Exponential field
In mathematics, an exponential field is a field with a further unary operation that is a homomorphism from the field's additive group to its multiplicative group. This generalizes the usual idea of exponentiation on the real numbers, where the base is a chosen positive real number.
Definition
A field is an algebraic structure composed of a set of elements, F, two binary operations, addition such that F forms an abelian group with identity 0F and multiplication, such that F excluding 0F forms an abelian group under multiplication with identity 1F, and such that multiplication is distributive over addition, that is for any elements a, b, c in F, one has. If there is also a function E that maps F into F, and such that for every a and b in F one hasthen F is called an exponential field, and the function E is called an exponential function on F. Thus an exponential function on a field is a homomorphism between the additive group of F and its multiplicative group.
Trivial exponential function
There is a trivial exponential function on any field, namely the map that sends every element to the identity element of the field under multiplication. Thus every field is trivially also an exponential field, so the cases of interest to mathematicians occur when the exponential function is non-trivial.Exponential fields are sometimes required to have characteristic zero as the only exponential function on a field with nonzero characteristic is the trivial one. To see this first note that for any element x in a field with characteristic p > 0,
Hence, taking into account the Frobenius endomorphism,
And so E = 1 for every x.
Examples
- The field of real numbers R, or as it may be written to highlight that we are considering it purely as a field with addition, multiplication, and special constants zero and one, has infinitely many exponential functions. One such function is the usual exponential function, that is, since we have and, as required. Considering the ordered field R equipped with this function gives the ordered real exponential field, denoted.
- Any real number gives an exponential function on R, where the map satisfies the required properties.
- Analogously to the real exponential field, there is the complex exponential field,.
- Boris Zilber constructed an exponential field Kexp that, crucially, satisfies the equivalent formulation of Schanuel's conjecture with the field's exponential function. It is conjectured that this exponential field is actually Cexp, and a proof of this fact would thus prove Schanuel's conjecture.
Exponential rings
The underlying set F may not be required to be a field but instead allowed to simply be a ring, R, and concurrently the exponential function is relaxed to be a homomorphism from the additive group in R to the multiplicative group of units in R. The resulting object is called an exponential ring.An example of an exponential ring with a nontrivial exponential function is the ring of integers Z equipped with the function E which takes the value +1 at even integers and −1 at odd integers, i.e., the function This exponential function, and the trivial one, are the only two functions on Z that satisfy the conditions.