p-adic exponential function

From The Right Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search

In mathematics, particularly p-adic analysis, the p-adic exponential function is a p-adic analogue of the usual exponential function on the complex numbers. As in the complex case, it has an inverse function, named the p-adic logarithm.

Definition

The usual exponential function on C is defined by the infinite series

exp(z)=n=0znn!.

Entirely analogously, one defines the exponential function on Cp, the completion of the algebraic closure of Qp, by

expp(z)=n=0znn!.

However, unlike exp which converges on all of C, expp only converges on the disc

|z|p<p1/(p1).

This is because p-adic series converge if and only if the summands tend to zero, and since the n! in the denominator of each summand tends to make them large p-adically, a small value of z is needed in the numerator. It follows from Legendre's formula that if |z|p<p1/(p1) then znn! tends to 0, p-adically. Although the p-adic exponential is sometimes denoted ex, the number e itself has no p-adic analogue. This is because the power series expp(x) does not converge at x = 1. It is possible to choose a number e to be a p-th root of expp(p) for p ≠ 2,[lower-alpha 1] but there are multiple such roots and there is no canonical choice among them.[1]

p-adic logarithm function

The power series

logp(1+x)=n=1(1)n+1xnn,

converges for x in Cp satisfying |x|p < 1 and so defines the p-adic logarithm function logp(z) for |z − 1|p < 1 satisfying the usual property logp(zw) = logpz + logpw. The function logp can be extended to all of C ×
p
 
(the set of nonzero elements of Cp) by imposing that it continues to satisfy this last property and setting logp(p) = 0. Specifically, every element w of C ×
p
 
can be written as w = pr·ζ·z with r a rational number, ζ a root of unity, and |z − 1|p < 1,[2] in which case logp(w) = logp(z).[lower-alpha 2] This function on C ×
p
 
is sometimes called the Iwasawa logarithm to emphasize the choice of logp(p) = 0. In fact, there is an extension of the logarithm from |z − 1|p < 1 to all of C ×
p
 
for each choice of logp(p) in Cp.[3]

Properties

If z and w are both in the radius of convergence for expp, then their sum is too and we have the usual addition formula: expp(z + w) = expp(z)expp(w). Similarly if z and w are nonzero elements of Cp then logp(zw) = logpz + logpw. For z in the domain of expp, we have expp(logp(1+z)) = 1+z and logp(expp(z)) = z. The roots of the Iwasawa logarithm logp(z) are exactly the elements of Cp of the form pr·ζ where r is a rational number and ζ is a root of unity.[4] Note that there is no analogue in Cp of Euler's identity, e2πi = 1. This is a corollary of Strassmann's theorem. Another major difference to the situation in C is that the domain of convergence of expp is much smaller than that of logp. A modified exponential function — the Artin–Hasse exponential — can be used instead which converges on |z|p < 1.

Notes

  1. or a 4th root of exp2(4), for p = 2
  2. In factoring w as above, there is a choice of a root involved in writing pr since r is rational; however, different choices differ only by multiplication by a root of unity, which gets absorbed into the factor ζ.

References

  1. Robert 2000, p. 252
  2. Cohen 2007, Proposition 4.4.44
  3. Cohen 2007, §4.4.11
  4. Cohen 2007, Proposition 4.4.45
  • Chapter 12 of Cassels, J. W. S. (1986). Local fields. London Mathematical Society Student Texts. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-31525-5.
  • Cohen, Henri (2007), Number theory, Volume I: Tools and Diophantine equations, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 239, New York: Springer, doi:10.1007/978-0-387-49923-9, ISBN 978-0-387-49922-2, MR 2312337
  • Robert, Alain M. (2000), A Course in p-adic Analysis, Springer, ISBN 0-387-98669-3

External links