The document discusses visual representations of p-adic numbers. It introduces p-adic numbers and how they were first defined by Kurt Hensel in 1897. P-adic numbers can be expressed as expansions using a prime number p, with digits between 0 and p-1. This allows defining a p-adic metric and norm. Examples show how numbers can be expressed in p-adic expansions and how the value of -1 can be represented as an infinite repeating decimal. Trees and Sierpinski triangles are presented as ways to visualize the p-adic integers.
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Slide Ve So Padic
The document discusses visual representations of p-adic numbers. It introduces p-adic numbers and how they were first defined by Kurt Hensel in 1897. P-adic numbers can be expressed as expansions using a prime number p, with digits between 0 and p-1. This allows defining a p-adic metric and norm. Examples show how numbers can be expressed in p-adic expansions and how the value of -1 can be represented as an infinite repeating decimal. Trees and Sierpinski triangles are presented as ways to visualize the p-adic integers.
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Visual Representations of
p-adic Numbers Mark Pedigo Saint Louis University
Visual Representations of p-adic Numbers – p. 1/17
Introducing p-adic numbers (1897) The p-adic numbers were first introduced by Kurt Hensel.
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Introducing p-adic numbers (1897) The p-adic numbers were first introduced by Kurt Hensel. He used them to bring the methods of power series into number theory.
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Introducing p-adic numbers (1897) The p-adic numbers were first introduced by Kurt Hensel. He used them to bring the methods of power series into number theory. p-adic Analysis is now a subject in its own right.
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The p-adic norm Given q ∈ Q, write q = ab · pn for a, b, n ∈ Z, where the prime p divides neither a nor b.
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The p-adic norm Given q ∈ Q, write q = ab · pn for a, b, n ∈ Z, where the prime p divides neither a nor b. p-adic norm
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The p-adic norm Given q ∈ Q, write q = ab · pn for a, b, n ∈ Z, where the prime p divides neither a nor b. p-adic norm If q 6= 0, |q|p = | ab · pn |p = 1 pn
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The p-adic norm Given q ∈ Q, write q = ab · pn for a, b, n ∈ Z, where the prime p divides neither a nor b. p-adic norm If q 6= 0, |q|p = | ab · pn |p = 1 pn |0|p = 0
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p-adic norm examples Examples
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Visual Representations of p-adic Numbers – p. 4/17
The p-adic metric Basic idea: Two points are “close” if their difference is divisible by a large power of a prime p
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The p-adic metric Basic idea: Two points are “close” if their difference is divisible by a large power of a prime p d(x, y) = |x − y|p
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The p-adic metric Basic idea: Two points are “close” if their difference is divisible by a large power of a prime p d(x, y) = |x − y|p Example. 7-adic metric: d(2, 51) < d(1, 2)
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The p-adic metric Basic idea: Two points are “close” if their difference is divisible by a large power of a prime p d(x, y) = |x − y|p Example. 7-adic metric: d(2, 51) < d(1, 2) d(2, 51) = |51 − 2|7 = |49|7 = |72 |7 = 712 = 1 49
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The p-adic metric Basic idea: Two points are “close” if their difference is divisible by a large power of a prime p d(x, y) = |x − y|p Example. 7-adic metric: d(2, 51) < d(1, 2) d(2, 51) = |51 − 2|7 = |49|7 = |72 |7 = 712 = 1 49 1 1 d(1, 2) = |2 − 1|7 = |1|7 = |70 |7 = 70 = 1 =1
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p-adic expansions p-adic P∞ expansion of any q ∈ Q: q = k=n ak pk for some n ∈ Z, ak ∈ 0, 1, . . . , p − 1 for each k ≥ n.
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p-adic expansions p-adic P∞ expansion of any q ∈ Q: q = k=n ak pk for some n ∈ Z, ak ∈ 0, 1, . . . , p − 1 for each k ≥ n. We sometimes denote q by its digits; i.e., q = a1 a2 a3 . . . ar
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p-adic expansions p-adic P∞ expansion of any q ∈ Q: q = k=n ak pk for some n ∈ Z, ak ∈ 0, 1, . . . , p − 1 for each k ≥ n. We sometimes denote q by its digits; i.e., q = a1 a2 a3 . . . ar This means that the digits are represented “backwards”
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Example of a p-adic expansion When p = 5, 23.41 = 2 · 5−2 + 3 · 5−1 + 4 · 50 + 1 · 51 2 = 25 + 53 + 4 + 5 = 9 17 25 = 242 25
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Convergence and the value of -1 Claim. Under the 3-adic metric, −1 = .222222...
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Visual Representations of p-adic Numbers – p. 8/17
p-adic Numbers Definition Every rational number - expressible as a p-adic expansion
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p-adic Numbers Definition Every rational number - expressible as a p-adic expansion Not every p-adic expansion is a rational number
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p-adic Numbers Definition Every rational number - expressible as a p-adic expansion Not every p-adic expansion is a rational number Qp , the field of p-adic numbers: every p-adic expansion
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A Tree for Z3 Z3 = integers in Q3
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A Tree for Z3 Z3 = integers in Q3 A tree representation of Z3
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A Tree Path for -1
Figure 1: The path of −1 = .22222... in the tree
representation of Z3 Visual Representations of p-adic Numbers – p. 11/17 Sierpinski Triangle
Visual Representations of p-adic Numbers – p. 12/17
S3,n : replace each triangular region T with three smaller triangles
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Generalizing the Sierpinski Triangle S3,n : replace each triangular region T with three smaller triangles S3 = ∪∞ n=1 S3,n
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Construction of S3
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Z3 and S3
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Albert A. Cuoco. Visualizing the p-adic integers. Amer. Math. Monthly, 98:355–364, 1991
Fernando Q. Gouvea. p-adic Numbers, An
Introduction, Second Edition. Springer, 1991
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Jan E. Holly. Pictures of ultrametric spaces, the p-adic numbers, and valued fields. Amer. Math. Monthly, 108(8):721–728, 2001
Jan E. Holly. Canonical forms for definable
subsets of algebraically closed and real closed valued fields. J. Symbolic Logic, 60:843–860, 1995
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