Spherically complete field
Appearance
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:[1]
The definition can be adapted also to a field K with a valuation v taking values in an arbitrary ordered abelian group: (K,v) is spherically complete if every collection of balls that is totally ordered by inclusion has a nonempty intersection.
Spherically complete fields are important in nonarchimedean functional analysis, since many results analogous to theorems of classical functional analysis require the base field to be spherically complete.[2]
Examples
[edit]- Any locally compact field is spherically complete. This includes, in particular, the fields Qp of p-adic numbers, and any of their finite extensions.
- Every spherically complete field is complete. On the other hand, Cp, the completion of the algebraic closure of Qp, is not spherically complete.[3]
- Any field of Hahn series is spherically complete.
References
[edit]- ^ Van der Put, Marius (1969). "Espaces de Banach non archimédiens". Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France. 79: 309–320. doi:10.24033/bsmf.1685. ISSN 0037-9484.
- ^ Schneider, P. (2002). Nonarchimedean functional analysis. Springer monographs in mathematics. Berlin ; New York: Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-42533-5.
- ^ Robert, Alain M. (2000-05-31). A Course in p-adic Analysis. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-387-98669-2.