-1

What is the multiplicative inverse of $1 + \epsilon$, in the ordered field of hyperreals or surreals?

Simple algebra shows it must be equal $1-\epsilon+\epsilon^2-\epsilon^3+\epsilon^4...$ But how do we prove that that number exists as a hyperreal or surreal?

If it does exist, is it realizable as a finite set of arithmetic operations on $\mathbb{R} + \epsilon$?

If not, how do we characterize the hyperreal or surreal numbers that are not realizable as such? And what symbols are customarily used for them (or why do they not have common symbols)?

If we simply take the ordered field of reals and introduce $\epsilon$, all the standard surreal numbers follow (e.g. $\omega$, e.g. $2\epsilon$, e.g. $1+\epsilon$, etc.), but I don't see how to prove that the infinite sum above exists as a hyperreal or surreal.

A similar question can be asked for $\frac{1}{1-\epsilon} = 1 + \epsilon + \epsilon^2 + \epsilon^3...$


UPDATE $\epsilon$ is the most basic infinitesimal, greater than zero but less than any real. In surreal numbers, it's $(\{0\},\{1,1/2,1/4,1/8/1/16,1/32...\})$.

$\frac{1}{1 +\epsilon} \ne 1 - \epsilon$, because $(1+\epsilon) * (1 - \epsilon) = 1 - \epsilon^2 $. It must be slightly greater than $(1 - \epsilon)$ , but the difference is less than $\epsilon^2$.

Another way to ask this is: $d = 1 - \frac{1}{1 +\epsilon}$.

$\epsilon^2 < d < \epsilon$. Is there a way to characterize $d$ and it's size compared to $\epsilon$?

SRobertJames
  • 6,117
  • 1
  • 12
  • 40
  • 3
    The hyperreals and surreals are totally different and you should not ask about them both in the same question. In any case you seem to have some very serious misunderstandings about how both the hyperreals and surreals are defined which makes your question not make a lot of sense. I would suggest you try reading about how they are actually defined. – Eric Wofsey Apr 26 '20 at 04:41
  • 2
    Another way to put it is, you might as well just ask "what are the hyperreal and surreal numbers?", because it's clear that you don't know the answer to that question, and won't understand any answer that addresses what you've written without first learning the answer to that question (and once you have learned the answer to that question, addressing your concerns is relatively trivial). – Eric Wofsey Apr 26 '20 at 04:49
  • @EricWofsey I understand that the hyperreals and surreals are different. I'm looking for the construction of 1/(1+eps) in either or both. Showing that would be more helpful than ad hominem comments which amount to You're too ignorant to ask a question. – SRobertJames Apr 26 '20 at 04:52
  • 3
    What is $\epsilon$? – nombre Apr 26 '20 at 11:31
  • If $\epsilon$ is infinitesimal, as I think you mean it to be, then $1+\epsilon$ is arbitrarily close to $1.$ Then the reciprocal is also $1,$ for all intents and purposes. Your series development also shows this. – Allawonder Apr 26 '20 at 18:23
  • @Allawonder, not in surreals or hyperreals, which admit infinitesimal numbers. I updated the question to clarify. – SRobertJames Apr 26 '20 at 18:34
  • @SRobertJames That's true. I was doing calculus already (linear approximations, LoL!) But of course its reciprocal is just $1/(1+\epsilon).$ – Allawonder Apr 26 '20 at 19:29
  • Your new edit seems to have one or more typos in the algebra. You have written $d<d$, for instance. Certainly $1/(1+\epsilon)-(1-\epsilon)<\epsilon^2,\epsilon^2-\epsilon^3+\epsilon^4,\ldots$. It seems like the answers to most of your questions might just come from careful algebra and series expansions, and not need the hyperreals or surreals at all. – Mark S. Apr 26 '20 at 19:44

2 Answers2

4

Hyperreals

What is the multiplicative inverse of $1+\epsilon$ in the ordered field of hyperreals?

I assume we're talking about Robinson's Hyperreals (not more general hyperreal fields) being created via an ultrapower construction.

For those unfamiliar, the basic idea behind of the construction isn't too complicated. I like Terry Tao's voting analogy. A hyperreal is a sequence of reals (well, an equivalence class of sequences) that vote each time you ask about a property (like "are you bigger than 5?"). How to determine which infinite collections of voters count as good majorities is handled by some technical stuff, but you don't have to worry about that to get the idea.

I assume that by $\epsilon$, the OP meant the following equivalence class: $[(1,\frac12,\frac13,\frac14,\ldots)]$. Then $1+\epsilon$ is $[(2,\frac32,\frac43,\frac54,\ldots)]$ and its reciprocal $\dfrac{1}{1+\epsilon}$ is $[(\frac12,\frac23,\frac34,\ldots)]$. It is "realizable as a finite set of arithmetic operations" in that it equals $1/(1+\epsilon)$.


Surreals

What is the multiplicative inverse of $1+\epsilon$ in the ordered field of surreals?

The surreals don't fit in a set (the collection of surreals is a proper class) so in some contexts people would not call the surreals an ordered field.

I assume that by $\epsilon$, the OP meant the following surreal: $\{0\mid 1,\frac12,\frac13,\frac14,\ldots\}$. Then $1+\epsilon$ is $\{1\mid 2,\frac32,\frac43,\frac54,\ldots\}$. Its reciprocal $\dfrac{1}{1+\epsilon}$ is not $\{\frac12,\frac23,\frac34,\ldots\mid1\}=1-\epsilon$. It's actually a bit of a pain to write down from first principles (see (5.28) of Surreal Numbers - An Introduction), but I think it might be equal to $\{1-\epsilon,1-\epsilon+\epsilon^2-\epsilon^3\ldots\mid1,1-\epsilon+\epsilon^2\ldots\}$.

It is "realizable as a finite set of arithmetic operations" in that it equals $1/(1+\epsilon)$.


Other Comments

If we simply take the ordered field of reals and introduce $\epsilon$, I don't see how to prove that the infinite sum above exists as a hyperreal or surreal.

What do you mean by "introduce"? The hyperreals and surreals, whatever your definitions, are known to act like fields, so division exists. As discussed above, there are even explicit ways to build a representative of a reciprocal for both. No infinite sum is required.

If we simply take the ordered field of reals and introduce $\epsilon$, all the standard surreal numbers follow (e.g. $\omega$, e.g. $2\omega$, e.g. $1+\epsilon$, etc.)

If all you do is "introduce" $\epsilon$ and allow arithmetic operations including division, then you only get what one might call the ordered field of rational functions, which doesn't have enough weird elements to be an example of Robinson's hyperreals, let alone the not-set-sized surreals.

Mark S.
  • 25,893
  • 1
    "so in some contexts people would not call the surreals an ordered field." Indeed, many people call such a construct a Field (with uppercase) :) – Wojowu Apr 26 '20 at 15:05
  • Wow. In the hyperreals, is 1/(1+eps) = 1 - eps (which is what I think that sequence is)? And, in general, where does 1/(1+eps) fit on the number line? I believe I have an intuitive sense of where the various infinitesimals go, but am not sure where this one is. – SRobertJames Apr 26 '20 at 18:27
  • 3
    @SRobertJames No. In the hyperreals, $1-\epsilon=[(0,1/2,2/3,\ldots)]<[(1/2,2/3,\ldots)]=1/(1+\epsilon)$ since $0<1/2$,$1/2<2/3$, etc. This inequality has nothing to do with the hyperreals/surreals in particular - it's just algebra: $(1-\epsilon)(1+\epsilon)=1-\epsilon^2<1$, so dividing both sides by the positive $1+\epsilon$ we get $1-\epsilon<1/(1+\epsilon)$. Understanding where $1/(1+\epsilon)$ fits on the number line, in any ordered field, comes from your series: It's less than $1$, more then $1-\epsilon$, less than $1-\epsilon+\epsilon^2$, more than $1-\epsilon+\epsilon^2-\epsilon^3$, etc – Mark S. Apr 26 '20 at 19:20
  • 1
    If the downvoter would like to explain their concern, I would be happy to try to address it. – Mark S. Apr 27 '20 at 00:26
2

A few comments:

In the field $\mathbf{No}$ of surreal numbers, there is one simplest, or first born number $\epsilon$ which is positive and smaller than all positive real numbers (i.e. positive and infinitesimal), and it is presented as you wrote.

In a field of hyperreal numbers, there are no distinguished positive infinitesimals, and there is nothing special about any hyperreal number represented by this or that sequence in a ultrapower of $\mathbb{R}$.


In fields of hyperreal numbers and in $\mathbf{No}$, for any positive infinitesimal $\varepsilon$, the sequence $(\sum \limits_{k=0}^n (-\varepsilon)^k)_{n \in \mathbb{N}}$ does not converge in the order topology, so the expression $1-\varepsilon + \varepsilon^2+\cdot\cdot\cdot$ does not make sense as a limit. In those fields, there are infinitely many numbers $x$ which satisfy $1-\varepsilon,1-\varepsilon+\varepsilon^2-\varepsilon^3,\cdot\cdot\cdot<x<\cdot\cdot\cdot,1-\varepsilon+\varepsilon^2,1$. Again in fields of hyperreal numbers, there is no reason to distinguish between two such numbers. However $(1+\varepsilon)^{-1}$ is one of those. In $\mathbf{No}$, one can consider the simplest one $x_{\varepsilon}$. As Mark S. wrote, we have $x_{\epsilon}=(1+\epsilon)^{-1}$. But in general, say for $\varepsilon=\epsilon +\frac{1}{\omega^{\omega}}$, you have $x_{\varepsilon}=x_{\epsilon}$, so $x_{\varepsilon}\neq(1+\varepsilon)^{-1}$.


Now there is a more intricate notion of sum of infinite families in $\mathbf{No}$, and this notion makes sense of $1-\varepsilon + \varepsilon^2+\cdot\cdot\cdot$ whenever $\varepsilon$ is infinitesimal. With that definition of sum, you have indeed $1-\varepsilon + \varepsilon^2+\cdot\cdot\cdot=(1+\varepsilon)^{-1}$. For more information, look up Hahn series fields and summable families in Hahn series fields, knowing that $\mathbf{No}$ is a Hahn series field.


Finally, if $F$ is an ordered field containing $\mathbb{R}$ and $\iota \in F$ is positive and infinitesimal, then there is no finite algebraic expression for $(1+\varepsilon)^{-1}$ in $F$ if by that you mean a polynomial $P \in \mathbb{R}[X]$ with $P(\iota)=(1+\iota)^{-1}$. In fact $\iota$ is transcendent over $\mathbb{R}$, because given $Q \in \mathbb{R}[X]$ irreducible, you have $Q(\iota)=Q(0)+\iota'$ for some infinitesimal $\iota'$. By irreducibility $Q(0)$ is a non zero real number, so $Q(\iota)\neq 0$.

nombre
  • 5,295
  • 17
  • 28