$p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem - MathOverflow most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-06-20T05:00:37Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/question/57657 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/57657/p-adic-integrals-and-cauchys-theorem $p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem wood 2011-03-07T12:54:56Z 2013-06-03T02:39:21Z <p>A short version of my question is: Is there a $p$-adic theory of integration?</p> <p>Now let me expand a little further. In introductory texts such as Koblitz' book $p$-adic numbers,.. a bunch of $p$-adic analysis is developed. However, since all applications are towards number theory, the exposition stops at some point. In particular, there is no theory of integration developed for $p$-adic numbers. By this I do not mean putting a measure on $\mathbb{C}_p$ and integrating real or complex valued functions, but instead putting a "$p$-adic measure"(whatever this may be) on it and integrating $\mathbb{C}_p$-valued functions on it.</p> <p>To rephrase my question: Is there are an integration theroy for $\mathbb{C}_p$-valued functions on $\mathbb{C}_p$. In particular I would like to know if an analogue of Cauchy's theorem holds. Where can I read more about such a theory?</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/57657/p-adic-integrals-and-cauchys-theorem/57662#57662 Answer by Franz Lemmermeyer for $p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem Franz Lemmermeyer 2011-03-07T13:24:39Z 2011-03-07T13:24:39Z <p>I recall that I once looked at a book by Schikhof called <em>Ultrametric calculus. An introduction to $p$-adic analysis</em>, which is available from CUP and might be what you're looking for.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/57657/p-adic-integrals-and-cauchys-theorem/57674#57674 Answer by Anatoly Kochubei for $p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem Anatoly Kochubei 2011-03-07T14:36:29Z 2011-03-07T15:06:36Z <p>There exists a theory of the Shnirelman integral providing Cauchy-type formulas for $\mathbb C_p$-valued rigid (Krasner) analytic functions on subsets of $\mathbb C_p$. For a modern exposition see M. M. Vishik, Non-Archimedean spectral theory, J. Soviet Math. 30 (1985), 2513--2554.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/57657/p-adic-integrals-and-cauchys-theorem/57677#57677 Answer by Chandan Singh Dalawat for $p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem Chandan Singh Dalawat 2011-03-07T14:40:11Z 2011-03-08T04:06:11Z <p>Christophe Breuil's Bourbaki report <em>Intégration sur les variétés p-adiques</em> (Séminaire Bourbaki 860, Astérisque 266, 2000, 319--350) might be a good place to start looking for answers. It is available on his <a href="http://www.math.u-psud.fr/~breuil/" rel="nofollow">webpage</a> and also at <a href="http://www.numdam.org/numdam-bin/fitem?id=SB_1998-1999__41__319_0" rel="nofollow">Numdam</a> (Grenoble).</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/57657/p-adic-integrals-and-cauchys-theorem/57781#57781 Answer by Minhyong Kim for $p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem Minhyong Kim 2011-03-08T06:09:51Z 2011-03-08T13:12:27Z <p>There is an important difference, relevant to the original question, between the two kinds of $p$-adic integrals mentioned by Kevin in his comments. Because I see frequent confusion on this issue, I thought I'd comment.</p> <p>The 'usual' $p$-adic integrals as you might see in, say, Tate's thesis on L-functions or the adelic theory of automorphic forms, are <em>volume</em> integrals, with respect to a measure, typically on some group. This kind of volume integral can also be easily defined on arbitary varieties, and you will see plenty in Weil's book on Tamagawa numbers, or in papers on motivic integration. Coleman integration, on the other hand, is a $p$-adic analogue of <em>line integrals</em>, and comes up most naturally in discussing the holonomy of vector bundles with connection on a variety over a $p$-adic field (often interpreted as isocrytals). These, therefore, should be the right quantities to relate to a Cauchy formula. However, unfortunately (and fortunately), it doesn't work. The reason is that Coleman integration is a line integral along a <em>canonical path</em> between two points on a variety over the $p$-adics. So there is a canonical holonomy in the theory, at least if you just want to compute it for a bundle with unipotent connection, that is, one that has a strictly upper-triangular connection form. This is where a mysterious 'crystalline' structure on the space of paths is used, whereby there is a unique path invariant under the action of the Frobenius. The notion of a path, by the way, uses the Tannakian formalism in this context. For a very quick overview of this approach, you can look at section 2 of this paper: <a href="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~ucahmki/siegelinv.pdf" rel="nofollow">http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~ucahmki/siegelinv.pdf</a></p> <p>Breuil's paper linked from Chandan's answer should provide a more systematic overview.</p> <p>Anyways, because of the canonical paths in Coleman's theory, there can be no holonomy around a loop, and hence, no Cauchy formula. I was told quite a few years ago by Berkovich that he has a theory of line integrals on Berkovich spaces that are path dependent in interesting ways, but I've never looked into it.</p> <p>Added: I realize I didn't mention above the connection between holonomy and usual integration of a one-form $A$. You get this by considering the connection $$d+\begin{bmatrix}0&amp; A; \ 0&amp; 0\end{bmatrix}$$</p> <p>on the trivial bundle of rank two. One view of Coleman integration is that the holonomy $H_a^b$ from $a$ to $b$ is defined first. And then, the naive integral is defined by the fomula $$H_a^b=\begin{bmatrix}1&amp; \int_a^bA ;\ 0&amp; 1\end{bmatrix}$$</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/57657/p-adic-integrals-and-cauchys-theorem/57785#57785 Answer by monodromy for $p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem monodromy 2011-03-08T06:49:56Z 2011-03-08T08:02:39Z <p>The answer to the short version of your question is: yes, there is a $p$-adic theory of integration. </p> <p>As to whether an analogue of Cauchy's theorem holds in such a theory, I assume you are thinking of Cauchy's integral formula, and I work with the theory of Coleman. That formula amounts to the statement that the complex logarithm is a multivalued function. But over the $p$-adics, for each choice of $\mathscr{L}\in\mathbb{C}_p$ there is a so-called branch of the $p$-adic logarithm, which is defined on all $\mathbb{C}_p^\times$, uniquely determined by the fact that it behaves as expected for the product and it extends the convergent power series </p> <p>$$\log(1+x)=\sum_{n=1}^\infty\frac{(-x)^n}{n}$$ </p> <p>of $x\in\mathbb{C}_p$ with $v_p(x)>0$. Each of these provides a primitive of the function $f(x)=\frac{1}{x}$ on $\mathbb{C}_p$, and the ``Fundamental Theorem of Calculus´´ satisfied by Coleman's theory of $p$-adic line integrals, will tell you that the integral of $f(x)$ along a closed loop around $0\in\mathbb{C}_p$ is zero. </p> <p>A good reference:</p> <p>MR0782557 (86j:14014) Coleman, Robert F. Torsion points on curves and $p$-adic abelian integrals. Ann. of Math. (2) 121 (1985), no. 1, 111–168.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/57657/p-adic-integrals-and-cauchys-theorem/67820#67820 Answer by Jeremy Teitelbaum for $p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem Jeremy Teitelbaum 2011-06-15T01:53:29Z 2011-06-15T01:53:29Z <p>One could also approach this question by looking at the theory of distributions such as those that arise in Iwasawa theory. Chapter 13 of Washington's book Introduction to Cyclotomic Fields gives an introduction to this theory. Schneider's Non-Archimedean Functional Analysis gives results on the linear duals of spaces of p-adic functions of various types and these spaces of distributions amount to an integration theory. You could also look at my paper with Schneider called "p-adic Fourier Theory" (and the references therein) for another type of p-adic integration.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/57657/p-adic-integrals-and-cauchys-theorem/67830#67830 Answer by S. Carnahan for $p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem S. Carnahan 2011-06-15T05:01:57Z 2011-06-15T05:01:57Z <p>As Minhyong mentioned, Berkovich has a theory of integration of one-forms on his analytic spaces that yields parallel transport of étale-locally unipotent connections along both paths in the Berkovich-analytic sense (continuous maps from $[0,1]$ to the Berkovich space) and "homotopy classes of étale paths" (which are isomorphisms of the fiber functors at the geometric endpoints). Where Coleman integration depends on a choice of global branch of logarithm, Berkovich packages all possible choices into a sheafy construction.</p> <p>There is a <a href="http://press.princeton.edu/titles/8341.html" rel="nofollow">book with more details</a>.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/57657/p-adic-integrals-and-cauchys-theorem/132617#132617 Answer by Hassan Jolany for $p$-adic integrals and Cauchy's theorem Hassan Jolany 2013-06-03T02:34:07Z 2013-06-03T02:39:21Z <p>In recent decade, several number theorists for instance, professor T.Kim, H.Srivastava, Serkan Araci ,extended q-integral concept for p-adic numbers and found several combinatorial identities for Bernoulli, Euler and Genocchi numbers by using this new method. I try to briefly explain this method here ,</p> <p>Assume that $p$ be a fixed odd prime number. By $Z_p$ we denote the ring of p-adic rational integers, Q denotes the field of rational numbers, $Q_p$ denotes the field of p-adic rational numbers, and $C_p$ denotes the completion of algebraic closure of $Q_p$. Let N be the set of natural numbers and $N^∗ = N ∪ { 0 } $. The p-adic absolute value is defined by $|p|_p =\frac{1}{p}$. We assume $|q − 1|_p &lt; 1 $ as an indeterminate. Let $UD(Z_p)$ be the space of uniformly differentiable functions on $Z_p$. For a positive integer $d$ with $(d, p) = 1$, set</p> <p>$$X = X_d = lim_{←n} Z/dp^nZ,$$</p> <p>$$X^∗ = ∪_{0&lt; a&lt; dp , (a,p)=1} a + dpZ_p$$</p> <p>and $a + dp^nZ_p = \{x ∈ X | x ≡ a (mod dp^n)\}$.</p> <p>where $a ∈ Z$ satisfies the condition $0 ≤ a &lt; dp^n$.</p> <p>Firstly, for introducing fermionic p-adic q-integral, we need some basic information which we state here. A measure on $Z_p$ with values in a p-adic Banach space</p> <p>B is a continuous linear map $$f →\int f(x)\mu =\int_{Z_p} f(x)\mu(x)$$</p> <p>from $C^0(Z_p,C_p)$, (continuous function on $Z_p$ ) to $B$. We know that the set of locally constant functions from $Z_p$ to $Q_p$ is dense in $C^0(Z_p,C_p)$ so explicitly, for all $f ∈ C^0(Z_p,C_p)$, the locally constant functions $$f_n =\sum_{i=0}^{p^n−1} f(i)1_{i+p^nZ_p} → f$$ in $C^0$.</p> <p>Now, set $\mu (i + p^nZ_p) = \int_{Z_p}1_{i+p^nZ_p}\mu$, then $\int _{Z_p}f\mu$ is given by the following Riemannian sum, </p> <p>$$\int_{Z_p}f\mu = lim_{n→∞}\sum_{i=0}^{p^n−1}f(i)\mu(i + p^nZ_p)$$. </p> <p>T. Kim introduced $\mu$ as follows: $\mu_{−q}(a + p^nZ_p) =\frac{(-q)^a}{[p^n]_{-q}}$ for $f \in UD(Z_p)$, which is famous to the fermionic p-adic q-integral on $Z_p$ and you can find the applications of this definition in several papers which about q-Bernoulli numbers and polynomials .See <a href="http://journals.cambridge.org/download.php?file=%252FBAZ%252FBAZ62_02%252FS0004972700018700a.pdf&amp;code=e1b7d46433f924c5be3d4e84592ebdd3" rel="nofollow">here</a></p>