Gaussian number in nLab
Context
Algebra
Algebraic theories
Algebras and modules
Higher algebras
-
symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category of spectra
Model category presentations
Geometry on formal duals of algebras
Theorems
The Gaussian numbers, sometimes (unnecessarily) called the Gaussian rational numbers, are the elements of the number field ℚ+iℚ\mathbb{Q} + \mathrm{i}\mathbb{Q}, where ℚ\mathbb{Q} is the field of rational numbers. In other words, a complex number is Gaussian (and a fortiori algebraic) iff both its real and imaginary parts are rational. The Gaussian integers are the algebraic integers in the Gaussian numbers, which happen to be simply the elements of the integral domain ℤ+iℤ\mathbb{Z} + \mathrm{i}\mathbb{Z}, where ℤ\mathbb{Z} is the integral domain of (rational) integers.
Last revised on July 19, 2014 at 01:31:04. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.