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Power-bounded element

A power-bounded element is an element of a topological ring whose powers are bounded. These elements are used in the theory of adic spaces.

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A power-bounded element is an element of a topological ring whose powers are bounded. These elements are used in the theory of adic spaces.

Definition

Let A {\displaystyle A} be a topological ring. A subset T A {\displaystyle T\subset A} is called bounded, if, for every neighbourhood U {\displaystyle U} of zero, there exists an open neighbourhood V {\displaystyle V} of zero such that T V := { t v t T , v V } U {\displaystyle T\cdot V:=\{t\cdot v\mid t\in T,v\in V\}\subset U} holds. An element a A {\displaystyle a\in A} is called power-bounded, if the set { a n n N } {\displaystyle \{a^{n}\mid n\in \mathbb {N} \}} is bounded.1

Examples

  • An element x R {\displaystyle x\in \mathbb {R} } is power-bounded if and only if | x | 1 {\displaystyle |x|\leq 1} hold.
  • More generally, if A {\displaystyle A} is a topological commutative ring whose topology is induced by an absolute value, then an element x A {\displaystyle x\in A} is power-bounded if and only if | x | 1 {\displaystyle |x|\leq 1} holds. If the absolute value is non-Archimedean, the power-bounded elements form a subring, denoted by A {\displaystyle A^{\circ }} . This follows from the ultrametric inequality.
  • The ring of power-bounded elements in Q p {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} _{p}} is Q p = Z p {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} _{p}^{\circ }=\mathbb {Z} _{p}} .
  • Every topological nilpotent element is power-bounded.2

Literature

References

References

  1. Wedhorn: Def. 5.27
  2. Wedhorn: Rem. 5.28 (4)