbers or real numbers by its multiplicative subgroup consisting of all nonzero numbers: is the equivalence class containing , while is the equivalence class containing all nonzero numbers. The hyper-addition law above encodes how such equivalence classes behave under addition: for example, the sum of two nonzero numbers can be zero or nonzero.
The sign hyperfield is the set with multiplication given by
and with addition given by
.
is the quotient of the field of rational numbers or real numbers by its multiplicative subgroup of positive numbers: is the equivalence class containing the positive numbers, is the equivalence class containing , and as the equivalence class of the negative numbers. Again, the hyper-addition law encodes how such equivalence classes behave under addition: most notably, the sum of a positive and a negative number can be positive, zero, or negative.
Proposition
To each element, , of there corresponds an extended real number, given as a Dedekind cut. This is a surjective mapping. The inverse image of each real algebraic number contains three elements, while that of a nonalgebraic number is a singleton. For real algebraic , the three homomorphisms from to are
The tropical hyperfield has as its underlying set . The product of is defined to be the usual sum of nonnegative numbers for , and we define . The sum of is defined to be when , but when it is defined to be the set .
Proposition. For any commutative ring , hyperring homomorphisms are the same as nonarchimedean valuations .
This was observed first by Viro (2010), but a proof can be found in Lorscheid’s Tropical geometry over the tropical hyperfield, Theorem 2.2.
The triangle hyperfield is the set with its usual multiplication, where the sum of and is the set of all such are the lengths of the sides of a triangle in the plane (allowing sides of length zero). Viro showed is a hyperfield in Theorem 5.4 of his paper on hyperfields in tropical geometry. This hyperfield is not doubly distributive, because
while
The notion of hyperring and hyperfield is due to:
Another early reference is
See also:
Review:
Monographs:
Bijan Davvaz, Violeta Leoreanu-Fotea, Hyperring Theory and Applications, International Academic Press (2007) [pdf]
Bijan Davvaz, Violeta Leoreanu-Fotea, Krasner Hyperring Theory, World Scientific (2024) [doi:10.1142/13652]
Applications to the geometry over the “field with one element”:
Alain Connes, Caterina Consani, The hyperring of adèle classes, Journal of Number Theory 131 2 (2011) 159-194 [arXiv:1001.4260, doi:10.1016/j.jnt.2010.09.001]
Alain Connes, Caterina Consani: From monoids to hyperstructures: in search of an absolute arithmetic [arXiv:1006.4810]
On algebraic geometry over hyperrings:
On the tropical hyperfield:
Oleg Viro: Hyperfields for tropical geometry I. hyperfields and dequantization [arXiv:1006.3034]
Oliver Lorscheid, Tropical geometry over the tropical hyperfield [arXiv:1907.01037]
Last revised on November 6, 2024 at 15:45:41. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.