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Construction of the real numbers

In mathematics, there are several equivalent ways of defining the real numbers. One of them is that they form a complete ordered field that does not contain any smaller complete ordered field. Such a definition does not prove that such a complete ordered field exists, and the existence proof consists of constructing a mathematical structure that satisfies the definition.

The article presents several such constructions.[1] They are equivalent in the sense that, given the result of any two such constructions, there is a unique isomorphism of ordered field between them. This results from the above definition and is independent of particular constructions. These isomorphisms allow identifying the results of the constructions, and, in practice, to forget which construction has been chosen.

Axiomatic definitions edit

An axiomatic definition of the real numbers consists of defining them as the elements of a complete ordered field.[2][3][4] This means the following: The real numbers form a set, commonly denoted  , containing two distinguished elements denoted 0 and 1, and on which are defined two binary operations and one binary relation; the operations are called addition and multiplication of real numbers and denoted respectively with + and ×; the binary relation is inequality, denoted   Moreover, the following properties called axioms must be satisfied.

The existence of such a structure is a theorem, which is proved by constructing such a structure. A consequence of the axioms is that this structure is unique up to an isomorphism, and thus, the real numbers can be used and manipulated, without referring to the method of construction.

Axioms edit

  1.   is a field under addition and multiplication. In other words,
    • For all x, y, and z in  , x + (y + z) = (x + y) + z and x × (y × z) = (x × y) × z. (associativity of addition and multiplication)
    • For all x and y in  , x + y = y + x and x × y = y × x. (commutativity of addition and multiplication)
    • For all x, y, and z in  , x × (y + z) = (x × y) + (x × z). (distributivity of multiplication over addition)
    • For all x in  , x + 0 = x. (existence of additive identity)
    • 0 is not equal to 1, and for all x in  , x × 1 = x. (existence of multiplicative identity)
    • For every x in  , there exists an element −x in  , such that x + (−x) = 0. (existence of additive inverses)
    • For every x ≠ 0 in  , there exists an element x−1 in  , such that x × x−1 = 1. (existence of multiplicative inverses)
  2.   is totally ordered for  . In other words,
    • For all x in  , xx. (reflexivity)
    • For all x and y in  , if xy and yx, then x = y. (antisymmetry)
    • For all x, y, and z in  , if xy and yz, then xz. (transitivity)
    • For all x and y in  , xy or yx. (totality)
  3. Addition and multiplication are compatible with the order. In other words,
    • For all x, y and z in  , if xy, then x + zy + z. (preservation of order under addition)
    • For all x and y in  , if 0 ≤ x and 0 ≤ y, then 0 ≤ x × y (preservation of order under multiplication)
  4. The order ≤ is complete in the following sense: every non-empty subset of   that is bounded above has a least upper bound. In other words,
    • If A is a non-empty subset of  , and if A has an upper bound in   then A has a least upper bound u, such that for every upper bound v of A, uv.

On the least upper bound property edit

Axiom 4, which requires the order to be Dedekind-complete, implies the Archimedean property.

The axiom is crucial in the characterization of the reals. For example, the totally ordered field of the rational numbers Q satisfy the first three axioms, but not the fourth. In other words, models of the rational numbers are also models of the first three axioms.

Note that the axiom is nonfirstorderizable, as it expresses a statement about collections of reals and not just individual such numbers. As such, the reals are not given by a first-order logic theory.

On models edit

A model of real numbers is a mathematical structure that satisfies the above axioms. Several models are given below. Any two models are isomorphic; so, the real numbers are unique up to isomorphisms.

Saying that any two models are isomorphic means that for any two models   and   there is a bijection   that preserves both the field operations and the order. Explicitly,

  • f is both injective and surjective.
  • f(0) = 0S and f(1) = 1S.
  • f(x + y) = f(x) +S f(y) and f(x × y) = f(x) ×S f(y), for all x and y in  
  • x y if and only if f(x) ≤S f(y), for all x and y in  

Tarski's axiomatization of the reals edit

An alternative synthetic axiomatization of the real numbers and their arithmetic was given by Alfred Tarski, consisting of only the 8 axioms shown below and a mere four primitive notions: a set called the real numbers, denoted  , a binary relation over   called order, denoted by the infix operator <, a binary operation over   called addition, denoted by the infix operator +, and the constant 1.

Axioms of order (primitives:  , <):

Axiom 1. If x < y, then not y < x. That is, "<" is an asymmetric relation.

Axiom 2. If x < z, there exists a y such that x < y and y < z. In other words, "<" is dense in  .

Axiom 3. "<" is Dedekind-complete. More formally, for all XY ⊆  , if for all x ∈ X and y ∈ Y, x < y, then there exists a z such that for all x ∈ X and y ∈ Y, if z ≠ x and z ≠ y, then x < z and z < y.

To clarify the above statement somewhat, let X ⊆   and Y ⊆  . We now define two common English verbs in a particular way that suits our purpose:

X precedes Y if and only if for every x ∈ X and every y ∈ Y, x < y.
The real number z separates X and Y if and only if for every x ∈ X with x ≠ z and every y ∈ Y with y ≠ z, x < z and z < y.

Axiom 3 can then be stated as:

"If a set of reals precedes another set of reals, then there exists at least one real number separating the two sets."

Axioms of addition (primitives:  , <, +):

Axiom 4. x + (y + z) = (x + z) + y.

Axiom 5. For all x, y, there exists a z such that x + z = y.

Axiom 6. If x + y < z + w, then x < z or y < w.

Axioms for one (primitives:  , <, +, 1):

Axiom 7. 1 ∈  .

Axiom 8. 1 < 1 + 1.

These axioms imply that   is a linearly ordered abelian group under addition with distinguished element 1.   is also Dedekind-complete and divisible.

Explicit constructions of models edit

We shall not prove that any models of the axioms are isomorphic. Such a proof can be found in any number of modern analysis or set theory textbooks. We will sketch the basic definitions and properties of a number of constructions, however, because each of these is important for both mathematical and historical reasons. The first three, due to Georg Cantor/Charles Méray, Richard Dedekind/Joseph Bertrand and Karl Weierstrass all occurred within a few years of each other. Each has advantages and disadvantages. A major motivation in all three cases was the instruction of mathematics students.

Construction from Cauchy sequences edit

A standard procedure to force all Cauchy sequences in a metric space to converge is adding new points to the metric space in a process called completion.

  is defined as the completion of Q with respect to the metric |x-y|, as will be detailed below (for completions of Q with respect to other metrics, see p-adic numbers).

Let R be the set of Cauchy sequences of rational numbers. That is, sequences

x1, x2, x3,...

of rational numbers such that for every rational ε > 0, there exists an integer N such that for all natural numbers m,n > N, |xmxn| < ε. Here the vertical bars denote the absolute value.

Cauchy sequences (xn) and (yn) can be added and multiplied as follows:

(xn) + (yn) = (xn + yn)
(xn) × (yn) = (xn × yn).

Two Cauchy sequences are called equivalent if and only if the difference between them tends to zero. This defines an equivalence relation that is compatible with the operations defined above, and the set R of all equivalence classes can be shown to satisfy all axioms of the real numbers. We can embed Q into R by identifying the rational number r with the equivalence class of the sequence (r,r,r, …).

Comparison between real numbers is obtained by defining the following comparison between Cauchy sequences: (xn) ≥ (yn) if and only if x is equivalent to y or there exists an integer N such that xnyn for all n > N.

By construction, every real number x is represented by a Cauchy sequence of rational numbers. This representation is far from unique; every rational sequence that converges to x is a representation of x. This reflects the observation that one can often use different sequences to approximate the same real number.[5]

The only real number axiom that does not follow easily from the definitions is the completeness of ≤, i.e. the least upper bound property. It can be proved as follows: Let S be a non-empty subset of R and U be an upper bound for S. Substituting a larger value if necessary, we may assume U is rational. Since S is non-empty, we can choose a rational number L such that L < s for some s in S. Now define sequences of rationals (un) and (ln) as follows:

Set u0 = U and l0 = L.

For each n consider the number:

mn = (un + ln)/2

If mn is an upper bound for S set:

un+1 = mn and ln+1 = ln

Otherwise set:

ln+1 = mn and un+1 = un

This defines two Cauchy sequences of rationals, and so we have real numbers l = (ln) and u = (un). It is easy to prove, by induction on n that:

un is an upper bound for S for all n

and:

ln is never an upper bound for S for any n

Thus u is an upper bound for S. To see that it is a least upper bound, notice that the limit of (un − ln) is 0, and so l = u. Now suppose b < u = l is a smaller upper bound for S. Since (ln) is monotonic increasing it is easy to see that b < ln for some n. But ln is not an upper bound for S and so neither is b. Hence u is a least upper bound for S and ≤ is complete.

The usual decimal notation can be translated to Cauchy sequences in a natural way. For example, the notation π = 3.1415... means that π is the equivalence class of the Cauchy sequence (3, 3.1, 3.14, 3.141, 3.1415, ...). The equation 0.999... = 1 states that the sequences (0, 0.9, 0.99, 0.999,...) and (1, 1, 1, 1,...) are equivalent, i.e., their difference converges to 0.

An advantage of constructing R as the completion of Q is that this construction is not specific to one example; it is used for other metric spaces as well.

Construction by Dedekind cuts edit

 
Dedekind used his cut to construct the irrational, real numbers.

A Dedekind cut in an ordered field is a partition of it, (A, B), such that A is nonempty and closed downwards, B is nonempty and closed upwards, and A contains no greatest element. Real numbers can be constructed as Dedekind cuts of rational numbers.[6][7]

For convenience we may take the lower set   as the representative of any given Dedekind cut  , since   completely determines  . By doing this we may think intuitively of a real number as being represented by the set of all smaller rational numbers. In more detail, a real number   is any subset of the set   of rational numbers that fulfills the following conditions:[8]

  1.   is not empty
  2.  
  3.   is closed downwards. In other words, for all   such that  , if   then  
  4.   contains no greatest element. In other words, there is no   such that for all  ,  
  • We form the set   of real numbers as the set of all Dedekind cuts   of  , and define a total ordering on the real numbers as follows:  
  • We embed the rational numbers into the reals by identifying the rational number   with the set of all smaller rational numbers  .[8] Since the rational numbers are dense, such a set can have no greatest element and thus fulfills the conditions for being a real number laid out above.
  • Addition.  [8]
  • Subtraction.   where   denotes the relative complement of   in  ,  
  • Negation is a special case of subtraction:  
  • Defining multiplication is less straightforward.[8]
    • if   then  
    • if either   or   is negative, we use the identities   to convert   and/or   to positive numbers and then apply the definition above.
  • We define division in a similar manner:
    • if   then  
    • if either   or   is negative, we use the identities   to convert   to a non-negative number and/or   to a positive number and then apply the definition above.
  • Supremum. If a nonempty set   of real numbers has any upper bound in  , then it has a least upper bound in   that is equal to  .[8]

As an example of a Dedekind cut representing an irrational number, we may take the positive square root of 2. This can be defined by the set  .[9] It can be seen from the definitions above that   is a real number, and that  . However, neither claim is immediate. Showing that   is real requires showing that   has no greatest element, i.e. that for any positive rational   with  , there is a rational   with   and   The choice   works. Then   but to show equality requires showing that if   is any rational number with  , then there is positive   in   with  .

An advantage of this construction is that each real number corresponds to a unique cut. Furthermore, by relaxing the first two requirements of the definition of a cut, the extended real number system may be obtained by associating   with the empty set and   with all of  .

Construction using hyperreal numbers edit

As in the hyperreal numbers, one constructs the hyperrationals *Q from the rational numbers by means of an ultrafilter.[10][11] Here a hyperrational is by definition a ratio of two hyperintegers. Consider the ring B of all limited (i.e. finite) elements in *Q. Then B has a unique maximal ideal I, the infinitesimal numbers. The quotient ring B/I gives the field R of real numbers[citation needed]. Note that B is not an internal set in *Q. Note that this construction uses a non-principal ultrafilter over the set of natural numbers, the existence of which is guaranteed by the axiom of choice.

It turns out that the maximal ideal respects the order on *Q. Hence the resulting field is an ordered field. Completeness can be proved in a similar way to the construction from the Cauchy sequences.

Construction from surreal numbers edit

Every ordered field can be embedded in the surreal numbers. The real numbers form a maximal subfield that is Archimedean (meaning that no real number is infinitely large or infinitely small). This embedding is not unique, though it can be chosen in a canonical way.

Construction from integers (Eudoxus reals) edit

A relatively less known construction allows to define real numbers using only the additive group of integers   with different versions.[12][13][14] The construction has been formally verified by the IsarMathLib project.[15] Shenitzer (1987) and Arthan (2004) refer to this construction as the Eudoxus reals, named after an ancient Greek astronomer and mathematician Eudoxus of Cnidus.

Let an almost homomorphism be a map   such that the set   is finite. (Note that   is an almost homomorphism for every  .) Almost homomorphisms form an abelian group under pointwise addition. We say that two almost homomorphisms   are almost equal if the set   is finite. This defines an equivalence relation on the set of almost homomorphisms. Real numbers are defined as the equivalence classes of this relation. Alternatively, the almost homomorphisms taking only finitely many values form a subgroup, and the underlying additive group of the real number is the quotient group. To add real numbers defined this way we add the almost homomorphisms that represent them. Multiplication of real numbers corresponds to functional composition of almost homomorphisms. If   denotes the real number represented by an almost homomorphism   we say that   if   is bounded or   takes an infinite number of positive values on  . This defines the linear order relation on the set of real numbers constructed this way.

Other constructions edit

Faltin et al. (1975) write: "Few mathematical structures have undergone as many revisions or have been presented in as many guises as the real numbers. Every generation reexamines the reals in the light of its values and mathematical objectives."[16]

A number of other constructions have been given, by:

For an overview, see Weiss (2015).

As a reviewer of one noted: "The details are all included, but as usual they are tedious and not too instructive."[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Weiss 2015.
  2. ^ http://math.colorado.edu/~nita/RealNumbers.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ http://homepages.math.uic.edu/~saunders/MATH313/INRA/INRA_chapters0and1.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ https://www.math.uci.edu/~mfinkels/140A/Introduction%2520and%2520Logic%2520Notes.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  5. ^ Kemp 2016.
  6. ^ https://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~temple/MAT25/HomeworkProblems.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  7. ^ http://math.furman.edu/~tlewis/math41/Pugh/chap1/sec2.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ a b c d e Pugh 2002.
  9. ^ Hersh 1997.
  10. ^ https://sites.math.washington.edu/~morrow/336_15/papers/gianni.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  11. ^ https://math.berkeley.edu/~kruckman/ultrafilters.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  12. ^ Arthan 2004.
  13. ^ A'Campo 2003.
  14. ^ Street 2003.
  15. ^ IsarMathLib.
  16. ^ Faltin et al. 1975.
  17. ^ MR693180 (84j:26002) review of Rieger1982.

Bibliography edit

  • Arthan, R.D. (2004). "The Eudoxus Real Numbers". arXiv:math/0405454.
  • de Bruijn, N.G. (1977). "Construction of the system of real numbers". Nederl. Akad. Wetensch. Verslag Afd. Natuurk. 86 (9): 121–125.
  • Faltin, F.; Metropolis, M.; Ross, B.; Rota, G.-C. (1975). "The real numbers as a wreath product". Advances in Mathematics. 16 (3): 278–304. doi:10.1016/0001-8708(75)90115-2.
  • Hersh, Reuben (1997). What is Mathematics, Really?. New York: Oxford University Press US. p. 274. ISBN 978-0-19-513087-4.
  • IsarMathLib (2022). "IsarMathLib".
  • Kemp, Todd (2016). "Cauchy's construction of R" (PDF).
  • Knopfmacher, Arnold; Knopfmacher, John (1987). "A new construction of the real numbers (via infinite products)". Nieuw Arch. Wisk. 4 (5): 19–31.
  • Pugh, Charles Chapman (2002). Real Mathematical Analysis. New York: Springer. pp. 11–15. ISBN 978-0-387-95297-0.
  • Rieger, Georg Johann (1982). "A new approach to the real numbers (motivated by continued fractions)" (PDF). Abhandlungen der Braunschweigischen Wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft. 33: 205–217.
  • Shenitzer, A (1987). "A topics course in mathematics". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 9 (3): 44–52. doi:10.1007/bf03023955. S2CID 122199850.
  • Street, Ross (September 2003). "Update on the efficient reals" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-10-23.

construction, real, numbers, mathematics, there, several, equivalent, ways, defining, real, numbers, them, that, they, form, complete, ordered, field, that, does, contain, smaller, complete, ordered, field, such, definition, does, prove, that, such, complete, . In mathematics there are several equivalent ways of defining the real numbers One of them is that they form a complete ordered field that does not contain any smaller complete ordered field Such a definition does not prove that such a complete ordered field exists and the existence proof consists of constructing a mathematical structure that satisfies the definition The article presents several such constructions 1 They are equivalent in the sense that given the result of any two such constructions there is a unique isomorphism of ordered field between them This results from the above definition and is independent of particular constructions These isomorphisms allow identifying the results of the constructions and in practice to forget which construction has been chosen Contents 1 Axiomatic definitions 1 1 Axioms 1 1 1 On the least upper bound property 1 1 2 On models 1 2 Tarski s axiomatization of the reals 2 Explicit constructions of models 2 1 Construction from Cauchy sequences 2 2 Construction by Dedekind cuts 2 3 Construction using hyperreal numbers 2 4 Construction from surreal numbers 2 5 Construction from integers Eudoxus reals 2 6 Other constructions 3 See also 4 References 5 BibliographyAxiomatic definitions editAn axiomatic definition of the real numbers consists of defining them as the elements of a complete ordered field 2 3 4 This means the following The real numbers form a set commonly denoted R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp containing two distinguished elements denoted 0 and 1 and on which are defined two binary operations and one binary relation the operations are called addition and multiplication of real numbers and denoted respectively with and the binary relation is inequality denoted displaystyle leq nbsp Moreover the following properties called axioms must be satisfied The existence of such a structure is a theorem which is proved by constructing such a structure A consequence of the axioms is that this structure is unique up to an isomorphism and thus the real numbers can be used and manipulated without referring to the method of construction Axioms edit R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is a field under addition and multiplication In other words For all x y and z in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp x y z x y z and x y z x y z associativity of addition and multiplication For all x and y in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp x y y x and x y y x commutativity of addition and multiplication For all x y and z in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp x y z x y x z distributivity of multiplication over addition For all x in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp x 0 x existence of additive identity 0 is not equal to 1 and for all x in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp x 1 x existence of multiplicative identity For every x in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp there exists an element x in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp such that x x 0 existence of additive inverses For every x 0 in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp there exists an element x 1 in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp such that x x 1 1 existence of multiplicative inverses R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is totally ordered for displaystyle leq nbsp In other words For all x in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp x x reflexivity For all x and y in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp if x y and y x then x y antisymmetry For all x y and z in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp if x y and y z then x z transitivity For all x and y in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp x y or y x totality Addition and multiplication are compatible with the order In other words For all x y and z in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp if x y then x z y z preservation of order under addition For all x and y in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp if 0 x and 0 y then 0 x y preservation of order under multiplication The order is complete in the following sense every non empty subset of R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp that is bounded above has a least upper bound In other words If A is a non empty subset of R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp and if A has an upper bound in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp then A has a least upper bound u such that for every upper bound v of A u v On the least upper bound property edit Axiom 4 which requires the order to be Dedekind complete implies the Archimedean property The axiom is crucial in the characterization of the reals For example the totally ordered field of the rational numbers Q satisfy the first three axioms but not the fourth In other words models of the rational numbers are also models of the first three axioms Note that the axiom is nonfirstorderizable as it expresses a statement about collections of reals and not just individual such numbers As such the reals are not given by a first order logic theory On models edit A model of real numbers is a mathematical structure that satisfies the above axioms Several models are given below Any two models are isomorphic so the real numbers are unique up to isomorphisms Saying that any two models are isomorphic means that for any two models R 0 R 1 R R R R displaystyle mathbb R 0 mathbb R 1 mathbb R mathbb R times mathbb R leq mathbb R nbsp and S 0 S 1 S S S S displaystyle S 0 S 1 S S times S leq S nbsp there is a bijection f R S displaystyle f colon mathbb R to S nbsp that preserves both the field operations and the order Explicitly f is both injective and surjective f 0ℝ 0S and f 1ℝ 1S f x ℝ y f x S f y and f x ℝ y f x S f y for all x and y in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp x ℝ y if and only if f x S f y for all x and y in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp Tarski s axiomatization of the reals edit Main article Tarski s axiomatization of the reals An alternative synthetic axiomatization of the real numbers and their arithmetic was given by Alfred Tarski consisting of only the 8 axioms shown below and a mere four primitive notions a set called the real numbers denoted R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp a binary relation over R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp called order denoted by the infix operator lt a binary operation over R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp called addition denoted by the infix operator and the constant 1 Axioms of order primitives R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp lt Axiom 1 If x lt y then not y lt x That is lt is an asymmetric relation Axiom 2 If x lt z there exists a y such that x lt y and y lt z In other words lt is dense in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp Axiom 3 lt is Dedekind complete More formally for all X Y R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp if for all x X and y Y x lt y then there exists a z such that for all x X and y Y if z x and z y then x lt z and z lt y To clarify the above statement somewhat let X R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp and Y R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp We now define two common English verbs in a particular way that suits our purpose X precedes Y if and only if for every x X and every y Y x lt y The real number z separates X and Y if and only if for every x X with x z and every y Y with y z x lt z and z lt y Axiom 3 can then be stated as If a set of reals precedes another set of reals then there exists at least one real number separating the two sets Axioms of addition primitives R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp lt Axiom 4 x y z x z y Axiom 5 For all x y there exists a z such that x z y Axiom 6 If x y lt z w then x lt z or y lt w Axioms for one primitives R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp lt 1 Axiom 7 1 R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp Axiom 8 1 lt 1 1 These axioms imply that R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is a linearly ordered abelian group under addition with distinguished element 1 R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is also Dedekind complete and divisible Explicit constructions of models editWe shall not prove that any models of the axioms are isomorphic Such a proof can be found in any number of modern analysis or set theory textbooks We will sketch the basic definitions and properties of a number of constructions however because each of these is important for both mathematical and historical reasons The first three due to Georg Cantor Charles Meray Richard Dedekind Joseph Bertrand and Karl Weierstrass all occurred within a few years of each other Each has advantages and disadvantages A major motivation in all three cases was the instruction of mathematics students Construction from Cauchy sequences edit A standard procedure to force all Cauchy sequences in a metric space to converge is adding new points to the metric space in a process called completion R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is defined as the completion of Q with respect to the metric x y as will be detailed below for completions of Q with respect to other metrics see p adic numbers Let R be the set of Cauchy sequences of rational numbers That is sequences x1 x2 x3 of rational numbers such that for every rational e gt 0 there exists an integer N such that for all natural numbers m n gt N xm xn lt e Here the vertical bars denote the absolute value Cauchy sequences xn and yn can be added and multiplied as follows xn yn xn yn xn yn xn yn Two Cauchy sequences are called equivalent if and only if the difference between them tends to zero This defines an equivalence relation that is compatible with the operations defined above and the set R of all equivalence classes can be shown to satisfy all axioms of the real numbers We can embed Q into R by identifying the rational number r with the equivalence class of the sequence r r r Comparison between real numbers is obtained by defining the following comparison between Cauchy sequences xn yn if and only if x is equivalent to y or there exists an integer N such that xn yn for all n gt N By construction every real number x is represented by a Cauchy sequence of rational numbers This representation is far from unique every rational sequence that converges to x is a representation of x This reflects the observation that one can often use different sequences to approximate the same real number 5 The only real number axiom that does not follow easily from the definitions is the completeness of i e the least upper bound property It can be proved as follows Let S be a non empty subset of R and U be an upper bound for S Substituting a larger value if necessary we may assume U is rational Since S is non empty we can choose a rational number L such that L lt s for some s in S Now define sequences of rationals un and ln as follows Set u0 U and l0 L For each n consider the number mn un ln 2If mn is an upper bound for S set un 1 mn and ln 1 lnOtherwise set ln 1 mn and un 1 unThis defines two Cauchy sequences of rationals and so we have real numbers l ln and u un It is easy to prove by induction on n that un is an upper bound for S for all nand ln is never an upper bound for S for any nThus u is an upper bound for S To see that it is a least upper bound notice that the limit of un ln is 0 and so l u Now suppose b lt u l is a smaller upper bound for S Since ln is monotonic increasing it is easy to see that b lt ln for some n But ln is not an upper bound for S and so neither is b Hence u is a least upper bound for S and is complete The usual decimal notation can be translated to Cauchy sequences in a natural way For example the notation p 3 1415 means that p is the equivalence class of the Cauchy sequence 3 3 1 3 14 3 141 3 1415 The equation 0 999 1 states that the sequences 0 0 9 0 99 0 999 and 1 1 1 1 are equivalent i e their difference converges to 0 An advantage of constructing R as the completion of Q is that this construction is not specific to one example it is used for other metric spaces as well Construction by Dedekind cuts edit nbsp Dedekind used his cut to construct the irrational real numbers A Dedekind cut in an ordered field is a partition of it A B such that A is nonempty and closed downwards B is nonempty and closed upwards and A contains no greatest element Real numbers can be constructed as Dedekind cuts of rational numbers 6 7 For convenience we may take the lower set A displaystyle A nbsp as the representative of any given Dedekind cut A B displaystyle A B nbsp since A displaystyle A nbsp completely determines B displaystyle B nbsp By doing this we may think intuitively of a real number as being represented by the set of all smaller rational numbers In more detail a real number r displaystyle r nbsp is any subset of the set Q displaystyle textbf Q nbsp of rational numbers that fulfills the following conditions 8 r displaystyle r nbsp is not empty r Q displaystyle r neq textbf Q nbsp r displaystyle r nbsp is closed downwards In other words for all x y Q displaystyle x y in textbf Q nbsp such that x lt y displaystyle x lt y nbsp if y r displaystyle y in r nbsp then x r displaystyle x in r nbsp r displaystyle r nbsp contains no greatest element In other words there is no x r displaystyle x in r nbsp such that for all y r displaystyle y in r nbsp y x displaystyle y leq x nbsp We form the set R displaystyle textbf R nbsp of real numbers as the set of all Dedekind cuts A displaystyle A nbsp of Q displaystyle textbf Q nbsp and define a total ordering on the real numbers as follows x y x y displaystyle x leq y Leftrightarrow x subseteq y nbsp We embed the rational numbers into the reals by identifying the rational number q displaystyle q nbsp with the set of all smaller rational numbers x Q x lt q displaystyle x in textbf Q x lt q nbsp 8 Since the rational numbers are dense such a set can have no greatest element and thus fulfills the conditions for being a real number laid out above Addition A B a b a A b B displaystyle A B a b a in A land b in B nbsp 8 Subtraction A B a b a A b Q B displaystyle A B a b a in A land b in textbf Q setminus B nbsp where Q B displaystyle textbf Q setminus B nbsp denotes the relative complement of B displaystyle B nbsp in Q displaystyle textbf Q nbsp x x Q x B displaystyle x x in textbf Q land x notin B nbsp Negation is a special case of subtraction B a b a lt 0 b Q B displaystyle B a b a lt 0 land b in textbf Q setminus B nbsp Defining multiplication is less straightforward 8 if A B 0 displaystyle A B geq 0 nbsp then A B a b a 0 a A b 0 b B x Q x lt 0 displaystyle A times B a times b a geq 0 land a in A land b geq 0 land b in B cup x in mathrm Q x lt 0 nbsp if either A displaystyle A nbsp or B displaystyle B nbsp is negative we use the identities A B A B A B A B displaystyle A times B A times B A times B A times B nbsp to convert A displaystyle A nbsp and or B displaystyle B nbsp to positive numbers and then apply the definition above We define division in a similar manner if A 0 and B gt 0 displaystyle A geq 0 mbox and B gt 0 nbsp then A B a b a A b Q B displaystyle A B a b a in A land b in textbf Q setminus B nbsp if either A displaystyle A nbsp or B displaystyle B nbsp is negative we use the identities A B A B A B A B displaystyle A B A B A B A B nbsp to convert A displaystyle A nbsp to a non negative number and or B displaystyle B nbsp to a positive number and then apply the definition above Supremum If a nonempty set S displaystyle S nbsp of real numbers has any upper bound in R displaystyle textbf R nbsp then it has a least upper bound in R displaystyle textbf R nbsp that is equal to S displaystyle bigcup S nbsp 8 As an example of a Dedekind cut representing an irrational number we may take the positive square root of 2 This can be defined by the set A x Q x lt 0 x x lt 2 displaystyle A x in textbf Q x lt 0 lor x times x lt 2 nbsp 9 It can be seen from the definitions above that A displaystyle A nbsp is a real number and that A A 2 displaystyle A times A 2 nbsp However neither claim is immediate Showing that A displaystyle A nbsp is real requires showing that A displaystyle A nbsp has no greatest element i e that for any positive rational x displaystyle x nbsp with x x lt 2 displaystyle x times x lt 2 nbsp there is a rational y displaystyle y nbsp with x lt y displaystyle x lt y nbsp and y y lt 2 displaystyle y times y lt 2 nbsp The choice y 2 x 2 x 2 displaystyle y frac 2x 2 x 2 nbsp works Then A A 2 displaystyle A times A leq 2 nbsp but to show equality requires showing that if r displaystyle r nbsp is any rational number with r lt 2 displaystyle r lt 2 nbsp then there is positive x displaystyle x nbsp in A displaystyle A nbsp with r lt x x displaystyle r lt x times x nbsp An advantage of this construction is that each real number corresponds to a unique cut Furthermore by relaxing the first two requirements of the definition of a cut the extended real number system may be obtained by associating displaystyle infty nbsp with the empty set and displaystyle infty nbsp with all of Q displaystyle textbf Q nbsp Construction using hyperreal numbers edit As in the hyperreal numbers one constructs the hyperrationals Q from the rational numbers by means of an ultrafilter 10 11 Here a hyperrational is by definition a ratio of two hyperintegers Consider the ring B of all limited i e finite elements in Q Then B has a unique maximal ideal I the infinitesimal numbers The quotient ring B I gives the field R of real numbers citation needed Note that B is not an internal set in Q Note that this construction uses a non principal ultrafilter over the set of natural numbers the existence of which is guaranteed by the axiom of choice It turns out that the maximal ideal respects the order on Q Hence the resulting field is an ordered field Completeness can be proved in a similar way to the construction from the Cauchy sequences Construction from surreal numbers edit Every ordered field can be embedded in the surreal numbers The real numbers form a maximal subfield that is Archimedean meaning that no real number is infinitely large or infinitely small This embedding is not unique though it can be chosen in a canonical way Construction from integers Eudoxus reals edit A relatively less known construction allows to define real numbers using only the additive group of integers Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp with different versions 12 13 14 The construction has been formally verified by the IsarMathLib project 15 Shenitzer 1987 and Arthan 2004 refer to this construction as the Eudoxus reals named after an ancient Greek astronomer and mathematician Eudoxus of Cnidus Let an almost homomorphism be a map f Z Z displaystyle f mathbb Z to mathbb Z nbsp such that the set f n m f m f n n m Z displaystyle f n m f m f n n m in mathbb Z nbsp is finite Note that f n a n displaystyle f n lfloor alpha n rfloor nbsp is an almost homomorphism for every a R displaystyle alpha in mathbb R nbsp Almost homomorphisms form an abelian group under pointwise addition We say that two almost homomorphisms f g displaystyle f g nbsp are almost equal if the set f n g n n Z displaystyle f n g n n in mathbb Z nbsp is finite This defines an equivalence relation on the set of almost homomorphisms Real numbers are defined as the equivalence classes of this relation Alternatively the almost homomorphisms taking only finitely many values form a subgroup and the underlying additive group of the real number is the quotient group To add real numbers defined this way we add the almost homomorphisms that represent them Multiplication of real numbers corresponds to functional composition of almost homomorphisms If f displaystyle f nbsp denotes the real number represented by an almost homomorphism f displaystyle f nbsp we say that 0 f displaystyle 0 leq f nbsp if f displaystyle f nbsp is bounded or f displaystyle f nbsp takes an infinite number of positive values on Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp This defines the linear order relation on the set of real numbers constructed this way Other constructions edit Faltin et al 1975 write Few mathematical structures have undergone as many revisions or have been presented in as many guises as the real numbers Every generation reexamines the reals in the light of its values and mathematical objectives 16 A number of other constructions have been given by de Bruijn 1976 de Bruijn 1977 Rieger 1982 Knopfmacher amp Knopfmacher 1987 Knopfmacher amp Knopfmacher 1988 For an overview see Weiss 2015 As a reviewer of one noted The details are all included but as usual they are tedious and not too instructive 17 See also editConstructivism mathematics Example from real analysis Mathematical viewpoint that existence proofs must be constructivePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Decidability of first order theories of the real numbersReferences edit Weiss 2015 http math colorado edu nita RealNumbers pdf bare URL PDF http homepages math uic edu saunders MATH313 INRA INRA chapters0and1 pdf bare URL PDF https www math uci edu mfinkels 140A Introduction 2520and 2520Logic 2520Notes pdf bare URL PDF Kemp 2016 https www math ucdavis edu temple MAT25 HomeworkProblems pdf bare URL PDF http math furman edu tlewis math41 Pugh chap1 sec2 pdf bare URL PDF a b c d e Pugh 2002 Hersh 1997 https sites math washington edu morrow 336 15 papers gianni pdf bare URL PDF https math berkeley edu kruckman ultrafilters pdf bare URL PDF Arthan 2004 A Campo 2003 Street 2003 IsarMathLib Faltin et al 1975 MR693180 84j 26002 review of Rieger1982 Bibliography editA Campo Norbert 2003 A natural construction for the real numbers arXiv math 0301015 Arthan R D 2004 The Eudoxus Real Numbers arXiv math 0405454 de Bruijn N G 1976 Defining reals without the use of rationals Indagationes Mathematicae Proceedings 79 2 100 108 doi 10 1016 1385 7258 76 90055 X also at http alexandria tue nl repository freearticles 597556 pdfde Bruijn N G 1977 Construction of the system of real numbers Nederl Akad Wetensch Verslag Afd Natuurk 86 9 121 125 Faltin F Metropolis M Ross B Rota G C 1975 The real numbers as a wreath product Advances in Mathematics 16 3 278 304 doi 10 1016 0001 8708 75 90115 2 Hersh Reuben 1997 What is Mathematics Really New York Oxford University Press US p 274 ISBN 978 0 19 513087 4 IsarMathLib 2022 IsarMathLib Kemp Todd 2016 Cauchy s construction of R PDF Knopfmacher Arnold Knopfmacher John 1987 A new construction of the real numbers via infinite products Nieuw Arch Wisk 4 5 19 31 Knopfmacher Arnold Knopfmacher John 1988 Two concrete new constructions of the real numbers Rocky Mountain Journal of Mathematics 18 4 813 824 doi 10 1216 RMJ 1988 18 4 813 S2CID 122161507 Pugh Charles Chapman 2002 Real Mathematical Analysis New York Springer pp 11 15 ISBN 978 0 387 95297 0 Rieger Georg Johann 1982 A new approach to the real numbers motivated by continued fractions PDF Abhandlungen der Braunschweigischen Wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft 33 205 217 Shenitzer A 1987 A topics course in mathematics The Mathematical Intelligencer 9 3 44 52 doi 10 1007 bf03023955 S2CID 122199850 Street Ross September 2003 Update on the efficient reals PDF Retrieved 2010 10 23 Weiss Ittay 2015 The real numbers a survey of constructions Rocky Mountain Journal of Mathematics 45 3 737 762 arXiv 1506 03467 doi 10 1216 RMJ 2015 45 3 737 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Construction of the real numbers amp oldid 1210151888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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