Hyperreal number
In
mathematics, particularly in
non-standard analysis and
mathematical logic,
hyperreal numbers or
nonstandard reals (usually denoted as
- R) denote an ordered field which is a proper extension of the ordered field of real numbers R and which satisfies the transfer principle. This principle allows true first order statements about R to be reinterpreted as true first order statements about *R.
An important property of
- R is that it has infinitely large as well as infinitesimal numbers, where an infinitely large number is one that is larger than all numbers representable in the form
:
The use of the definite article
the in the phrase
the hyperreal numbers is somewhat misleading in that there is not a unique ordered field that is referred to in most treatments.
However, a 2003 paper by Kanovei and
Shelah shows that there is a definable, countably
saturated (meaning ω-saturated, but not of course countable)
elementary extension of the reals, which therefore has a good claim to the title of
the hyperreal numbers.
The condition of being a hyperreal field is a stronger one than that of being a
real closed field strictly containing
R. It is also stronger than that of being a superreal field in the sense of Dales and Woodin.
The application of hyperreal numbers and in particular the transfer principle to problems of
analysis is called nonstandard analysis; some find it more intuitive than standard
real analysis. When
Newton and (more explicitly)
Leibniz introduced differentials, they used infinitesimals and these were still regarded as useful by later mathematicians such as
Euler and
Cauchy. Nonetheless these concepts were from the beginning seen as suspect, notably by
Berkeley, and when in the
1800s calculus was put on a firm footing through the development of the epsilon-delta definition of a
limit by Cauchy, Weierstrass and others, they were largely abandoned.
However, in the 1960s
Abraham Robinson showed how infinitely large and infinitesimal numbers can be rigorously defined and used to develop the field of nonstandard analysis. Robinson developed his theory nonconstructively, using model theory; however it is possible to proceed using only algebra and topology, and proving the transfer principle as a consequence of the definitions. In other words hyperreal numbers
per se, aside from the use of them in nonstandard analysis, have no necessary relationship to model theory or first order logic.
The transfer principle
The hyperreals
- R form an ordered field containing the reals R as a subfield. Unlike the reals, the hyperreals do not form a standard metric space, but by virtue of their order they carry an order topology.
The hyperreals are to be defined in such a way that every true first-order logic statement that uses basic arithmetic (the natural numbers, plus, times, comparison) and quantifies only over the real numbers is also true in a reinterpreted form if we presume that it quantifies over hyperreal numbers. For example, we can state that for every real number there is another number greater than it:
::
The same will then also hold for hyperreals:
::
Another example is the statement that if you add 1 to a number you get a bigger number:
::
which will also hold for hyperreals:
::
The correct general statement that formulates these equivalences is called the
transfer principle. Note that in many formulas in analysis quantification is over higher order objects such as functions and sets which makes the transfer principle somewhat more subtle than the above examples suggest.
The transfer principle however doesn't mean that
R and
have identical behavior. For instance, in
*R there exists an element
w such that
::