On 1/5/22 11:54 AM, Glauco wrote:
1. the "standard" theory works perfectly fine without assuming plus infinity not being a complex number. Thus, |- -. +oo e. CC should NOT be a theorem in set.m
At least that seems like it from the "requiring only that +∞ be a set not in ℝ" language in http://us.metamath.org/mpeuni/df-pnf.html and, backing it up, that df-pnf is only used in http://us.metamath.org/mpeuni/pnfnre.html and http://us.metamath.org/mpeuni/mnfnre.html (and a third one trivially satisfied by anything used to define RR* the way we do) and that other usages go via pnfnre .
There are other definitions of infinity on the complex plane:
Benoît has for example defined the circle at infinity, with an
infinite number of points at infinity (see ~
bj-inftyexpidisj), and the (single) point at infinity of the
complex projective line (~
df-bj-infty). These might be used as more general versions
of infinity, and we could then identify the current `+oo` and
`-oo` with the corresponding points at infinity in direction 0 and
π.
Glauco, can you give the actual counter example you tried to
prove in the first place?
Isn't it possible to prove it within RR, using `abs`, without any
need to consider `CC`?
There are other definitions of infinity on the complex plane: Benoît has for example defined the circle at infinity, with an infinite number of points at infinity (see ~ bj-inftyexpidisj), and the (single) point at infinity of the complex projective line (~ df-bj-infty). These might be used as more general versions of infinity, and we could then identify the current `+oo` and `-oo` with the corresponding points at infinity in direction 0 and π.
Thanks Glauco,
Ok, I see that your new formulation would be provable, since you have already proven ` ( limsup ` (/) ) = -oo ` in ~ limsup0.
I suppose you're just being curious about out-of-domain behavior
here, and whether or not you are able to prove this counter
example shall not have any impact on the broader picture, like
measure theory or integration.
Did you see ~ lmdvglim ? It states that if a monotonic sequence does not converge in the real numbers in the sense of ~~> , then it converges to +oo in the topology of the extended numbers.
Maybe it could be related with what you're interested in.
Also, in his Mathbox, and commented out, Mario has a sketch of
definition of an Alexandroff extension, using `~P U. X` (~
alextop; see also ~
dfac14lem and ~
kelac2lem). I think those would be interesting starting
points to define one-point compactifications, and apply them to
the complex plane.
BR,
_
Thierry