The Different Classes and Flavors of Numbers

In summary, Charles R Greathouse IV from MMF has allowed the reproduction of an image showcasing the different classes of numbers. These include rings, fields, and algebraically closed fields, with objects in dashed rings being sets. The key includes examples such as the ring of integers and the field of rational numbers. Other types of numbers mentioned are quadratic integers, quadratic numbers, polyquadratic numbers, constructible numbers, Huzita-Hatori numbers, algebraic integers, algebraic numbers, solvable by radicals numbers, EL numbers, Liouvilian numbers, elementary numbers, periods, exponential periods, and complex numbers. References are also provided for further reading.
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MarkFL
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Resident number theorist and global moderator at MMF (Charles R Greathouse IV) has graciously given me permission to reproduce an image he created to demonstrate the different classes of numbers:

1662436650508.png


Rings are depicted in a ring, fields in an octagon, and algebraically closed fields in a rectangle. Objects in dashed rings are just sets (usually not even closed under addition!).

Key:

$\mathbb{Z}$: the ring of integers $\{..., -2, -1, 0, 1, ...\}$.

$\mathbb{Q}$: the field of rational numbers.

quadratic (etc.) integers: the root of a monic quadratic (etc.) polynomial in the integers.

quadratic (etc.) numbers: the root of a quadratic (etc.) polynomial in the integers.

polyquadratic numbers: numbers of the form $\sqrt{a_1}+\sqrt{a_2}+\cdots+\sqrt{a_k}$ with $a_i$ rational; see Conway, Radin, & Sadun.

constructible numbers: numbers which can be formed from field operations plus extraction of square roots, for example $\sqrt{4 + \sqrt{7}}$.

Huzita-Hatori numbers: numbers which can be formed from the field operations plus extraction of square and cube roots.

algebraic integers: the root of a monic polynomial in the integers.

algebraic numbers: the root of a polynomial in the integers.

solvable by radicals: numbers which can be formed from the field operations plus extraction of $n$-th roots.

$EL$ numbers: the smallest subfield of $\mathbb{C}$ closed under $\exp$ and $\log$, allowing explicit roots like $\exp\left(\dfrac{\log(x)}{5} \right)$; Chow writes $E$ for this.

Liouvilian numbers: algebraic closure of $EL$, allowing finding arbitrary roots in addition to $\exp$ and $\log$; sometimes written $L$.

elementary numbers: extension of Liouvilian numbers allowing implicit $\exp$ and $\log$
periods: multidimensional integrals of rational functions; see Kontsevich & Zagier.

exponential periods: the (algebraic?) closure of periods and exponentials of periods; see Kontsevich & Zagier.

$\mathbb{C}$: the complex numbers.

References:

Timothy Y. Chow, http://math.mit.edu/~tchow/closedform.pdf, The American Mathematical Monthly 106:5 (1999), pp. 440-448.

John H. Conway, Charles Radin, and Lorenzo Sadun, On Angles Whose Squared Trigonometric Functions are Rational, Discrete Computational Geometry 22 (1999), pp. 321-332.

Maxim Kontsevich and Don Zagier, Periods, in "Mathematics Unlimited, Year 2001 and Beyond", Eds. B.Engquist and W.Scmidt, Springer, 2001.
 

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Thanks @MarkFL! What math forum can we move this to?
 

Related to The Different Classes and Flavors of Numbers

1. What are the different classes of numbers?

The different classes of numbers are natural numbers, whole numbers, integers, rational numbers, and irrational numbers.

2. What are natural numbers?

Natural numbers are positive numbers that are used for counting and do not include fractions or decimals.

3. What are irrational numbers?

Irrational numbers are numbers that cannot be expressed as a ratio of two integers and have an infinite number of non-repeating digits after the decimal point.

4. How do integers differ from whole numbers?

Integers include all positive and negative whole numbers, while whole numbers include only positive numbers.

5. What are rational numbers?

Rational numbers are numbers that can be expressed as a ratio of two integers and can be either terminating or non-terminating repeating decimals.

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