How different are these structures for different values
of p? My guess is the following: (I'm not going to
call it a conjecture because it or its negation is undoubtedly
a standard result.)
Guess: if p and q are distinct primes, then the only ring
homomorphism from Z_p into Q_q is the constantly-zero function.
At the moment I have no idea how to prove it; in fact, I don't
even know how to prove that Q_p and Q_q aren't isomorphic.
(Well, OK, I do have *some* notion. I have a sketch in my
head of a proof that the theory of algebraically closed
fields of characteristic 0 is categorical in every infinite
cardinality (can anyone refute me on that?), so Q_p and Q_q
must not be algebraically closed, or they *would* be the
same thing. The most natural possibility is that you can
take p'th roots in Q_q but not in Q_p; that's the first
place I'd look if I wanted to spend a lot of time on this.)
Any help?
--
Disclaimer: I could be wrong -- but I'm not. (Eagles, "Victim of Love")
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I, Mike Oliver, wrote:
> I have a sketch in my
> head of a proof that the theory of algebraically closed
> fields of characteristic 0 is categorical in every infinite
> cardinality (can anyone refute me on that?),
Oops, I can refute myself on that one. Q-bar, and the
algebraic closure of Q(pi).
Make it every *uncountable* cardinality.
. How different are these structures for different values of p?
.
Depends how much of the "structure" you're worried about. The ordinary
integers are a dense additive subgroup of Z_p for any given prime p.
Similarly for the ordinary nonzero rationals in the multiplicative group
of the nonzero elements of Q_p. For each p, the p-adic integers/rationals
are a completion of the ordinary integers/rationals in the p-adic
topology.
However, the topologies for different values of p are inequivalent, and
this is a well known basic result that should be covered in most any
introductory treatment of valuations or p-adic fields and rings. The
usual statement is to the effect that, given distinct primes p and q,
there is an x in Q such that |x|_p < 1 and |x|_q > 1. The powers of such
an x give a sequence converging to 0 in one topology, but to infinity in
the other.
Kurt Foster wrote:
>
> In <365A5F84...@math.ucla.edu>, Mike Oliver said:
> . How different are these structures for different values of p?
> Depends how much of the "structure" you're worried about.
Algebraic structure only.
> The ordinary
> integers are a dense additive subgroup of Z_p for any given prime p.
> Similarly for the ordinary nonzero rationals in the multiplicative
> group of the nonzero elements of Q_p. For each p, the p-adic
> integers/rationals
> are a completion of the ordinary integers/rationals in the p-adic
> topology.
Sure. But this doesn't seem in any obvious way to give nontrivial
homomorphisms from Z_p to Q_q for p <> q, which is what I asked
about.
I, Mike Oliver, wrote:
> Guess: if p and q are distinct primes, then the only ring
> homomorphism from Z_p into Q_q is the constantly-zero function.
>
> At the moment I have no idea how to prove it; in fact, I don't
> even know how to prove that Q_p and Q_q aren't isomorphic.
OK, I have a partial answer. I have it on Knuth's authority
(Seminumerical Algorithms, section 4.1, problem 31) that there
is a square root of -7 in the 2-adics; in fact, in the answers
to exercises, he gives an algorithm for computing
sqrt(n) in the 2-adics whenever n = 2^k (mod 2^{k+3}) for
some k.
However there can be no sqrt(-7) in the 5-adics, because
-7 is not a quadratic residue mod 5 (more computationally,
observe that -7 = ...444433. But if the 5-adic number x
ends in 0, then x^2 ends in 0; if x ends in 1 then x^2 ends in 1;
2 gives 4, 3 gives 4, 4 gives 1 -- so you can't get 3 as the
last digit).
Thus there is no nontrivial ring homomorphism from Z_2 to Q_5.
(If 1 is not sent to 0, it must be sent to 1, which is
the only other solution of x^2=x; therefore the homomorphism
must fix the integers pointwise, so the image of -7 is -7).
So to answer the question in general, it may be enough to
generalize the algorithm that Knuth gives -- if it does
in fact generalize.
You call that a ring homomorphism? :-)
|At the moment I have no idea how to prove it; in fact, I don't
|even know how to prove that Q_p and Q_q aren't isomorphic.
The rational polynomials having roots in each are quite different. For
example (and various other proofs could no doubt be found), in order
for x^2-m=0 to have a p-adic root, where m is an integer, one must at
least have a solution to the congruence x^2-m=0 (mod p). On the other
hand, if p>2, p does not divide m, and x^2-m=0 (mod p), Hensel's lemma
ensures that x^2-m=0 has a root in Z_p. It also ensures that x^2-m=0
for integer m has a root in Z_2 when m=1 (mod 8). Thus for any
distinct primes p and q, there are m such that m has a p-adic integer
square root but no q-adic square root at all.
Sometimes people embed Q_p into a field called C_p which according to
the axiom of choice is isomorphic to the complex number field.
Keith Ramsay "Thou Shalt not hunt statistical significance with
kra...@aol.com a shotgun." --Michael Driscoll's 1st commandment
If they were, Q_p would have two discrete valuations (the p-adic
and the carry-over of the q-adic by the isomorphism); that's impossible
by Hensel's lemma.
@OK, I have a partial answer. I have it on Knuth's authority
@(Seminumerical Algorithms, section 4.1, problem 31) that there
@is a square root of -7 in the 2-adics; in fact, in the answers
@to exercises, he gives an algorithm for computing
@sqrt(n) in the 2-adics whenever n = 2^k (mod 2^{k+3}) for
@some k.
@
@However there can be no sqrt(-7) in the 5-adics, because
@-7 is not a quadratic residue mod 5 (more computationally,
@observe that -7 = ...444433. But if the 5-adic number x
@ends in 0, then x^2 ends in 0; if x ends in 1 then x^2 ends in 1;
@2 gives 4, 3 gives 4, 4 gives 1 -- so you can't get 3 as the
@last digit).
@
@Thus there is no nontrivial ring homomorphism from Z_2 to Q_5.
@(If 1 is not sent to 0, it must be sent to 1, which is
@the only other solution of x^2=x; therefore the homomorphism
@must fix the integers pointwise, so the image of -7 is -7).
@
@So to answer the question in general, it may be enough to
@generalize the algorithm that Knuth gives -- if it does
@in fact generalize.
For any x in Z, not a multiple of p^2 (odd prime p)
if x is a multiple of p, then x is not a square in Q_p; other-
wise, x is a square in Q_p if and only if x is a quadratic
residue mod p.
Ilias
This should not be hard to prove from quadratic reciprocity (see any
good Number Theory textbook), though it may be necessary to split the
proof into several cases. E.g., -1 has a square root if and only if
p is congruent to 1 mod 4.
Original message appended.
Gerry Myerson (ge...@mpce.mq.edu.au)
In article <365B0D21...@math.ucla.edu>, oli...@math.ucla.edu wrote:
=> I, Mike Oliver, wrote:
=> > Guess: if p and q are distinct primes, then the only ring
=> > homomorphism from Z_p into Q_q is the constantly-zero function.
=> >
=> > At the moment I have no idea how to prove it; in fact, I don't
=> > even know how to prove that Q_p and Q_q aren't isomorphic.
=>
=> OK, I have a partial answer. I have it on Knuth's authority
=> (Seminumerical Algorithms, section 4.1, problem 31) that there
=> is a square root of -7 in the 2-adics; in fact, in the answers
=> to exercises, he gives an algorithm for computing
=> sqrt(n) in the 2-adics whenever n = 2^k (mod 2^{k+3}) for
=> some k.
=>
=> However there can be no sqrt(-7) in the 5-adics, because
=> -7 is not a quadratic residue mod 5 (more computationally,
=> observe that -7 = ...444433. But if the 5-adic number x
=> ends in 0, then x^2 ends in 0; if x ends in 1 then x^2 ends in 1;
=> 2 gives 4, 3 gives 4, 4 gives 1 -- so you can't get 3 as the
=> last digit).
=>
=> Thus there is no nontrivial ring homomorphism from Z_2 to Q_5.
=> (If 1 is not sent to 0, it must be sent to 1, which is
=> the only other solution of x^2=x; therefore the homomorphism
=> must fix the integers pointwise, so the image of -7 is -7).
=>
=> So to answer the question in general, it may be enough to
=> generalize the algorithm that Knuth gives -- if it does
=> in fact generalize.
=>
=> --
=> Disclaimer: I could be wrong -- but I'm not. (Eagles, "Victim of Love")
=>
=> Finger for PGP public key, or visit http://www.math.ucla.edu/~oliver.
=> 1500 bits, fingerprint AE AE 4F F8 EA EA A6 FB E9 36 5F 9E EA D0 F8 B9
You're saying it's not? Next you'll be telling me that {0} isn't
a field, either.
On reflection, I think {0} is my favorite field; it has so
many marvelous properties. I'll list just a few:
0) The zero element is invertible.
0) The field is algebraically closed -- and the computational
algorithm for finding a root for a given polynomial has this,
shall I say, pristine purity about it.
0) In spite of being algebraically closed, the field is also
rigid--find me another field like that!
0) It's a great structure for nihilists.
Moreover, a number of recurring sci.math threads can be resolved,
or at least unified, by considering this field:
0) Here, one really *does* equal zero -- so all those "proofs"
were right!
0) 1/0 and 0/0 are both perfectly well defined.
0) The field has characteristic 1, which should put to rest
once and for all the question, "is 1 prime?".
(I note in passing that the theory of algebraically closed fields
of characteristic 1 is *extremely* categorical--any two models
are isomorphic *whether*or*not* they have the same cardinality.)
I modestly propose that any of the threads referenced above
should now go under one of the following two subjects:
{0} is too a field, you doofus!
or
It is not either a field, stupid!
--
"Nihilists! You can say what you want about the tenets of National
Socialism, but at least it's an ethos!" -- John Goodman's character in
"The Big Lebowski"
I think you can argue as follows:
if f is a ring isomorphism (of rings with units) between them,
then it must send the maximal subrings to each other and must
send p to p. However one of the maximal subrings is invariant
under multiplication by p and the other is not.
Tom Ward
UEA
Very soothing, isn't it. It fits the Buddha's remark, "void is form,
form is void".
|I'll list just a few:
|
|0) The zero element is invertible.
That would answer the periodic concerns over why we don't permit
division by zero.
|0) The field is algebraically closed
...
0) {0} has a decidable theory so Goedel incompleteness isn't a worry.
0) Both 0^0=1 and 0^0=0 are correct, which puts that argument to rest.
0) No more pesky inequalities to deal with.
0) 0 can always be integrated in closed form.
0) You won't get the wrong answer in a multiple choice test about {0}.
0) Every element of {0} is a palindrome.
0) {0} is Noetherian: only one ideal.
0) {0} is Artinian: only one ideal.
0) {0} is a P.I.D.: only one ideal, generated by 0.
0) It is easy to apply the Euclidean algorithm in {0}.
0) The spectrum of {0} was our favorite scheme, in algebraic geometry
class: no points, and just one section of the structure sheaf, 0,
which is defined globally.