symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category of spectra
transfinite arithmetic, cardinal arithmetic, ordinal arithmetic
prime field, p-adic integer, p-adic rational number, p-adic complex number
arithmetic geometry, function field analogy
For any prime number, the -adic numbers (or -adic rational numbers, for emphasis) form a field that completes the field of rational numbers with respect to a metric, called the -adic metric. As such they are analogous to real numbers. A crucial difference is that the reals form an archimedean field, while the -adic numbers form a non-archimedean field.
Fields of -adic numbers play a role in non-archimedean analytic geometry that is analogous to the role of the real numbers/Cartesian spaces in ordinary differential geometry.
Moreover, as such they serve as an approximation technique in arithmetic geometry over prime fields (see e.g. Lubicz).
There have long been speculations (see the references below) that this must mean that -adic numbers also play a central role in the description of physics, see p-adic physics.
We first recall the definition and construction of the p-adic integers
and then consider
Let be the ring of integers and for every , its ideal consisting of all integer multiples of , and the corresponding quotient, the ring of residues mod .
Let now be a prime number. Then for any two positive integers there is an inclusion which induces the canonical homomorphism of quotients . These homomorphisms for all pairs form a family closed under composition, and in fact a category, which is in fact a poset, and moreover a directed system of (commutative unital) rings. The ring of p-adic integers is the (inverse) limit of this directed system (in the category Ring of rings).
Regarding that the rings in the system are finite, it is clear that the underlying set of has a natural topology as a profinite (Stone) space and it is in particular a compact Hausdorff topological ring. More concretely, is the closed (hence compact) subspace of the cartesian product of discrete topological spaces (which is by the Tihonov theorem compact Hausdorff) consisting of threads, i.e. sequences of the form with and satisfying .
The kernel of the projection , to the -th component (which is the corresponding projection of the limiting cone) is , i.e. the sequence
is an exact sequence of abelian groups, hence also .
An element in is invertible (and called a -adic unit) iff is not divisible by .
Let be the group of all invertible elements in . Then every element can be uniquely written as with and . The correspondence defines a discrete valuation called the p-adic valuation and is said to be the -adic valuation of . Of course, as required by the axioms of valuation. The norm induced by the valuation is (up to equivalence) given by , and this in turn induces a metric
making the ring a complete metric space and in fact a completion of , in that is a complete metric, and is dense in it.
Concretely, a -adic integer may be written as a base- expansion
with . Addition and multiplication are performed with carrying as in ordinary base- arithmetic, carried infinitely far to the left if is written as .
Algebraically, the ring of -adic integers is isomorphic to the endomorphism ring where is the Prüfer group . In particular, is tautologically a -module.
Relatedly, the additive group of -adic integers is Pontrjagin dual to . Observe that embeds in as the set of all roots of unity of order , and that every character factors through this embedding .
The field of -adic numbers is the field of fractions of the p-adic integers . The -adic valuation extends to a discrete valuation, also denoted on . Indeed, it is still true for all that they can be uniquely written in the form where (the same group as before), but now one needs to allow . One defines the metric on by the same formula as for . It appears that is a complete field (in particular locally compact Hausdorff) and that is an open subring.
The distance satisfies the “ultrametric” inequality
Concretely, a -adic number may be written as , with only finitely many negative powers of occurring. If , the expansion is conventionally displayed as
with finitely many terms to the “right” of the “decimal” point. Again such expressions are added and multiplied with carrying as in ordinary arithmetic.
An element is invertible precisely if .
Ostrowski's theorem implies there are precisely two kinds of completions of the rational numbers: the real numbers and the -adic numbers.
Any non-trivial absolute value on the rational numbers is equivalent either to the standard real absolute value, or to the -adic absolute value.
While the -adic numbers are complete in the p-adic norm, that topology is exotic: is a locally compact, Hausdorff, totally disconnected topological space.
For that reason the naive idea of formulating p-adic geometry in analogy to complex analytic geometry as modeled on domains in , regarded with their subspace topology, fails (for instance there would be no analytic continuation), as also all these domains are totally disconnected.
Instead there is (Tate 71) a suitable Grothendieck topology on such affinoid domains – the G-topology – with respect to which there is a good theory of non-archimedean analytic geometry (“rigid analytic geometry”) and hence in particular of p-adic geometry. Moreover, one may sensibly assign to an -adic domain a topological space which is well behaved (in particular locally connected and even locally contractible), this is the analytic spectrum construction. The resulting topological space is equipped with covers by affinoid domain under the analytic spectrum are called Berkovich spaces.
Earlier we observed that as an additive compact Hausdorff topological group, the inverse limit is dual to the discrete Prüfer group that is isomorphic to a direct limit of finite cyclic groups . The canonical inclusion induces an isomorphism , in fact an isomorphism of -modules, so there is an exact sequence
This exact sequence is Pontrjagin self-dual in the sense that the map induced from the pairing
fits into an isomorphism of exact sequences
where the commutativity of the squares can be traced to the fact that is a -module homomorphism, and where the vertical isomorphisms on left and right come from Pontrjagin duality. The middle arrow is then an isomorphism by the short five lemma for topological groups, which holds by protomodularity of topological groups.
This self-duality figures in Tate’s thesis; for more, see ring of adeles.
natural number, integer, rational number, algebraic number, Gaussian number, irrational number, real number
The -adic numbers had been introduced in
A standard reference is
Review in the context of p-local homotopy theory is in
Review of the use of -adic numbers in arithmetic geometry includes
A formalization in homotopy type theory and there in Coq is discussed in
-adic differential equations are discussed in
Kiran Kedlaya, -adic differential equations (pdf, course notes)
Gilles Cristol, Exposants -adiques et solutions dans les couronnes (pdf)
The development of rigid analytic geometry starts with
p-adic homotopy theory is discussed in
Last revised on August 6, 2024 at 02:27:32. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.