The polynomial closure is not topological (Q2154265): Difference between revisions

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Property / DOI: 10.1016/j.jpaa.2022.107133 / rank
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Property / arXiv ID: 2107.02552 / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Integer-Valued Polynomials / rank
 
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Property / cites work: What You Should Know About Integer-Valued Polynomials / rank
 
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Property / cites work: On the polynomial closure in a valued field / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 06:52, 17 December 2024

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The polynomial closure is not topological
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    The polynomial closure is not topological (English)
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    19 July 2022
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    Let \(D\) be a commutative integral domain with quotient field \(K\). The \(D\)-polynomial closure of a subset \(S\) of \(K\) is defined as the largest subset \(\overline S\) of \(K\) for which \(\mathrm{Int}(S, D) =\mathrm{Int}(\overline S, D)\), where \(\mathrm{Int}(S, D) = \{f \in K[X] \mid f(S) \subseteq D\}\) is the ring of integer-valued polynomials over \(S\). Chabert proved that the \(D\)-polynomial closure is topological (that is, it is equal to the closure operator for some topology on \(D\)) if \(D\) is a valuation domain of rank \(1\), using pseudo-convergent sequences introduced by Ostrowski. The authors prove that the \(V\)-polynomial closure is never topological for a valuation domain \(V\) of rank \(>1\) by describing first the polynomial closure of a pseudo-convergent sequence. Using this description they obtain a pseudo-convergent sequence \(E\) such that for some \(t\in E\) one has that \(\overline E\ne \overline{\{E\setminus t\}}\cup \overline{ \{t\}}\), implying that the polynomial closure is not topological. They also determine when two pseudo-convergent sequences have the same polynomial closure.
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    polynomial closure
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    pseudo-convergent sequences
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    valuation domains
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    integer-valued polynomials
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