According to Keisler's calculus text, the square root of an infinitesimal is still an infinitesimal. I was afraid it would lie half-way in-between reals and infinitesimals.
Hurkyl said:
Isn't that just the real function field (i.e. the
fraction field of the ring of real polynomials) along with the ordering that makes the indeterminate variable infinite?
i.e. the thing you call 1
-1 is just the rational function x
-1 (where
x is the indeterminate)
With 1
-1 replaced with the symbol 'u', we can dispense with the cumbersome subscripts for infinitesimals infinities.
I'm afraid I don't know enough mathematics to follow you quit, but you bring up something I hadn't noticed. With this scaling scheme, a hyperreal, a* can be expressed as
a* = ... + a
-2 u
-2 + a
-1 u
-1 + a
0 u + a
1 u
1 + a
1 u
2 + ... ,
where the subscripts resume their usual role of distinguishing variables, and the a's are real valued. Other than the a's being real valued rather than quotients, is this what you were talking about?
But if you want to define something that has the same analytical behavior as the reals, then a nonstandard model of real analysis is your only option.
that seems to be the case, though comming at it from a different direction, I'm trying to add to it. After scanning Keisler I didn't find any referral to infinitesimals with numerical values. That is, where are the equivalent counting numbers 1, 2, 3, ... in the hyperreal infinitesimals?
More, I wonder if u
1/u can stand in for the identity element of addition without inconsistency.