Wheel theory
Wheels are a type of algebra where division is always defined. In particular, division by zero is meaningful. The real numbers can be extended to a wheel, as can any commutative ring.
Also the Riemann sphere can be extended to a wheel by adjoining an element . The Riemann sphere is an extension of the complex plane by an element , where for any complex . However, is still undefined on the Riemann sphere, but defined in wheels.
The term wheel is inspired by the topological picture of the projective line together with an extra point .[1]
The algebra of wheels
Wheels discard the usual notion of division being a binary operator, replacing it with multiplication by a unary operator similar (but not identical) to the multiplicative inverse , such that becomes shorthand for , and modifies the rules of algebra such that
- in the general case.
- in the general case.
- in the general case, as is not the same as the multiplicative inverse of .
Precisely, a wheel is an algebraic structure with operations binary addition , multiplication , constants 0, 1 and unary , satisfying:
- Addition and multiplication are commutative and associative, with 0 and 1 as their respective identities.
- and
If there is an element with , then we may define negation by and .
Other identities that may be derived are
And, for with and , we get the usual
The subset is always a commutative ring if negation can be defined as above, and every commutative ring is such a subset of a wheel. If is an invertible element of the commutative ring, then . Thus, whenever makes sense, it is equal to , but the latter is always defined, even when .
References
- ↑ Carlström (2004)
- Carlström, Jesper: Wheels – on division by zero. Mathematical Structures in Computer Science, 14(2004): no. 1, 143–184 (also available online here).
- Setzer, Anton (Drafts): Wheels (1997)