Computable dimension for ordered fields (Q283123): Difference between revisions

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It is a natural question to ask whether the various effective presentations of a computable structure are somewhat equivalent. This can be phrased in terms of computable dimension: the computable dimension of a computable structure is the number of distinct computable presentations of the structure, up to computable isomorphism. A computable structure is computably categorical if it has computable dimension 1. The question has been studied for various structures, but it seems not so much is known for fields. Some recent work of Miller, Park, Poonen, Schoutens and Shlapentokh seems to have open the horizon by constructing a fully faithfull functor from graphs to fields, allowing to associate to a computable graph a computable field with the same essential computable-model-theoretic properties. The present paper considers computable ordered fields. The main results are: {\parindent=7mm \begin{itemize}\item[(1)] Every computable ordered field of finite transcendence degree is computably stable, i.e., for every other computable ordered field \(B\), any classical isomorphism from the original field to \(B\) is in fact computable, and this yield computable dimension 1. \item[(2)] There are computable ordered fields of infinite transcendence degree which have infinite computable dimension, but others with computable dimension 1. \item[(3)] Archimedean computable ordered fields having finite computable dimension must in fact have dimension 1.\end{itemize}}
Property / review text: It is a natural question to ask whether the various effective presentations of a computable structure are somewhat equivalent. This can be phrased in terms of computable dimension: the computable dimension of a computable structure is the number of distinct computable presentations of the structure, up to computable isomorphism. A computable structure is computably categorical if it has computable dimension 1. The question has been studied for various structures, but it seems not so much is known for fields. Some recent work of Miller, Park, Poonen, Schoutens and Shlapentokh seems to have open the horizon by constructing a fully faithfull functor from graphs to fields, allowing to associate to a computable graph a computable field with the same essential computable-model-theoretic properties. The present paper considers computable ordered fields. The main results are: {\parindent=7mm \begin{itemize}\item[(1)] Every computable ordered field of finite transcendence degree is computably stable, i.e., for every other computable ordered field \(B\), any classical isomorphism from the original field to \(B\) is in fact computable, and this yield computable dimension 1. \item[(2)] There are computable ordered fields of infinite transcendence degree which have infinite computable dimension, but others with computable dimension 1. \item[(3)] Archimedean computable ordered fields having finite computable dimension must in fact have dimension 1.\end{itemize}} / rank
 
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Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Luc Bélair / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 03D45 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 03C57 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 12J15 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 12L12 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6580194 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
computable dimension
Property / zbMATH Keywords: computable dimension / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
computable ordered fields
Property / zbMATH Keywords: computable ordered fields / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
computably categorical ordered fields
Property / zbMATH Keywords: computably categorical ordered fields / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
effective algebra
Property / zbMATH Keywords: effective algebra / rank
 
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Computable dimension for ordered fields
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    Computable dimension for ordered fields (English)
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    13 May 2016
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    It is a natural question to ask whether the various effective presentations of a computable structure are somewhat equivalent. This can be phrased in terms of computable dimension: the computable dimension of a computable structure is the number of distinct computable presentations of the structure, up to computable isomorphism. A computable structure is computably categorical if it has computable dimension 1. The question has been studied for various structures, but it seems not so much is known for fields. Some recent work of Miller, Park, Poonen, Schoutens and Shlapentokh seems to have open the horizon by constructing a fully faithfull functor from graphs to fields, allowing to associate to a computable graph a computable field with the same essential computable-model-theoretic properties. The present paper considers computable ordered fields. The main results are: {\parindent=7mm \begin{itemize}\item[(1)] Every computable ordered field of finite transcendence degree is computably stable, i.e., for every other computable ordered field \(B\), any classical isomorphism from the original field to \(B\) is in fact computable, and this yield computable dimension 1. \item[(2)] There are computable ordered fields of infinite transcendence degree which have infinite computable dimension, but others with computable dimension 1. \item[(3)] Archimedean computable ordered fields having finite computable dimension must in fact have dimension 1.\end{itemize}}
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    computable dimension
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    computable ordered fields
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    computably categorical ordered fields
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    effective algebra
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