Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T03:11:09.514Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

ERDŐS PROPERTIES OF SUBSETS OF THE MAHLER SET S

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2023

TABOKA PRINCE CHALEBGWA
Affiliation:
The Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences, 222 College Street, Toronto, Ontario MST 3J1, Canada e-mail: [email protected]
SIDNEY A. MORRIS*
Affiliation:
School of Engineering, IT and Physical Sciences, Federation University Australia, PO Box 663, Ballarat, Victoria 3353, Australia and Department of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria 3086, Australia
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Erdős proved that every real number is the sum of two Liouville numbers. A set W of complex numbers is said to have the Erdős property if every real number is the sum of two members of W. Mahler divided the set of all transcendental numbers into three disjoint classes S, T and U such that, in particular, any two complex numbers which are algebraically dependent lie in the same class. The set of Liouville numbers is a proper subset of the set U and has Lebesgue measure zero. It is proved here, using a theorem of Weil on locally compact groups, that if $m\in [0,\infty )$, then there exist $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ dense subsets W of S each of Lebesgue measure m such that W has the Erdős property and no two of these W are homeomorphic. It is also proved that there are $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ dense subsets W of S each of full Lebesgue measure, which have the Erdős property. Finally, it is proved that there are $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ dense subsets W of S such that every complex number is the sum of two members of W and such that no two of these W are homeomorphic.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Australian Mathematical Publishing Association Inc.

1 Preliminaries

In 1844, Joseph Liouville proved the existence of transcendental numbers [Reference Angell1, Reference Baker2]. He introduced the set $\mathcal L$ of real numbers, now known as Liouville numbers, and showed that they are all transcendental. A real number x is said to be a Liouville number if for every positive integer n, there exists a pair of integers $(p,q)$ with $q>1$ such that

$$ \begin{align*}0< \bigg\lvert x-\frac{p}{q}\bigg\rvert<\frac{1}{q^n}.\end{align*} $$

In [Reference Erdős8], in 1962, Paul Erdős proved that every real number is the sum of two Liouville numbers (and also, if nonzero, is the product of two Liouville numbers). He gave two proofs. One was a constructive proof. The other proof used the fact that the set $\mathcal {L}$ of all Liouville numbers is a dense $G_{\delta }$ -set in $\mathbb {R}$ and showed that every dense $G_{\delta }$ -set in $\mathbb {R}$ has this property.

Definition 1.1. A subset W of the set $\mathbb {C}$ of all complex numbers is said to have the Erdős property [Reference Chalebgwa and Morris7] if every real number is a sum of two numbers in W. A subset V of the set $\mathbb {C}$ of all complex numbers is said to have the multiplicative Erdős property if every positive real number is a product of two numbers in V.

By the theorem proved by Erdős mentioned above, the set $\mathcal {L}$ of all Liouville numbers has the Erdős property and the multiplicative Erdős property.

The classification of Mahler partitions the set $\mathbb {C}$ of all complex numbers into four sets denoted by A, S, T and U, characterised by the rate with which a nonzero polynomial with integer coefficients approaches zero when evaluated at a particular number. We follow the presentation in [Reference Bugeaud4, Section 3]. While the definitions and results therein are stated and proved for real numbers, they carry over to the case of complex numbers.

Given a polynomial $P(X) \in \mathbb {C}[X]$ , recall that the height of P, denoted by $H(P)$ , is the maximum of the absolute values of the coefficients of P. Given a complex number $\xi $ , a positive integer n, and a real number $H \geq 1$ , we define the quantity

$$ \begin{align*} w_n(\xi, H) = \min \{ \mid\! P(\xi)\!\mid \, : P(X) \in \mathbb{Z} [X], \ H(P) \leq H, \ \deg (P) \leq n, \ P(\xi) \neq 0 \}. \end{align*} $$

Furthermore, we set

$$ \begin{align*} w_n(\xi) = \limsup_{H \rightarrow \infty} \frac{- \log w_n(\xi, H)}{\log H} \end{align*} $$

and

$$ \begin{align*} w(\xi) = \limsup_{n \rightarrow \infty} \frac{w_n(\xi)}{n}. \end{align*} $$

Definition 1.2. Let $\xi $ be a complex number. Then $\xi $ is said to be

  1. (i) an A-number if $w(\xi ) = 0$ ;

  2. (ii) an S-number if $0 < w(\xi ) < \infty $ ;

  3. (iii) a T-number if $w(\xi ) = \infty $ and $w_n(\xi ) < \infty $ for any $n \geq 1$ ;

  4. (iv) a U-number if $w(\xi ) = \infty $ and $w_n(\xi ) = \infty $ for all $n \geq n_0$ , for some positive integer $n_0$ .

Remark 1.3. Note the following from [Reference Baker2, Reference Bugeaud4, Reference Mahler10, Reference Mahler11].

  1. (i) The A-numbers are the algebraic numbers.

  2. (ii) Each Liouville number is a real U-number.

  3. (iii) If the complex numbers $\alpha $ and $\beta $ are algebraically dependent then they are in the same Mahler class; for example, the numbers $\alpha , -\alpha , n\alpha $ are all in the same Mahler set, for $n\in \mathbb {N}$ .

  4. (iv) The two-dimensional Lebesgue measure of each of the sets A, U and T is zero; S has full two-dimensional Lebesgue measure, that is, its complement in $\mathbb {C}$ has zero two-dimensional Lebesgue measure.

  5. (v) The one-dimensional Lebesgue measure of each of the sets $A\cap \mathbb {R}$ , $U\cap \mathbb {R}$ , $\mathcal {L}$ and $T\cap \mathbb {R}$ is zero; $S\cap \mathbb {R}$ has full one-dimensional Lebesgue measure, that is, its complement in $\mathbb {R}$ has zero one-dimensional Lebesgue measure.

  6. (vi) If a is an algebraic number with $a\ne 0$ , then $\exp (a)\in S$ .

André Weil (see [Reference Grosse-Erdmann9, Reference Weil16]) proved the following generalisation of the Steinhaus theorem [Reference Stromberg14].

Theorem 1.4. If G is a locally compact Hausdorff group and B is a subset of G of positive (left) Haar measure, then $BB^{-1}=\{b_1b_2^{-1}:b_1,b_2\in B\}$ contains an open neighbourhood of the identity.

Corollary 1.5 (See [Reference Brown, Yin, Pollington and Moran3, Reference Pollington, Pollington and Moran13])

  1. (i) If B is a subset of $\mathbb {R}$ of positive one-dimensional Lebesgue measure, then the set $B-B=\{b_1-b_2:b_1,b_2\in B\}$ contains an open interval containing $0$ .

  2. (ii) If D is a subset of $\mathbb {C}$ of positive two-dimensional Lebesgue measure, then the set $D-D=\{d_1-d_2:d_1,d_2\in D\}$ contains an open disc with centre $0$ .

  3. (iii) If E is a subset of the multiplicative group $\mathbb {C}^*$ of all nonzero complex numbers, where E has positive two-dimensional Lebesgue measure, then the set $EE^{-1}= \{e_1\cdot e_2^{-1}: e_1,e_2\in E\}$ contains an open disc with centre $1$ .

  4. (iv) If F is a subset of the multiplicative group $\mathbb {R}^{>0}$ of all positive real numbers, then the set $F F^{-1}=\{f_1\cdot f_2^{-1}: f_1,f_2\in F\}$ contains an open interval containing $1$ .

The following theorem was proved by Mahler [Reference Mahler10]. (See [Reference Bugeaud4, Section 3.5].)

Theorem 1.6. If a is an algebraic number with $a\ne 0$ , then $\exp (a)\in S$ .

Remark 1.7. It is an immediate consequence of Theorem 1.6 and Definition 1.2 that the number e and $\exp (a)$ , for a any nonzero algebraic number, are not Liouville numbers.

As the set of nonzero algebraic numbers is a dense subset of $\mathbb {C}$ and $\exp $ is a continuous mapping from $\mathbb {C}$ onto $\mathbb {C}\setminus \{0\}$ , we obtain the following corollary.

Corollary 1.8. If $\mathbb {A'}$ is the set of all nonzero algebraic numbers, then $B= \exp (\mathbb {A'})$ is a countably infinite dense subset of S (and also a countably infinite dense subset of $\mathbb {C}$ ) and B has two-dimensional Lebesgue measure equal to zero.

Corollary 1.9. The set S is dense in the set of all transcendental numbers and in $\mathbb {C}$ .

2 The main results

Definition 2.1. A subset W of $\mathbb {C}$ is said to have the complex Erdős property if every complex number is a sum of two members of W. A subset V of $\mathbb {C}$ is said to have the complex multiplicative Erdős property if every nonzero complex number is a product of two members of V.

Remark 2.2. Let $A\subseteq B\subseteq \mathbb {C}$ and $C\subseteq D\subseteq \mathbb {C}$ . If A has the Erdős property, then so does B. If $B\subseteq \mathbb {R}$ , the set of all real numbers, and A has the multiplicative Erdős property, then so does B. If C has the complex Erdős property, then so does D. If $C $ has the complex multiplicative Erdős property, then so does D.

Proposition 2.3

  1. (i) Let E be a subset of $\mathbb {C}$ of positive two-dimensional Lebesgue measure such that if $x\in E$ , then $-x\in E$ and $nx\in E$ , for all $n\in \mathbb {N}$ . Then E has the complex Erdős property.

  2. (ii) Let F be a subset of $\mathbb {R}$ of positive one-dimensional Lebesgue measure such that if $x\in F$ , then $-x\in F$ and $nx\in F$ , for all $n\in \mathbb {N}$ . Then F has the Erdős property.

  3. (iii) If G is a subset of $\mathbb {C}^*$ with positive two-dimensional Lebesgue measure such that if $x\in G$ , then $x^{-1}\in g$ and $x^n\in G$ , for all $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , then G has the complex multiplicative Erdős property.

  4. (iv) If H is a subset of $\mathbb {R}^{>0}$ with positive one-dimensional Lebesgue measure such that if $x\in F$ then $x^{-1}\in F$ and $x^n\in F$ , for all $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , then H has the multiplicative Erdős property.

Proof. By Corollary 1.5, $F-F$ contains a nonempty open interval I containing $0$ in $\mathbb {R}$ and $E-E$ contains a nonempty open disc D with centre $0$ in $\mathbb {C}$ . As $E=-E$ and $F=-F$ ,

$$ \begin{align*}E+E=\bigcup\limits_{n\in \mathbb{N}} n(E+E)= \bigcup_{n\in \mathbb{N}} n(E-E)= \bigcup_{n\in \mathbb{N}} n D = \mathbb{C}\quad \text{and}\end{align*} $$
$$ \begin{align*}F+F=\bigcup\limits_{n\in \mathbb{N}} n(F+F)= \bigcup_{n\in \mathbb{N}} n(F-F)= \bigcup_{n\in \mathbb{N}}n I= \mathbb{R}.\end{align*} $$

So items (i) and (ii) are proved.

The proofs of items (iii) and (iv) for the multiplicative Erdős cases are analogous.

The next result follows from Proposition 2.3 and Remark 1.3(iii), (iv) and (v).

Corollary 2.4. The real Mahler set $S\cap \mathbb {R}$ has the Erdős property and the multiplicative Erdős property and the complex Mahler set S has the complex Erdős property and the complex multiplicative Erdős property.

Remark 2.5. In contradistinction with the result of Erdős that the set $\mathcal {L}$ of zero Lebesgue measure has the Erdős property and the results in [Reference Chalebgwa and Morris7] that certain subsets of Lebesgue measure zero of the set $\mathcal {L}$ have the Erdős property, we have in Corollary 2.4 and Theorem 2.6 sets of all Lebesgue measures having the Erdős property.

Theorem 2.6. Let $m\in [0,\infty )$ . Then there exist $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ dense subsets W of S each of two-dimensional Lebesgue measure m such that W has the Erdős property and no two of these W are homeomorphic. There also exist $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ dense subsets of S which have full two-dimensional Lebesgue measure, and no two of these are homeomorphic.

Proof. First consider the case $m\in (0,\infty )$ . Let W be the set $(S\setminus [-1,1])\cap \mathbb {R}$ . Then W is a set of positive one-dimensional Lebesgue measure and two-dimensional Lebesgue measure $0$ . By Proposition 2.3(ii), W has the Erdős property. By Remark 2.2, any set which contains W has the Erdős property. Let $V_m$ be the intersection of S with any square in $\mathbb {C}$ of side $\sqrt {m}$ , X any subset of $[-1,1]\cap S$ and B the subset of S defined in Corollary 1.8. Then the set $V^*_m=W\cup V_m\cup X\cup B$ is a set of two-dimensional Lebesgue measure m which has the Erdős property. As $S\cap [-1,1]$ has cardinality $\mathfrak {c}$ , there are $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ choices for X each resulting in a different set $V^*_m$ . So for each $m\in (0,\infty )$ , there are $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ subsets of S of two-dimensional Lebesgue measure m and having the Erdős property. Each of these sets contains the set B, and so, by Corollary 1.8, is dense in S.

Next, consider the case $m=0$ . We simply choose $V_0=\emptyset $ in the above proof.

Finally, consider the case of full two-dimensional Lebesgue measure. This time, we put $V_{\infty }= \mathbb {C}\setminus \mathbb {R}$ instead of $V_m$ in our proof and we obtain the desired result.

In each of the three cases above, we use the Lavrentieff theorem [Reference van Mill15, Theorem A8.5], which says that there are at most $\mathfrak {c}$ subspaces of $\mathbb {C}$ which are homeomorphic. Thus, there exist $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ subsets of S of measure $m\in [0,\infty )$ which have the Erdős property, no two of which are homeomorphic, and $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ subsets of S of full two-dimensional Lebesgue measure which have the Erdős property, no two of which are homeomorphic.

Theorem 2.7 (See [Reference Chalebgwa and Morris6, Reference Morris12])

There exist $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ dense subsets W of S such that W has the complex Erdős property and no two of these W are homeomorphic.

Proof. Let D be a closed disc in $\mathbb {C}$ of radius one with centre $0$ . Put $W= S\setminus D$ . By Proposition 2.3, W has the complex Erdős property. Therefore, any set which contains W has the complex Erdős property. Let X be any subset of $D\cap S$ and let B be as in Corollary 1.8. Then $X\cup W\cup B$ has the complex Erdős property and is dense in S. As the cardinality of $D\cap S$ is $\mathfrak {c}$ , there are $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ sets $X\cup W\cup B$ , each a subset of S and having the complex Erdős property. As in the proof of Theorem 2.6, the Lavrentieff theorem implies that these subsets can be chosen so that no two are homeomorphic.

Proposition 2.8. Let $S'=\exp (S\cap \mathbb {R})\cap S$ . Then $S'$ has full Lebesgue measure in the set $\mathbb {R}^{>0}$ of positive real numbers.

Proof. Note that $\exp $ maps $\mathbb {R}$ onto $\mathbb {R}^{>0}$ and $\exp $ is Lipschitz continuous on bounded sets. As $S\cap \mathbb {R}$ has full Lebesgue measure in $\mathbb {R}$ , $\mathbb {R}\setminus S$ has Lebesgue measure zero. Therefore, $\exp (\mathbb {R}\setminus S)$ has Lebesgue measure zero. As the map $\exp $ is surjective from $\mathbb {R}$ to $\mathbb {R}^{>0}$ and $\exp (\mathbb {R}\setminus S)$ has zero Lebesgue measure, $\exp (S\cap \mathbb {R})$ has full measure in $\mathbb {R}^{>0}$ . Noting that any subset of a set of Lebesgue measure zero has Lebesgue measure zero, we see that the set $\exp (S\cap \mathbb {R})\cap (\mathbb {R}^{>0}\setminus S)$ has Lebesgue measure zero. So $S'=\exp (S\cap \mathbb {R})\cap S$ has full Lebesgue measure in $\mathbb {R}^{>0}$ .

Proposition 2.9. The set $\exp (S\cap \mathbb {R})$ has the multiplicative Erdős property and the set $\exp (S)$ has the complex multiplicative Erdős property.

Proof. We shall apply Proposition 2.3(iv) to the set $S'=\exp (S\cap \mathbb {R})\cap S$ . First observe that $\exp $ maps $\mathbb {R}$ onto $\mathbb {R}^{>0}$ . Let $x\in S'$ . Then $x\in S$ and $x=\exp (s)$ , for some $s\in S\cap \mathbb {R}$ . Now for any $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , $ns\in S\cap \mathbb {R}$ and so $\exp (ns) \in \exp (S\cap \mathbb {R})$ . However, $\exp (ns)= (\exp (s))^n=x^n$ . As $x\in S\cap \mathbb {R}$ , $x^n\in S\cap \mathbb {R}$ . Thus, $x^n\in S'$ . Also, $x\in S$ implies $x^{-1}\in S$ . Further, $x=\exp (s)$ implies $x^{-1}=\exp (-s)\in \exp (S)$ . So by Proposition 2.3(iv) and Proposition 2.8, $\exp (S\cap \mathbb {R})\cap S$ has the multiplicative Erdős property. Thus, $\exp (S\cap \mathbb {R})$ has the multiplicative Erdős property.

As $\exp $ maps $\mathbb {C}$ onto $\mathbb {C}\setminus \{0\}$ , an analogous argument shows that $\exp (S)$ has the complex multiplicative Erdős property.

Proposition 2.10. Let $S"=S\cap (0,\infty )$ . Then $\log (S")\cap S$ has full Lebesgue measure in $\mathbb {R}$ .

Proof. Clearly $(\mathbb {R}\setminus S)\cap (0,\infty )$ has zero Lebesgue measure. As $\log $ is Lipschitz continuous on all closed bounded subintervals of $(0,\infty )$ , $\log ((\mathbb {R}\setminus S)\cap (0,\infty ))$ has zero Lebesgue measure. Thus, $\log S"$ has full Lebesgue measure in $\mathbb {R}$ . As $\mathbb {R}\setminus S$ has zero Lebesgue measure, $\log (S")\cap S$ has full Lebesgue measure in $\mathbb {R}$ .

Proposition 2.11. The sets $\log (S")$ and $(\log (S"))\cap S$ have the Erdős property.

Proof. Observe that if $x\in \log (S") \cap S$ , then $x=\log y$ , $y\in S"$ and $x\in S$ . So $nx=n, \log y=\log (y^n)$ and clearly $y^n\in S"$ , for any $n\in \mathbb {N}$ . So $nx\in \log (S")\cap S$ . Also, $-x =\log (1/y)$ and $1/y\in S\cap (0,\infty )$ . So $-x\in \log (S") \cap S$ . By Propositions 2.3 and 2.10 and Remark 2.2, $\log (S") $ and $(\log (S"))\cap S$ have the Erdős property.

Remark 2.12. Let X be a subset of the set of positive real numbers and the set $Y=\{\log x: x\in X\}\cap X$ such that every positive real number is a product of two numbers in Y. If r is any positive real number strictly greater than 1, we put $t=\log (r)$ . As t is a positive real number, $t = y_1\cdot y_2$ , where $y_1,y_2\in Y$ . So $t =y_1\cdot \log x_2= \log x_2^{y_1}$ , $x_2\in X$ . So $e^t=x_2^{y_1}$ ; that is, $r=x_2^{y_1}$ . Thus,

$$ \begin{align*}\mathit{every\ positive\ real\ number\ strictly\ greater\ than}\ 1\ \mathit{equals}\ a^b,\end{align*} $$

for $b=y_1\in Y\subseteq X$ and $a=x_2\in X$ .

This should be contrasted with the Gelfond–Schneider theorem [Reference Baker2] which says that for any algebraic numbers a and b, with $a\not =0,1$ and b not a rational number, $a^b$ is a transcendental number.

The authors do not know whether any interesting set X with the property stated above exists. Of course, $X=(0,\infty )$ is an example. However, we observe that Burger [Reference Burger5] proves that for any positive real number r, there exist Liouville numbers a and b such that $r= a^b$ .

Acknowledgement

The authors thank the referee for helpful comments.

Footnotes

The first author’s research is supported by the Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences, via the Fields-Ontario postdoctoral Fellowship.

References

Angell, D., Irrationality and Transcendence in Number Theory (CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 2022).Google Scholar
Baker, A., Transcendental Number Theory (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1975).10.1017/CBO9780511565977CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, G. and Yin, Q.-H., ‘Some metric properties of sum sets’, in: Number Theory with an Emphasis on the Markhoff Spectrum (eds. Pollington, A. D. and Moran, W.) (Marcel Dekker Inc., New York, 1993), 1722.Google Scholar
Bugeaud, Y., Approximation by Algebraic Numbers (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2004).10.1017/CBO9780511542886CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burger, E. B., ‘On Liouville decompositions in local fields’, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 124 (1996), 33053310.10.1090/S0002-9939-96-03572-1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chalebgwa, T. P. and Morris, S. A., ‘Topological transcendental fields’, Axioms 11 (2022), Article no. 118, 5 pages.10.3390/axioms11030118CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chalebgwa, T. P. and Morris, S. A., ‘Erdős–Liouville sets’, Bull. Aust. Math. Soc., to appear. Published online (3 October 2022).10.1017/S0004972722001009CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Erdős, P., ‘Representation of real numbers as sums and products of Liouville numbers’, Michigan Math. J. 9 (1962), 5960.10.1307/mmj/1028998621CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grosse-Erdmann, K.-G., ‘An extension of the Steinhaus–Weil theorem’, Colloq. Math. 57 (1989), 307317.10.4064/cm-57-2-307-317CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahler, K., ‘Zur approximation der exponential Function und des Logarithmus I’, J. reine angew. Math. 166 (1932), 118136.10.1515/crll.1932.166.118CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahler, K., ‘On the approximation of logarithms of algebraic numbers’, Philos. Trans. Roy. Soc. Lond. Ser. A 245, 371398.Google Scholar
Morris, S. A., ‘Transcendental groups’, Preprint, 2021, arXiv:2112.12450.Google Scholar
Pollington, A. D., ‘Some metric properties of sum sets’, in: Number Theory with an Emphasis on the Markhoff Spectrum (eds. Pollington, A. D. and Moran, W.) (Marcel Dekker Inc., New York, 1993), 207214.Google Scholar
Stromberg, K., ‘An elementary proof of Steinhaus’s theorem’, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 36 (1972), 308.Google Scholar
van Mill, J., The Infinite-Dimensional Topology of Function Spaces (Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2001).Google Scholar
Weil, A., L’intégration dans les groupes topologiques et ses applications (Hermann, Paris, 1940).Google Scholar