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A
-adic number is an extension of the Field of Rational Numbers such that
Congruences Modulo Powers of a fixed Prime
are related to proximity in
the so called ``
-adic metric.''
Any Nonzero Rational Number
can be represented by
| (1) |
| (2) |
| (3) |
As an example, consider the Fraction
| (4) |
| (5) | |||
| (6) | |||
| (7) | |||
| (8) | |||
| (9) |
The
-adic absolute value satisfies the relations
The
-adics were probably first introduced by Hensel in 1902 in a paper which was concerned with the development of algebraic
numbers in Power Series.
-adic numbers were then generalized to Valuations by Kürschák in
1913. In the early 1920s, Hasse formulated the Local-Global Principle (now usually called the Hasse Principle),
which is one of the chief applications of Local Field theory. Skolem's
-adic method, which is used in attacking
certain Diophantine Equations, is another powerful application of
-adic numbers. Another
application is the theorem that the Harmonic Numbers
are never Integers
(except for
). A similar application is the proof of the von Staudt-Clausen Theorem using the
-adic valuation,
although the technical details are somewhat difficult. Yet another application is provided by the Mahler-Lech Theorem.
Every Rational
has an ``essentially'' unique
-adic expansion (``essentially'' since zero
terms can always be added at the beginning)
![]() |
(10) |
| (11) |
| (12) |
| (13) |
| (14) |
The
-adic valuation on
gives rise to the
-adic metric
| (15) |
Just as the Real Numbers are the completion of the Rationals
with
respect to the usual absolute valuation
, the
-adic numbers are the completion of
with respect to the
-adic valuation
. The
-adic numbers are useful in solving Diophantine Equations.
For example, the equation
can easily be shown to have no solutions in the field of 2-adic numbers (we simply take the
valuation of both sides). Because the 2-adic numbers contain the rationals as a subset, we can immediately see that the
equation has no solutions in the Rationals. So we have an immediate proof of the irrationality of
.
This is a common argument that is used in solving these types of equations: in order to show that an equation has no solutions
in
, we show that it has no solutions in a Field Extension. For another example, consider
. This
equation has no solutions in
because it has no solutions in the reals
, and
is a subset of
.
Now consider the converse. Suppose we have an equation that does have solutions in
and in all the
.
Can we conclude that the equation has a solution in
? Unfortunately, in general, the answer is no, but there
are classes of equations for which the answer is yes. Such equations are said to satisfy the Hasse Principle.
See also Ax-Kochen Isomorphism Theorem, Diophantine Equation, Harmonic Number, Hasse Principle, Local Field, Local-Global Principle, Mahler-Lech Theorem, Product Formula, Valuation, Valuation Theory, von Staudt-Clausen Theorem
References
Burger, E. B. and Struppeck, T. ``Does
Cassels, J. W. S. and Scott, J. W. Local Fields. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1986.
Gouvêa, F. Q.
Koblitz, N.
Mahler, K.
P-adic Numbers
Really Converge? Infinite Series and
-adic Analysis.'' Amer. Math. Monthly 103, 565-577, 1996.
-adic Numbers: An Introduction, 2nd ed. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1997.
-adic Numbers,
-adic Analysis, and Zeta-Functions, 2nd ed. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1984.
-adic Numbers and Their Functions, 2nd ed. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1981.
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© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein