Sunday, 19 February 2017

Group isomorphism h:(mathbbR,+)to(mathbbR+,times) that is not an exponential function.




Let R+ denote the set of positive real numbers. Group isomorphism hb:(R,+)(R+,×) can be given by the exponential function: hb(r)=br, where b is a positive real number and is not 1. Moreover, after we define the group automorphism Ax:(R+,×)(R,+)(rxr), the set of all exponential functions(with positive base) are related by hk(r)=hbArh1b(k), with Ar the automorphism defined above.



I start to wonder that is this the only possible way to construct the isomorphism? Are there any isomorphisms i:(R,+)(R+,×) different from the exponential function?(It needs not to be continuous) But what about the case if we are looking for a continuous isomorphism?


Answer



First we will construct an isomorphism (R,+)(R+,×) which is not an exponential. Let V be R as a vector space over Q and let {vαR:αA} be a basis for V. Then any permutation σ of A induces linear operator T=Tσ on V, and so T:(R,+)(R,+) is a group isomorphism. T is not continuous (unless σ is the identity), and so expT:(R,+)(R+,×) is an isomorphism which is not continuous, hence not an exponential.



Now suppose that ϕ:(R,+)(R+,×) is a continuous group isomorphism. Write b=ϕ(1). Then ϕ(1)=b1 and induction gives ϕ(k)=bk for all kZ. Furthermore, for p/qQ, we have bp=ϕ(p)=ϕ((p/q)q)=ϕ(p/q)q,


so that ϕ(p/q)=bp/q. We then use continuity to extend ϕ to the reals, giving that ϕ(x)=bx for all x, so ϕ is an exponential with base b.


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