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In real analysis, the real projective line (also called the one-point compactification of the real line, or the projectively extended real numbers), is the set The symbol
Dividing by zeroUnlike most mathematical models of the intuitive concept of 'number', this structure allows division by zero: for nonzero a. This structure, however is not a field, and division does not retain its original algebraic meaning in it. The geometric interpretation is this: a vertical line has infinite slope. Extensions of the real lineThe real projective line extends the field of real numbers in the same way that the Riemann sphere extends the field of complex numbers, by adding a single point called conventionally ∞. Compare the extended real number line (also called the two-point compactification of the real line), which does distinguish between OrderThe order relation cannot be extended to GeometryFundamental to the idea that ∞ is a point no different from any other is the way the real projective line is a homogeneous space, in fact homeomorphic to a circle. For example the general linear group of 2×2 real invertible matrices has a transitive action on it. The group action may be expressed by Möbius transformations, with the understanding that when the denominator of the linear fractional transformation is 0, the image is ∞. The detailed analysis of the action shows that for any three distinct points P, Q and R, there is a linear fractional transformation taking P to 0, Q to 1, and R to ∞. This cannot be extended to 4-tuples of points, because the cross-ratio is invariant. The terminology projective line is appropriate, because the points are in 1-1 correspondence with one-dimensional linear subspaces of R2. Arithmetic operationsMotivation for arithmetic operationsThe arithmetic operations in this space are an extension of the same operations on reals. The motivation for the new definitions is the limits of functions of real numbers. Arithmetic operations which are definedArithmetic operations which are left undefinedThe following cannot be motivated by considering limits of real functions, and any definition of them would require us to give up additional algebraic properties. Therefore, they are left undefined: Algebraic propertiesThe following equalities mean: Either both sides are undefined, or both sides are defined and equal. This is true for any The following is true whenever the right-hand side is defined, for any In general, all laws of arithmetic are valid as long as all the occurring expressions are defined. Intervals and topologyThe concept of an interval can be extended to The corresponding open and half-open intervals are obtained by removing the endpoints.
The open intervals as base define a topology on As said, the topology is homeomorphic to a circle. Thus it is metrizable corresponding (for a given homeomorphism) to the ordinary metric on this circle (either measured straight or along the circle). There is no metric which is an extension of the ordinary metric on R. Interval arithmeticInterval arithmetic is trickier in which is true even when the intervals involved include 0. CalculusThe tools of calculus can be used to analyze functions of NeighbourhoodsLet
LimitsBasic definitions of limitsLet The limit of f(x) as x approaches p is L, denoted if and only if for every neighbourhood A of L, there is a punctured neighbourhood B of p, such that The one-sided limit of f(x) as x approaches p from the right (left) is L, denoted if and only if for every neighbourhood A of L, there is a right-sided (left-sided) punctured neighbourhood B of p, such that It can be shown that Comparison with limits in
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