Admissible absolute values #
This file defines a structure AbsoluteValue.IsAdmissible which we use to show the class number
of the ring of integers of a global field is finite.
Main definitions #
AbsoluteValue.IsAdmissible abvstates the absolute valueabv : R ā ā¤respects the Euclidean domain structure onR, and that a large enough set of elements ofR^ncontains a pair of elements whose remainders are pointwise close together.
Main results #
AbsoluteValue.absIsAdmissibleshows the "standard" absolute value onā¤, mapping negativexto-x, is admissible.Polynomial.cardPowDegreeIsAdmissibleshowscardPowDegree, mappingp : Polynomial š½_qtoq ^ degree p, is admissible
- map_lt_map_iff' : ā {x y : R}, āabv x < āabv y ā EuclideanDomain.r x y
- exists_partition' : ā (n : ā) {ε : ā}, 0 < ε ā ā {b : R}, b ā 0 ā ā (A : Fin n ā R), ā t, ā (iā iā : Fin n), t iā = t iā ā ā(āabv (A iā % b - A iā % b)) < āabv b ⢠ε
For all
ε > 0and finite familiesA, we can partition the remainders ofAmodbintoabv.card εsets, such that all elements in each part of remainders are close together.
An absolute value R ā ⤠is admissible if it respects the Euclidean domain
structure and a large enough set of elements in R^n will contain a pair of
elements whose remainders are pointwise close together.
Instances For
For all ε > 0 and finite families A, we can partition the remainders of A mod b
into abv.card ε sets, such that all elements in each part of remainders are close together.
Any large enough family of vectors in R^n has a pair of elements
whose remainders are close together, pointwise.
Any large enough family of vectors in R^ι has a pair of elements
whose remainders are close together, pointwise.