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Formal power series with cyclically ordered exponents
by
Gerard Leloup
University of LeMans, France
We say that a set C is cyclically ordered if
it is equipped with
a 3-ary relation (·, ·, ·) on C that
satisfies (1), (2), (3)
below.
(1) (·, ·, ·) enjoys for allx, y, z,
(x, y, z) ===> x =/= y =/= z =/= x
(2) (·, ·, ·) enjoys for allx, y, z,
(x, y, z) ===> (y, z, x)
(3) for all x in C, (x , ·, ·) is antisymetric and
transitive. Hence it induces a total order on
C \{ x },
we will note <= x the associate order on C, with first
element x, Cx this ordered set and minx the minimum
with the order <= x.
Let C be an Abelian group and a cyclic order
(·, ·, ·), we say that C is a
cyclically ordered group if
(·, ·, ·) is compatible, i.e. for allx, y, z, u,
(x, y, z) ===> (x+u, y+u, z+u)
Any totally ordered set is a
cyclically ordered one once equipped with the ternary relation
(x, y, z) iff x < y < z or y < z < x or z < x < y.
With the same relation, any totally ordered group is a
cyclically ordered one. Such a
cyclically ordered group is called a
linear cyclically ordered
one.
Let k be a commutative ring (or field), and C be a
cyclically ordered group.
We generalize the usual
definitions of k[[C]], the ring of formal power series, and
k[C], the ring of polynomials, in such a way that they coincide
with classical one when C is a linear cyclically ordered group.
And applying Rieger's theorem, we show that there exists a
totally ordered group G
and z in G+, z cofinal in G+, and subrings R of
k((G)) such that k[C] =~ k[G]/(1-Xz),
k[[C]] =~ R/(1-Xz).
We can prove that k[C] is
integral if and only if k is integral and C is torsion free,
and that k[[C]] is a field if and only if k is a field and C
a linear cyclically ordered group.
Then, we define the cyclic
valuation on k[[C]], as the mapping v
from C ×k[[C]] onto C \cup { \infty}, such that
for all a in C and \sigma in k[[C]], v(a, \sigma) is the
first element of the support of \sigma in the ordered set
Ca with first element a, and point out some of its
properties.
Next, we define
cyclically valued groups. An Abelian group G is a
cyclically valued one if there exists a
cyclically ordered set C and a
mapping v from C ×G onto C \cup { \infty} such
that for any a in C, (G, v(a, ·)) is a valued group,
with the order <= a on C; v(a, ·) will be called
the a-valuation. For any \sigma in G, the
support
of \sigma will be the subset of C of elements a
such that there exists b in C with v(b, \sigma)=a.
\sigma is a monomial if its support contains
exactly one element. Using such notions, we give two first order
properties :
(1) the cyclic valuation on G is defined
by the supports
(2) the monomials v-generate G,
and prove that :
(a) the subgroups of Hahn products of
Abelian groups indexed by C
are exactly the cyclically valued groups satisfying (1) and (2),
and such that the supports of all the elements are well ordered,
(b) the Hahn products of Abelian group indexed by C
are exactly the cyclically valued group (G, v) satisfying (1) and
(2), and
such that (G, v(a, ·)) is spherically complete for
some a in C and is closed under section.
If we assume C is a cyclically
ordered group, and extend the definition of cyclically
valued group to cyclically valued ring, there exist some properties
analogous to the properties of the cyclically valued groups, with
formal power series rings with cyclically ordered exponents
instead of Hahn products. If all the supports are finite, then
such cyclically valued rings are isomorphic to polynomial
rings. The valued fields of equal characteristic and perfect
residue fields are subfields of cyclically valued one.
The usual valuations on fields are characterized by
valuation rings. In the same way, we characterize the cyclically
valued rings by the multiplicative subgroup of inversible
monomials, where a subset is the analog of the
positive cone of the subgroup of the inversible monomials,
and by the set of
elements of 0-valuation equal to 0.
Remark that if C is a linear cyclically ordered group,
(that is a totally ordered group), and if all the supports are well
ordered, then we can define a valuation in the usual sense on the
ring. We will call it the infinite valuation denoted
v(\infty, ·). We shall
define the infinite valuation in a more general case, such that
it satisfies the rule
v(\infty, \sigma\tau)=v(\infty, \sigma)+v(\infty, \tau) if
and only if C is his a linear cyclically ordered group.
Now let T be a totally ordered group
and k a field (or a ring), \nu the usual valuation on k[[T]].
The v(a, ·), a in T exist : for \sigma in k[[T]],
v(a, \sigma) is the first element of the intersection of the
support of \sigma with the final segment [a, \infty] (set
v(a, \sigma)=\infty if the intersection is empty). v(a, ·)
satisfies the ultrametric inequality, but v(a, \sigma)=\infty is
not equivalent to \sigma = 0. If we consider T with the
order <= a deduced from the cyclic order, then
v(a, \sigma)=\infty is equivalent to \sigma = 0. So the
formal power series with exponents in a totally ordered group
are a particular case of the formal power series with cyclically
ordered exponents, and \nu = v(\infty, ·).
Date received: April 9, 1999
Copyright © 1999 by the author(s). The author(s) of this document and the organizers of the conference have granted their consent to include this abstract in Atlas Conferences Inc. Document # cacv-23.