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In mathematics, the Levi-Civita field, named after
Tullio Levi-Civita Tullio Levi-Civita, (, ; 29 March 1873 – 29 December 1941) was an Italian mathematician, most famous for his work on absolute differential calculus (tensor calculus) and its applications to the theory of relativity, but who also made significa ...
, is a
non-Archimedean ordered field In mathematics, a non-Archimedean ordered field is an ordered field that does not satisfy the Archimedean property. Examples are the Levi-Civita field, the hyperreal numbers, the surreal numbers, the Dehn field, and the field of rational functions ...
; i.e., a system of numbers containing infinite and
infinitesimal In mathematics, an infinitesimal number is a quantity that is closer to zero than any standard real number, but that is not zero. The word ''infinitesimal'' comes from a 17th-century Modern Latin coinage ''infinitesimus'', which originally referr ...
quantities. Each member a can be constructed as a formal series of the form : a = \sum_ a_q\varepsilon^q , where a_q are real numbers, \mathbb is the set of
rational number In mathematics, a rational number is a number that can be expressed as the quotient or fraction of two integers, a numerator and a non-zero denominator . For example, is a rational number, as is every integer (e.g. ). The set of all ration ...
s, and \varepsilon is to be interpreted as a positive infinitesimal. The
support Support may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media * Supporting character Business and finance * Support (technical analysis) * Child support * Customer support * Income Support Construction * Support (structure), or lateral support, a ...
of a, i.e., the set of indices of the nonvanishing coefficients \, must be a left-finite set: for any member of \mathbb, there are only finitely many members of the set less than it; this restriction is necessary in order to make multiplication and division well defined and unique. The ordering is defined according to the dictionary ordering of the list of coefficients, which is equivalent to the assumption that \varepsilon is an infinitesimal. The
real number In mathematics, a real number is a number that can be used to measure a ''continuous'' one-dimensional quantity such as a distance, duration or temperature. Here, ''continuous'' means that values can have arbitrarily small variations. Every real ...
s are embedded in this field as series in which all of the coefficients vanish except a_0.


Examples

* 7\varepsilon is an infinitesimal that is greater than \varepsilon, but less than every positive real number. * \varepsilon^2 is less than \varepsilon, and is also less than r\varepsilon for any positive real r. * 1+\varepsilon differs infinitesimally from 1. * \varepsilon^ is greater than \varepsilon, but still less than every positive real number. * 1/\varepsilon is greater than any real number. * 1+\varepsilon+\frac\varepsilon^2+\cdots+\frac\varepsilon^n+\cdots is interpreted as e^\varepsilon. * 1+\varepsilon + 2\varepsilon^2 + \cdots + n!\varepsilon^n + \cdots is a valid member of the field, because the series is to be construed formally, without any consideration of
convergence Convergence may refer to: Arts and media Literature *''Convergence'' (book series), edited by Ruth Nanda Anshen * "Convergence" (comics), two separate story lines published by DC Comics: **A four-part crossover storyline that united the four Wei ...
.


Definition of the field operations and positive cone

If f=\sum \limits_f_q \varepsilon^q and g=\sum \limits_g_q \varepsilon^q are two Levi-Civita series, then * their sum f+g is the pointwise sum f+g:=\sum \limits_(f_q+g_q) \varepsilon^q. * their product fg is the Cauchy product fg:=\sum \limits_\sum \limits_(f_ag_b) \varepsilon^q. (One can check that the support of this series is left-finite and that for each of its elements q, the set \ is finite, so the product is well defined.) * the relation 0 holds if f\neq 0 (i.e. f has non-empty support) and the least non-zero coefficient of f is strictly positive. Equipped with those operations and order, the Levi-Civita field is indeed an ordered field extension of \mathbb where the series \varepsilon is a positive infinitesimal.


Properties and applications

The Levi-Civita field is real-closed, meaning that it can be
algebraically closed In mathematics, a field is algebraically closed if every non-constant polynomial in (the univariate polynomial ring with coefficients in ) has a root in . Examples As an example, the field of real numbers is not algebraically closed, because ...
by adjoining an
imaginary unit The imaginary unit or unit imaginary number () is a solution to the quadratic equation x^2+1=0. Although there is no real number with this property, can be used to extend the real numbers to what are called complex numbers, using addition an ...
(''i''), or by letting the coefficients be
complex Complex commonly refers to: * Complexity, the behaviour of a system whose components interact in multiple ways so possible interactions are difficult to describe ** Complex system, a system composed of many components which may interact with each ...
. It is rich enough to allow a significant amount of analysis to be done, but its elements can still be represented on a computer in the same sense that real numbers can be represented using
floating point In computing, floating-point arithmetic (FP) is arithmetic that represents real numbers approximately, using an integer with a fixed precision, called the significand, scaled by an integer exponent of a fixed base. For example, 12.345 can be ...
. It is the basis of
automatic differentiation In mathematics and computer algebra, automatic differentiation (AD), also called algorithmic differentiation, computational differentiation, auto-differentiation, or simply autodiff, is a set of techniques to evaluate the derivative of a function ...
, a way to perform differentiation in cases that are intractable by symbolic differentiation or finite-difference methods.Khodr Shamseddine, Martin Berz
Analysis on the Levi-Civita Field: A Brief Overview
, ''Contemporary Mathematics'', 508 pp 215-237 (2010)
The Levi-Civita field is also
Cauchy complete In mathematical analysis, a metric space is called complete (or a Cauchy space) if every Cauchy sequence of points in has a limit that is also in . Intuitively, a space is complete if there are no "points missing" from it (inside or at the boun ...
, meaning that relativizing the \forall \exists\forall definitions of Cauchy sequence and convergent sequence to sequences of Levi-Civita series, each Cauchy sequence in the field converges. Equivalently, it has no proper dense ordered field extension. As an ordered field, it has a natural valuation given by the rational exponent corresponding to the first non zero coefficient of a Levi-Civita series. The valuation ring is that of series bounded by real numbers, the residue field is \mathbb, and the value group is (\mathbb,+). The resulting valued field is
Henselian In mathematics, a Henselian ring (or Hensel ring) is a local ring in which Hensel's lemma holds. They were introduced by , who named them after Kurt Hensel. Azumaya originally allowed Henselian rings to be non-commutative, but most authors now res ...
(being real closed with a convex valuation ring) but not
spherically complete In mathematics, a field ''K'' with an absolute value is called spherically complete if the intersection of every decreasing sequence of balls (in the sense of the metric induced by the absolute value) is nonempty: :B_1\supseteq B_2\supseteq \cdo ...
. Indeed, the field of
Hahn series In mathematics, Hahn series (sometimes also known as Hahn–Mal'cev–Neumann series) are a type of formal infinite series. They are a generalization of Puiseux series (themselves a generalization of formal power series) and were first introduced ...
with real coefficients and value group (\mathbb,+) is a proper immediate extension, containing series such as 1+\varepsilon^+\varepsilon^+\varepsilon^+\varepsilon^+\cdots which are not in the Levi-Civita field.


Relations to other ordered fields

The Levi-Civita field is the Cauchy-completion of the field \mathbb of
Puiseux series In mathematics, Puiseux series are a generalization of power series that allow for negative and fractional exponents of the indeterminate. For example, the series : \begin x^ &+ 2x^ + x^ + 2x^ + x^ + x^5 + \cdots\\ &=x^+ 2x^ + x^ + 2x^ + x^ + ...
over the field of real numbers, that is, it is a dense extension of \mathbb without proper dense extension. Here is a list of some of its notable proper subfields and its proper ordered field extensions:


Notable subfields

* The field \mathbb of real numbers. * The field \mathbb(\varepsilon) of fractions of real polynomials with infinitesimal positive indeterminate \varepsilon. * The field \mathbb((\varepsilon)) of
formal Laurent series In mathematics, a formal series is an infinite sum that is considered independently from any notion of convergence, and can be manipulated with the usual algebraic operations on series (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, partial sums ...
over \mathbb. * The field \mathbb of Puiseux series over \mathbb.


Notable extensions

* The field \mathbb \varepsilon^ of Hahn series with real coefficients and rational exponents. * The field \mathbb^ of logarithmic-exponential transseries. * The field \mathbf(\varepsilon_0) of
surreal numbers In mathematics, the surreal number system is a totally ordered proper class containing the real numbers as well as infinite and infinitesimal numbers, respectively larger or smaller in absolute value than any positive real number. The surreals s ...
with birthdate below the first \varepsilon-number \varepsilon_0. * Fields of hyperreal numbers constructed as ultrapowers of \mathbb modulo a free ultrafilter on \mathbb (although here the embeddings are not canonical).


References


External links


A web-based calculator for Levi-Civita numbers
{{Infinitesimals Field (mathematics) Infinity