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Ordered field
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==Examples of ordered fields== Examples of ordered fields are: * the field <math>\Q</math> of [[rational number]]s with its standard ordering (which is also its only ordering); * the field <math>\R</math> of [[real number]]s with its standard ordering (which is also its only ordering); * any subfield of an ordered field, such as the real [[algebraic numbers]] or the [[computable number]]s, becomes an ordered field by restricting the ordering to the subfield; * the field <math>\mathbb{Q}(x)</math> of [[rational functions]] <math>p(x)/q(x)</math>, where <math>p(x)</math> and <math>q(x)</math> are [[polynomial]]s with rational coefficients and <math>q(x) \ne 0</math>, can be made into an ordered field by fixing a real [[transcendental number]] <math>\alpha</math> and defining <math>p(x)/q(x) > 0</math> if and only if <math>p(\alpha)/q(\alpha) > 0</math>. This is equivalent to embedding <math>\mathbb{Q}(x)</math> into <math>\mathbb{R}</math> via <math>x\mapsto \alpha</math> and restricting the ordering of <math>\mathbb{R}</math> to an ordering of the image of <math>\mathbb{Q}(x)</math>. In this fashion, we get many different orderings of <math>\mathbb{Q}(x)</math>. * the field <math>\mathbb{R}(x)</math> of [[rational functions]] <math>p(x)/q(x)</math>, where <math>p(x)</math> and <math>q(x)</math> are [[polynomial]]s with real coefficients and <math>q(x) \ne 0</math>, can be made into an ordered field by defining <math>p(x)/q(x) > 0</math> to mean that <math>p_n/q_m > 0</math>, where <math>p_n \neq 0</math> and <math>q_m \neq 0</math> are the leading coefficients of <math>p(x) = p_n x^n + \dots + p_0</math> and <math>q(x) = q_m x^m + \dots + q_0</math>, respectively. Equivalently: for rational functions <math>f(x), g(x)\in \mathbb{R}(x)</math> we have <math>f(x) < g(x)</math> if and only if <math>f(t) < g(t)</math> for all sufficiently large <math>t\in\mathbb{R}</math>. In this ordered field the polynomial <math>p(x)=x</math> is greater than any constant polynomial and the ordered field is not [[Archimedean field|Archimedean]]. * The field <math>\mathbb{R}((x))</math> of [[formal Laurent series]] with real coefficients, where ''x'' is taken to be infinitesimal and positive * the [[transseries]] * [[real closed field]]s * the [[superreal number]]s * the [[hyperreal number]]s The [[surreal numbers]] form a [[class (set theory)|proper class]] rather than a [[Set (mathematics)|set]], but otherwise obey the axioms of an ordered field. Every ordered field can be embedded into the surreal numbers.
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