Is there any polynomial $f(x,y)\in{\mathbb Q}[x,y]{}\ $ such that $f:\mathbb{Q}\times\mathbb{Q} \rightarrow\mathbb{Q}$ is a bijection?
Remember to vote up questions/answers you find interesting or helpful (requires 15 reputation points)
|
231
117
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
-2
|
Edit[ The following is wrong ~ see comments] I don't think so. Suppose $f$ to be surjective. Let $x\mapsto 0$ and $y\mapsto 1$. Now consider two distinct paths $\gamma,\eta:[0,1]\to\mathbb Q\times\mathbb Q$ from $x$ to $y$. Since $f$ is continuous it maps these paths surjectively onto $[0,1]$ (more exactly $[0,1]\subset f\gamma([0,1])$ and $[0,1]\subset f\eta([0,1])$). Thus, $f$ cannot be injective. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
You can accept an answer to one of your own questions by clicking the check mark next to it. This awards 15 reputation points to the person who answered and 2 reputation points to you.
|
-2
|
I would be inclined to say no, for the following reasons. First, note that the function $f^{-1}$ is a bijection $\mathbb{Q}\mapsto\mathbb{Q}\times\mathbb{Q}$, and as such, is something that resembles a space-filling curve. But in general, space-filling curves are highly complex, "messy" objects, not something one would expect from the inverse of a polynomial in two variables. Furthermore, note that the polynomials $p(x)=f(x,y)$ and $q(y)=f(x,y)$, for fixed $y$, satisfy $p^{-1}(x)\in\mathbb{Q}$ and $q^{-1}(x)\in\mathbb{Q}$ whenever $x\in\mathbb{Q}$, i.e., the equation $p(x)-r=0$ has a rational solution for every $r\in\mathbb{Q}$. However, as far as I know, the only polynomials that satisfy this are linear functions, which could not provide the bijection required. |
|||||||||||||
|
|
-2
|
Let us consider a simpler case first. Let $Q_1=Q\cap [0,1]$. Now let us assume $f:Q_1\times Q_1\to Q_1$ is a uniformly continuous bijection. Then, according to Rudin (I believe it is an exercise), there is unique continuous extension, $g$, such that: 1) $f=g$ on $Q_1\times Q_1$. 2) $g$ is uniformly continuous on $\overline{Q_1\times Q_1}=[0,1]^2$. 3) Namely, $g(x_0)=\lim_{x\to x_0} f(x)$. Since the image of a connected, compact set is connected and compact, then $Im(g)=[0,1]$. But, this is impossible because if we consider three distinct rational points $a,b,c$ in $[0,1]^2$, then $g$ restricted to the connected set $[0,1]^2-${$a,b,c$} is still continuous, but the image will not be connected since g is bijective on $Q_1\times Q_1$. I think the above case now follows. That is if we consider $f:Q\times Q\to Q$ and $f$ is a polynomial, then $f$ restricted to $Q_1\times Q_1$ would could be a uniformly continuous bijection. However, we won't know what the image is. But this doesn't matter, since when we extend to $g$ the continuous image of a connected compact set is connected and compact. But the only connected compact subsets of $R$ are bounded closed intervals. So, the image would be some $[a,b]$ and would get another contradiction. |
|||||
|
|
-10
|
No, there is none. Suppose that there was such an $f$. Then for every $a\in\mathbb{Q}$ the function $f(a,\cdot):\mathbb{Q}\rightarrow \mathbb{Q}$ would be an injection. So there should infinitely many injections from $\mathbb{Q}$ to $\mathbb{Q}$, that have disjoint images. But there are only two possibilities for their limits when $x\rightarrow +\infty$. Contradiction. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|

