Product Design, Manufacturing & Innovation Resources
Home » p-adic Numbers

p-adic Numbers

1897
  • Kurt Hensel
19th century study room of Kurt Hensel focused on p-adic numbers and number theory.

(generated image for illustration only)

For a prime number \(p\), the p-adic numbers form an extension of the rational numbers that is topologically different from the real numbers. While real numbers are a completion of \(\mathbb{Q}\) with respect to the usual absolute value metric, the p-adic numbers are the completion of \(\mathbb{Q}\) with respect to the p-adic metric, where numbers are “small” if they are divisible by a high power of \(p\).

The concept of p-adic numbers, introduced by Kurt Hensel, provides a powerful and alternative way to extend the field of rational numbers. The construction is based on a different notion of distance, or absolute value. For a fixed prime \(p\), the p-adic absolute value \(|x|_p\) of a non-zero rational number \(x\) is defined as follows: first, write \(x = p^n (a/b)\) where \(a, b\) are not divisible by \(p\). Then \(|x|_p = p^{-n}\). For example, for \(p=5\), the number 75 is \(5^2 \cdot 3\), so \(|75|_5 = 5^{-2} = 1/25\). A number is considered “small” in the p-adic sense if it is divisible by a high power of \(p\).

This p-adic absolute value defines a metric \(d_p(x, y) = |x-y|_p\), which satisfies the ultrametric inequality: \(|x+y|_p \leq \max(|x|_p, |y|_p)\). This is stronger than the usual triangle inequality and leads to a strange topology where all triangles are isosceles and any point in an open ball is its center. The field of p-adic numbers, denoted \(\mathbb{Q}_p\), is the completion of the rational numbers \(\mathbb{Q}\) with respect to this metric, just as the real numbers \(\mathbb{R}\) are the completion of \(\mathbb{Q}\) with respect to the standard absolute value.

A key tool for working with p-adic numbers is Hensel’s Lemma, which provides a method for lifting solutions of polynomial congruences modulo \(p\) to solutions modulo higher powers of \(p\), and ultimately to solutions in the p-adic integers. The Hasse principle, or local-global principle, states that a Diophantine equation has a rational solution if and only if it has a solution in the real numbers and in the p-adic numbers for every prime \(p\). While not universally true, it holds for important cases like quadratic forms and is a guiding principle in number theory.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 1101
– Algebra, Number theory and Group theory

Type

Abstract System

Disruption

Substantial

Usage

Niche/Specialized

Precursors

  • concept of field completion
  • work on power series by Weierstrass
  • theory of congruences and modular arithmetic
  • development of metric spaces

Applications

  • number theory, particularly in solving Diophantine equations (Hasse principle)
  • algebraic geometry
  • quantum mechanics and string theory (p-adic quantum mechanics)
  • cryptography

Patents:

NA

Potential Innovations Ideas

Due to scrapping bot traffic, currently more than 40k per day, this content is reserved to community members.
> Login < or > Register < (100% free) to access this, so as all other restricted content and tools.

Related to: p-adic number, number theory, Kurt Hensel, completion, metric space, absolute value, Hasse principle, Hensel’s lemma, ultrametric, Diophantine equation.

Historical Context

P-adic Numbers

1801
1850
1875
1897
1950
1800
1844
1874
1893
1900

(if date is unknown or not relevant, e.g. "fluid mechanics", a rounded estimation of its notable emergence is provided)

Related Invention, Innovation & Technical Principles

Full size images and downloads are only available, 100% free, for registered members.

> Login <