In mathematics, specifically transcendental number theory, Schanuel's conjecture is a conjecture about the transcendence degree of certain field extensions of the rational numbers , which would establish the transcendence of a large class of numbers, for which this is currently unknown. It is due to Stephen Schanuel and was published by Serge Lang in 1966.[1]

Statement

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Schanuel's conjecture can be given as follows:[1][2]

Schanuel's conjecture — Given any set of   complex numbers   that are linearly independent over  , the field extension   has transcendence degree at least   over  .

Consequences

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Schanuel's conjecture, if proven, would generalize most known results in transcendental number theory and establish a large class of numbers transcendental. Special cases of Schanuel's conjecture include:

Lindemann-Weierstrass theorem

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Considering Schanuels conjecture for only   gives that for nonzero compex numbers  , at least one of the numbers   and   must be transcendental. This was proved by Ferdinand von Lindemann in 1882.[3]

If the numbers   are taken to be all algebraic and linearly independent over   then the  result to be transcendental and algebraically independent over  . The first proof for this more general result was given by Carl Weierstrass in 1885.[4]

This so-called Lindemann–Weierstrass theorem implies the transcendence of the numbers e and π. It also follows that for algebraic numbers   not equal to 0 or 1, both   and   are transcendental. It further gives the transcendence of the trigonometric functions at nonzero algebraic values.

Baker's theorem

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Another special case was proved by Alan Baker in 1966: If complex numbers   are chosen to be linearly independent over the rational numbers   such that   are algebraic, then   are also linearly independent over the algebraic numbers  .

Schanuel's conjecture would strengthen this result, implying that   would also be algebraically independent over   (and equivalently over  ).[2]

Gelfond-Schneider theorem

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In 1934 it was proved by Aleksander Gelfond and Theodor Schneider that if   and   are two algebraic complex numbers with   and  , then   is transcendental.

This establishes the transcendence of numbers like Hilbert's constant   and Gelfond's constant  .[5]

The Gelfond–Schneider theorem follows from Schanuel's conjecture by setting   and  . It also would follow from the strengthened version of Baker's theorem above.

Four exponentials conjecture

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The currently unproven four exponentials conjecture would also follow from Schanuel's conjecture: If   and   are two pairs of complex numbers, with each pair being linearly independent over the rational numbers, then at least one of the following four numbers is transcendental:

 

The four exponential conjecture would imply that for any irrational number  , at least one of the numbers   and   is transcendental. It also implies that if   is a positive real number such that both   and   are integers, then   itself must be an integer.[2] The related six exponentials theorem has been proven.

Other consequences

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Schanuel's conjecture, if proved, would also establish many nontrivial combinations of e, π, algebraic numbers and elementary functions to be transcendental:[2][6][7]

 

In particular it would follow that e and π are algebraically independent simply by setting   and  .

Euler's identity states that  . If Schanuel's conjecture is true then this is, in some precise sense involving exponential rings, the only relation between e, π, and i over the complex numbers.[8]

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The converse Schanuel conjecture[9] is the following statement:

Suppose F is a countable field with characteristic 0, and e : FF is a homomorphism from the additive group (F,+) to the multiplicative group (F,·) whose kernel is cyclic. Suppose further that for any n elements x1,...,xn of F which are linearly independent over  , the extension field  (x1,...,xn,e(x1),...,e(xn)) has transcendence degree at least n over  . Then there exists a field homomorphism h : F  such that h(e(x)) = exp(h(x)) for all x in F.

A version of Schanuel's conjecture for formal power series, also by Schanuel, was proven by James Ax in 1971.[10] It states:

Given any n formal power series f1,...,fn in t [[t]] which are linearly independent over  , then the field extension  (t,f1,...,fn,exp(f1),...,exp(fn)) has transcendence degree at least n over  (t).

Although ostensibly a problem in number theory, Schanuel's conjecture has implications in model theory as well. Angus Macintyre and Alex Wilkie, for example, proved that the theory of the real field with exponentiation,  exp, is decidable provided Schanuel's conjecture is true.[11] In fact, to prove this result, they only needed the real version of the conjecture, which is as follows:[12]

Suppose x1,...,xn are real numbers and the transcendence degree of the field  (x1,...,xn, exp(x1),...,exp(xn)) is strictly less than n, then there are integers m1,...,mn, not all zero, such that m1x1 +...+ mnxn = 0.

This would be a positive solution to Tarski's exponential function problem.

A related conjecture called the uniform real Schanuel's conjecture essentially says the same but puts a bound on the integers mi. The uniform real version of the conjecture is equivalent to the standard real version.[12] Macintyre and Wilkie showed that a consequence of Schanuel's conjecture, which they dubbed the Weak Schanuel's conjecture, was equivalent to the decidability of  exp. This conjecture states that there is a computable upper bound on the norm of non-singular solutions to systems of exponential polynomials; this is, non-obviously, a consequence of Schanuel's conjecture for the reals.[11]

It is also known that Schanuel's conjecture would be a consequence of conjectural results in the theory of motives. In this setting Grothendieck's period conjecture for an abelian variety A states that the transcendence degree of its period matrix is the same as the dimension of the associated Mumford–Tate group, and what is known by work of Pierre Deligne is that the dimension is an upper bound for the transcendence degree. Bertolin has shown how a generalised period conjecture includes Schanuel's conjecture.[13]

Zilber's pseudo-exponentiation

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While a proof of Schanuel's conjecture seems a long way off,[14] connections with model theory have prompted a surge of research on the conjecture.

In 2004, Boris Zilber systematically constructed exponential fields Kexp that are algebraically closed and of characteristic zero, and such that one of these fields exists for each uncountable cardinality.[15] He axiomatised these fields and, using Hrushovski's construction and techniques inspired by work of Shelah on categoricity in infinitary logics, proved that this theory of "pseudo-exponentiation" has a unique model in each uncountable cardinal. Schanuel's conjecture is part of this axiomatisation, and so the natural conjecture that the unique model of cardinality continuum is actually isomorphic to the complex exponential field implies Schanuel's conjecture. In fact, Zilber showed that this conjecture holds if and only if both Schanuel's conjecture and the Exponential-Algebraic Closedness conjecture hold.[16] As this construction can also give models with counterexamples of Schanuel's conjecture, this method cannot prove Schanuel's conjecture.[17]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Lang, Serge (1966). Introduction to Transcendental Numbers. Addison–Wesley. pp. 30–31.
  2. ^ a b c d Waldschmidt, Michel (2021). "Schanuel's Conjecture: algebraic independence of transcendental numbers" (PDF).
  3. ^ von Lindemann, Ferdinand (1882). "Ueber die Zahl π". Mathematische Annalen. 20: 213–225. ISSN 0025-5831.
  4. ^ Weierstrass 1885, pp. 1067–1086,
  5. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Gelfond's Theorem". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2024-10-26.
  6. ^ Murty, M. Ram; Rath, Purusottam (2014). Transcendental Numbers. Springer. doi:10.1007/978-1-4939-0832-5. ISBN 978-1-4939-0832-5.
  7. ^ Cheng, Chuangxun; Dietel, Brian; Herblot, Mathilde; Huang, Jingjing; Krieger, Holly; Marques, Diego; Mason, Jonathan; Mereb, Martin; Wilson, S. Robert (2008-05-07). "Some consequences of Schanuel's Conjecture". arXiv:0804.3550 [math.NT].
  8. ^ Terzo, Giuseppina (2008). "Some consequences of Schanuel's conjecture in exponential rings". Communications in Algebra. 36 (3): 1171–1189. doi:10.1080/00927870701410694. S2CID 122764821.
  9. ^ Scott W. Williams, Million Bucks Problems
  10. ^ Ax, James (1971). "On Schanuel's conjectures". Annals of Mathematics. 93 (2): 252–268. doi:10.2307/1970774. JSTOR 1970774.
  11. ^ a b Macintyre, A. & Wilkie, A. J. (1996). "On the decidability of the real exponential field". In Odifreddi, Piergiorgio (ed.). Kreiseliana: About and Around Georg Kreisel. Wellesley: Peters. pp. 441–467. ISBN 978-1-56881-061-4.
  12. ^ a b Kirby, Jonathan & Zilber, Boris (2006). "The uniform Schanuel conjecture over the real numbers". Bull. London Math. Soc. 38 (4): 568–570. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.407.5667. doi:10.1112/S0024609306018510. S2CID 122077474.
  13. ^ Bertolin, Cristiana (2002). "Périodes de 1-motifs et transcendance". Journal of Number Theory. 97 (2): 204–221. doi:10.1016/S0022-314X(02)00002-1. hdl:2318/103562.
  14. ^ Waldschmidt, Michel (2000). Diophantine approximation on linear algebraic groups. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-3-662-11569-5.
  15. ^ Zilber, Boris (2004). "Pseudo-exponentiation on algebraically closed fields of characteristic zero". Annals of Pure and Applied Logic. 132 (1): 67–95. doi:10.1016/j.apal.2004.07.001.
  16. ^ Zilber, Boris (2002). "Exponential sums equations and the Schanuel conjecture". J. London Math. Soc. 65 (2): 27–44. doi:10.1112/S0024610701002861. S2CID 123143365.
  17. ^ Bays, Martin; Kirby, Jonathan (2018). "Pseudo-exponential maps, variants, and quasiminimality". Algebra Number Theory. 12 (3): 493–549. arXiv:1512.04262. doi:10.2140/ant.2018.12.493. S2CID 119602079.

Sources

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