Is there an easy way to see that binary expansion is unique? [duplicate]
This question already has an answer here:
Binary expansion Unique
4 answers
Let $n in mathbb{N}$. Using the Euclidean algorithm, it is straightforward to see that every natural number can be written as
$$n = sum_{j=0}^m epsilon_j(n) 2^j $$
where $epsilon_j(n) in {0,1}$.
Is there an easy way to show that this way of writing the number is unique?
elementary-number-theory binary
marked as duplicate by Asaf Karagila♦ Nov 29 '18 at 8:44
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
|
show 2 more comments
This question already has an answer here:
Binary expansion Unique
4 answers
Let $n in mathbb{N}$. Using the Euclidean algorithm, it is straightforward to see that every natural number can be written as
$$n = sum_{j=0}^m epsilon_j(n) 2^j $$
where $epsilon_j(n) in {0,1}$.
Is there an easy way to show that this way of writing the number is unique?
elementary-number-theory binary
marked as duplicate by Asaf Karagila♦ Nov 29 '18 at 8:44
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
8
Have you tried induction?
– saulspatz
Nov 28 '18 at 16:12
8
@stanleydodds Why are you answering in a comment?
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:17
4
@stanleydodds Outlines of answers are still answers. Even one-line hints belong in answer posts in my opinion
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:19
Index $j$ should start at $0$. If it starts at $1$ then RHS is even.
– drhab
Nov 28 '18 at 16:30
3
As presented, such expansions are not unique. For uniqueness, you need to add the constraint that $$epsilon_m(n) = 1$$. Otherwise, an arbitrary number of additional leading 0 terms can be included to produce distinct expansions of the same n.
– John Bollinger
Nov 28 '18 at 17:54
|
show 2 more comments
This question already has an answer here:
Binary expansion Unique
4 answers
Let $n in mathbb{N}$. Using the Euclidean algorithm, it is straightforward to see that every natural number can be written as
$$n = sum_{j=0}^m epsilon_j(n) 2^j $$
where $epsilon_j(n) in {0,1}$.
Is there an easy way to show that this way of writing the number is unique?
elementary-number-theory binary
This question already has an answer here:
Binary expansion Unique
4 answers
Let $n in mathbb{N}$. Using the Euclidean algorithm, it is straightforward to see that every natural number can be written as
$$n = sum_{j=0}^m epsilon_j(n) 2^j $$
where $epsilon_j(n) in {0,1}$.
Is there an easy way to show that this way of writing the number is unique?
This question already has an answer here:
Binary expansion Unique
4 answers
elementary-number-theory binary
elementary-number-theory binary
edited Nov 28 '18 at 16:30
asked Nov 28 '18 at 16:06
Math_QED
7,17731449
7,17731449
marked as duplicate by Asaf Karagila♦ Nov 29 '18 at 8:44
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by Asaf Karagila♦ Nov 29 '18 at 8:44
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
8
Have you tried induction?
– saulspatz
Nov 28 '18 at 16:12
8
@stanleydodds Why are you answering in a comment?
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:17
4
@stanleydodds Outlines of answers are still answers. Even one-line hints belong in answer posts in my opinion
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:19
Index $j$ should start at $0$. If it starts at $1$ then RHS is even.
– drhab
Nov 28 '18 at 16:30
3
As presented, such expansions are not unique. For uniqueness, you need to add the constraint that $$epsilon_m(n) = 1$$. Otherwise, an arbitrary number of additional leading 0 terms can be included to produce distinct expansions of the same n.
– John Bollinger
Nov 28 '18 at 17:54
|
show 2 more comments
8
Have you tried induction?
– saulspatz
Nov 28 '18 at 16:12
8
@stanleydodds Why are you answering in a comment?
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:17
4
@stanleydodds Outlines of answers are still answers. Even one-line hints belong in answer posts in my opinion
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:19
Index $j$ should start at $0$. If it starts at $1$ then RHS is even.
– drhab
Nov 28 '18 at 16:30
3
As presented, such expansions are not unique. For uniqueness, you need to add the constraint that $$epsilon_m(n) = 1$$. Otherwise, an arbitrary number of additional leading 0 terms can be included to produce distinct expansions of the same n.
– John Bollinger
Nov 28 '18 at 17:54
8
8
Have you tried induction?
– saulspatz
Nov 28 '18 at 16:12
Have you tried induction?
– saulspatz
Nov 28 '18 at 16:12
8
8
@stanleydodds Why are you answering in a comment?
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:17
@stanleydodds Why are you answering in a comment?
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:17
4
4
@stanleydodds Outlines of answers are still answers. Even one-line hints belong in answer posts in my opinion
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:19
@stanleydodds Outlines of answers are still answers. Even one-line hints belong in answer posts in my opinion
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:19
Index $j$ should start at $0$. If it starts at $1$ then RHS is even.
– drhab
Nov 28 '18 at 16:30
Index $j$ should start at $0$. If it starts at $1$ then RHS is even.
– drhab
Nov 28 '18 at 16:30
3
3
As presented, such expansions are not unique. For uniqueness, you need to add the constraint that $$epsilon_m(n) = 1$$. Otherwise, an arbitrary number of additional leading 0 terms can be included to produce distinct expansions of the same n.
– John Bollinger
Nov 28 '18 at 17:54
As presented, such expansions are not unique. For uniqueness, you need to add the constraint that $$epsilon_m(n) = 1$$. Otherwise, an arbitrary number of additional leading 0 terms can be included to produce distinct expansions of the same n.
– John Bollinger
Nov 28 '18 at 17:54
|
show 2 more comments
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
How do you know the ordinary base $10$ expansion is unique?
Suppose digit strings $s$ and $t$ both represent the positive integer $n$. Then the units digit of each must be $d = n pmod {10}$. So you can lop off both units digits. The lopped strings then both represent $(n-d)/10$.
Continue with the other digits (from the right) until you're done. Or, for a formal induction proof, apply that argument to the least $n$ with two representations to deduce a contradiction.
This argument works for any base. It's the standard algorithm for base conversion, finding the digits from right to left. It depends on knowing that you can do division with remainder, but not on the full strength of the Euclidean algorithm.
add a comment |
Suppose $exists ninBbb N$ such that $n=sum_{iin A}2^i=sum_{iin B}2^i$ with $A,BsubsetBbb N_0$. Then $sum_{iin A}2^i-sum_{iin B}2^i=0$ and so for set $C=ADelta B$ (symmetric difference) and some function $s:Crightarrow{-1,1}$ we have $sum_{iin C}s(i)2^i=0$. Now if $Cneemptyset$ then $C$ has a largest element (say $x$) and we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}s(i)2^i=-s(x)2^x$ so $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^i=2^x$ but we now know $Cbackslash{x}subset{0,1,2,...,x-1}$ and also $-{s(i)over s(x)}le1$ so we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^ilesum_{i=0}^{x-1}2^i=2^{x}-1$ which is a contradiction. Hence $C=emptyset$, so $A=B$, so the representations are in fact the same, hence the representation of n is unique (assuming it exists, which I gather has been shown already).
add a comment |
Not really an answer. But here's just a different way of framing your question which I think is neat.
Let $f: P_{fin}(mathbb{N}) to mathbb{N}$ by $f(S) =sum_{sin S} 2^s$.
$f$ is onto. You have claimed this can be handled Euclidean algorithm.
What about $1-1$? We use the argument Stanley Dodds presented.
So we've seen that the set of all finite subsets of the natural numbers is in 1-1 correspondence with the set of natural numbers.
add a comment |
Hint $ $ Uniqueness of radix rep can be deduced intuitively from the simple fact that an integer root of an integer coef polynomial divides the least degree coef (i.e. Rational Root Test). For example
$qquad11001_2 = g(2),, g(x) = x^4+x^3+1$
$qquad 10011_2 = h(2), h(x) = x^4+x+1$
If they're equal $, 0 = g(2)-h(2) =: f(2),$ for $,f = g-h = x(x^2-1),$ so $,2,$ is a root of $,x^2-1,$ so $, 2^2 = 1,Rightarrow, 2mid 1,,$ contradiction. This idea works generally - the nonzero coef's of $g-h$ are $pm1$ contra the root $2$ must divide the least degree such coef. Below is the proof for general radix.
If $,g(x) = sum g_i x^i$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,g_i,$ such that $,0le g_i < b,$ and $,g(b) = n,$ then we call $,(g,b),$ a radix $,b,$ representation of $,n.,$ It is unique: $ $ if $,n,$ has another rep $,(h,b),,$ with $,g(x) ne h(x),,$ then $,f(x)= g(x)-h(x)ne 0,$ has root $,b,$ but all coefficients $,color{#c00}{|f_i| < b},,$ contra the below slight generalization of: $ $ integer roots of integer polynomials divide their constant term.
Theorem $ $ If $,f(x) = x^k(color{#0a0}{f_0}!+f_1 x +cdots + f_n x^n)=x^kbar f(x),$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,f_i,$ and with $,color{#0a0}{f_0ne 0},$ then an integer root $,bne 0,$ satisfies $,bmid f_0,,$ so $,color{#c00}{|b| le |f_0|}$
Proof $ 0 = f(b) = b^k bar f(b),overset{large b,ne, 0}Rightarrow, 0 = bar f(b),,$ so, subtracting $,f_0$ from both sides yields $$-f_0 =, b,(f_1!+f_2 b+,cdots+f_n b^{n-1}), Rightarrow,bmid f_0, overset{large color{#0a0}{f_0,ne, 0}}Rightarrow, |b| le |f_0|qquad {bf QED}qquadquad$$
Remark $ $ Thus uniqueness of radix rep is essentially a special case of the Rational Root Test,
add a comment |
A very simple proof is by the pigeonhole principle. The key observation is that not only does any natural number $n$ have a binary expansion $$n = sum_{j=0}^m epsilon_j(n) 2^j,$$ but if $0leq n<2^N$ then we need no powers of $2$ above $2^{N-1}$ so we can take $m=N-1$. Now, for any fixed $N$, there are $2^N$ natural numbers $n$ such that $0leq n<2^N$ and $2^N$ different ways of choosing $epsilon_j(n)in{0,1}$ for each $j$ from $0$ to $N-1$. So, all $2^N$ of these binary expansions must have distinct sums, or else they would not be able to represent all $2^N$ of the different values of $n$.
This proves that for any $N$, a natural number $n$ has at most one binary expansion using powers of $2$ up to $2^{N-1}$. It follows that $n$ has only one binary expansion, up to adding $0$s at the start (since given two expansions of different lengths, you can always extend one by $0$s to make them the same length, and then they must become the same).
add a comment |
This argument is very basic but I think the notation is easy to follow:
Suppose a number has two different expansions ${a_i}$ and ${b_i}$. Then
$$ sum_{i=0}^m a_i(n) 2^i = sum_{i=0}^m b_i(n) 2^i $$ Break off the first term in both sums and you can get $$ a_o(n) - b_0(n) = 2sum_{i=1}^m (b_i(n)-a_i(n)) 2^{i-1}$$
The l.h.s can only be ($0-0$), ($0-1$), ($1-0$), or ($1-1$), and it must be divisible by $2$, so it must equal $0$, i.e. $a_0(n) = b_0(n)$. Then you can divide by the $2$ in front of the sum, and repeat the argument (or use induction) to get $a_i(n) = b_i(n)$ for all $i$.
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
How do you know the ordinary base $10$ expansion is unique?
Suppose digit strings $s$ and $t$ both represent the positive integer $n$. Then the units digit of each must be $d = n pmod {10}$. So you can lop off both units digits. The lopped strings then both represent $(n-d)/10$.
Continue with the other digits (from the right) until you're done. Or, for a formal induction proof, apply that argument to the least $n$ with two representations to deduce a contradiction.
This argument works for any base. It's the standard algorithm for base conversion, finding the digits from right to left. It depends on knowing that you can do division with remainder, but not on the full strength of the Euclidean algorithm.
add a comment |
How do you know the ordinary base $10$ expansion is unique?
Suppose digit strings $s$ and $t$ both represent the positive integer $n$. Then the units digit of each must be $d = n pmod {10}$. So you can lop off both units digits. The lopped strings then both represent $(n-d)/10$.
Continue with the other digits (from the right) until you're done. Or, for a formal induction proof, apply that argument to the least $n$ with two representations to deduce a contradiction.
This argument works for any base. It's the standard algorithm for base conversion, finding the digits from right to left. It depends on knowing that you can do division with remainder, but not on the full strength of the Euclidean algorithm.
add a comment |
How do you know the ordinary base $10$ expansion is unique?
Suppose digit strings $s$ and $t$ both represent the positive integer $n$. Then the units digit of each must be $d = n pmod {10}$. So you can lop off both units digits. The lopped strings then both represent $(n-d)/10$.
Continue with the other digits (from the right) until you're done. Or, for a formal induction proof, apply that argument to the least $n$ with two representations to deduce a contradiction.
This argument works for any base. It's the standard algorithm for base conversion, finding the digits from right to left. It depends on knowing that you can do division with remainder, but not on the full strength of the Euclidean algorithm.
How do you know the ordinary base $10$ expansion is unique?
Suppose digit strings $s$ and $t$ both represent the positive integer $n$. Then the units digit of each must be $d = n pmod {10}$. So you can lop off both units digits. The lopped strings then both represent $(n-d)/10$.
Continue with the other digits (from the right) until you're done. Or, for a formal induction proof, apply that argument to the least $n$ with two representations to deduce a contradiction.
This argument works for any base. It's the standard algorithm for base conversion, finding the digits from right to left. It depends on knowing that you can do division with remainder, but not on the full strength of the Euclidean algorithm.
edited Nov 28 '18 at 21:47
answered Nov 28 '18 at 16:49
Ethan Bolker
41.7k547110
41.7k547110
add a comment |
add a comment |
Suppose $exists ninBbb N$ such that $n=sum_{iin A}2^i=sum_{iin B}2^i$ with $A,BsubsetBbb N_0$. Then $sum_{iin A}2^i-sum_{iin B}2^i=0$ and so for set $C=ADelta B$ (symmetric difference) and some function $s:Crightarrow{-1,1}$ we have $sum_{iin C}s(i)2^i=0$. Now if $Cneemptyset$ then $C$ has a largest element (say $x$) and we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}s(i)2^i=-s(x)2^x$ so $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^i=2^x$ but we now know $Cbackslash{x}subset{0,1,2,...,x-1}$ and also $-{s(i)over s(x)}le1$ so we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^ilesum_{i=0}^{x-1}2^i=2^{x}-1$ which is a contradiction. Hence $C=emptyset$, so $A=B$, so the representations are in fact the same, hence the representation of n is unique (assuming it exists, which I gather has been shown already).
add a comment |
Suppose $exists ninBbb N$ such that $n=sum_{iin A}2^i=sum_{iin B}2^i$ with $A,BsubsetBbb N_0$. Then $sum_{iin A}2^i-sum_{iin B}2^i=0$ and so for set $C=ADelta B$ (symmetric difference) and some function $s:Crightarrow{-1,1}$ we have $sum_{iin C}s(i)2^i=0$. Now if $Cneemptyset$ then $C$ has a largest element (say $x$) and we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}s(i)2^i=-s(x)2^x$ so $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^i=2^x$ but we now know $Cbackslash{x}subset{0,1,2,...,x-1}$ and also $-{s(i)over s(x)}le1$ so we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^ilesum_{i=0}^{x-1}2^i=2^{x}-1$ which is a contradiction. Hence $C=emptyset$, so $A=B$, so the representations are in fact the same, hence the representation of n is unique (assuming it exists, which I gather has been shown already).
add a comment |
Suppose $exists ninBbb N$ such that $n=sum_{iin A}2^i=sum_{iin B}2^i$ with $A,BsubsetBbb N_0$. Then $sum_{iin A}2^i-sum_{iin B}2^i=0$ and so for set $C=ADelta B$ (symmetric difference) and some function $s:Crightarrow{-1,1}$ we have $sum_{iin C}s(i)2^i=0$. Now if $Cneemptyset$ then $C$ has a largest element (say $x$) and we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}s(i)2^i=-s(x)2^x$ so $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^i=2^x$ but we now know $Cbackslash{x}subset{0,1,2,...,x-1}$ and also $-{s(i)over s(x)}le1$ so we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^ilesum_{i=0}^{x-1}2^i=2^{x}-1$ which is a contradiction. Hence $C=emptyset$, so $A=B$, so the representations are in fact the same, hence the representation of n is unique (assuming it exists, which I gather has been shown already).
Suppose $exists ninBbb N$ such that $n=sum_{iin A}2^i=sum_{iin B}2^i$ with $A,BsubsetBbb N_0$. Then $sum_{iin A}2^i-sum_{iin B}2^i=0$ and so for set $C=ADelta B$ (symmetric difference) and some function $s:Crightarrow{-1,1}$ we have $sum_{iin C}s(i)2^i=0$. Now if $Cneemptyset$ then $C$ has a largest element (say $x$) and we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}s(i)2^i=-s(x)2^x$ so $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^i=2^x$ but we now know $Cbackslash{x}subset{0,1,2,...,x-1}$ and also $-{s(i)over s(x)}le1$ so we have $sum_{iin Cbackslash{x}}-{s(i)over s(x)}2^ilesum_{i=0}^{x-1}2^i=2^{x}-1$ which is a contradiction. Hence $C=emptyset$, so $A=B$, so the representations are in fact the same, hence the representation of n is unique (assuming it exists, which I gather has been shown already).
answered Nov 28 '18 at 16:40
stanley dodds
4251310
4251310
add a comment |
add a comment |
Not really an answer. But here's just a different way of framing your question which I think is neat.
Let $f: P_{fin}(mathbb{N}) to mathbb{N}$ by $f(S) =sum_{sin S} 2^s$.
$f$ is onto. You have claimed this can be handled Euclidean algorithm.
What about $1-1$? We use the argument Stanley Dodds presented.
So we've seen that the set of all finite subsets of the natural numbers is in 1-1 correspondence with the set of natural numbers.
add a comment |
Not really an answer. But here's just a different way of framing your question which I think is neat.
Let $f: P_{fin}(mathbb{N}) to mathbb{N}$ by $f(S) =sum_{sin S} 2^s$.
$f$ is onto. You have claimed this can be handled Euclidean algorithm.
What about $1-1$? We use the argument Stanley Dodds presented.
So we've seen that the set of all finite subsets of the natural numbers is in 1-1 correspondence with the set of natural numbers.
add a comment |
Not really an answer. But here's just a different way of framing your question which I think is neat.
Let $f: P_{fin}(mathbb{N}) to mathbb{N}$ by $f(S) =sum_{sin S} 2^s$.
$f$ is onto. You have claimed this can be handled Euclidean algorithm.
What about $1-1$? We use the argument Stanley Dodds presented.
So we've seen that the set of all finite subsets of the natural numbers is in 1-1 correspondence with the set of natural numbers.
Not really an answer. But here's just a different way of framing your question which I think is neat.
Let $f: P_{fin}(mathbb{N}) to mathbb{N}$ by $f(S) =sum_{sin S} 2^s$.
$f$ is onto. You have claimed this can be handled Euclidean algorithm.
What about $1-1$? We use the argument Stanley Dodds presented.
So we've seen that the set of all finite subsets of the natural numbers is in 1-1 correspondence with the set of natural numbers.
edited Nov 28 '18 at 16:42
answered Nov 28 '18 at 16:36
Mason
1,9641530
1,9641530
add a comment |
add a comment |
Hint $ $ Uniqueness of radix rep can be deduced intuitively from the simple fact that an integer root of an integer coef polynomial divides the least degree coef (i.e. Rational Root Test). For example
$qquad11001_2 = g(2),, g(x) = x^4+x^3+1$
$qquad 10011_2 = h(2), h(x) = x^4+x+1$
If they're equal $, 0 = g(2)-h(2) =: f(2),$ for $,f = g-h = x(x^2-1),$ so $,2,$ is a root of $,x^2-1,$ so $, 2^2 = 1,Rightarrow, 2mid 1,,$ contradiction. This idea works generally - the nonzero coef's of $g-h$ are $pm1$ contra the root $2$ must divide the least degree such coef. Below is the proof for general radix.
If $,g(x) = sum g_i x^i$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,g_i,$ such that $,0le g_i < b,$ and $,g(b) = n,$ then we call $,(g,b),$ a radix $,b,$ representation of $,n.,$ It is unique: $ $ if $,n,$ has another rep $,(h,b),,$ with $,g(x) ne h(x),,$ then $,f(x)= g(x)-h(x)ne 0,$ has root $,b,$ but all coefficients $,color{#c00}{|f_i| < b},,$ contra the below slight generalization of: $ $ integer roots of integer polynomials divide their constant term.
Theorem $ $ If $,f(x) = x^k(color{#0a0}{f_0}!+f_1 x +cdots + f_n x^n)=x^kbar f(x),$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,f_i,$ and with $,color{#0a0}{f_0ne 0},$ then an integer root $,bne 0,$ satisfies $,bmid f_0,,$ so $,color{#c00}{|b| le |f_0|}$
Proof $ 0 = f(b) = b^k bar f(b),overset{large b,ne, 0}Rightarrow, 0 = bar f(b),,$ so, subtracting $,f_0$ from both sides yields $$-f_0 =, b,(f_1!+f_2 b+,cdots+f_n b^{n-1}), Rightarrow,bmid f_0, overset{large color{#0a0}{f_0,ne, 0}}Rightarrow, |b| le |f_0|qquad {bf QED}qquadquad$$
Remark $ $ Thus uniqueness of radix rep is essentially a special case of the Rational Root Test,
add a comment |
Hint $ $ Uniqueness of radix rep can be deduced intuitively from the simple fact that an integer root of an integer coef polynomial divides the least degree coef (i.e. Rational Root Test). For example
$qquad11001_2 = g(2),, g(x) = x^4+x^3+1$
$qquad 10011_2 = h(2), h(x) = x^4+x+1$
If they're equal $, 0 = g(2)-h(2) =: f(2),$ for $,f = g-h = x(x^2-1),$ so $,2,$ is a root of $,x^2-1,$ so $, 2^2 = 1,Rightarrow, 2mid 1,,$ contradiction. This idea works generally - the nonzero coef's of $g-h$ are $pm1$ contra the root $2$ must divide the least degree such coef. Below is the proof for general radix.
If $,g(x) = sum g_i x^i$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,g_i,$ such that $,0le g_i < b,$ and $,g(b) = n,$ then we call $,(g,b),$ a radix $,b,$ representation of $,n.,$ It is unique: $ $ if $,n,$ has another rep $,(h,b),,$ with $,g(x) ne h(x),,$ then $,f(x)= g(x)-h(x)ne 0,$ has root $,b,$ but all coefficients $,color{#c00}{|f_i| < b},,$ contra the below slight generalization of: $ $ integer roots of integer polynomials divide their constant term.
Theorem $ $ If $,f(x) = x^k(color{#0a0}{f_0}!+f_1 x +cdots + f_n x^n)=x^kbar f(x),$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,f_i,$ and with $,color{#0a0}{f_0ne 0},$ then an integer root $,bne 0,$ satisfies $,bmid f_0,,$ so $,color{#c00}{|b| le |f_0|}$
Proof $ 0 = f(b) = b^k bar f(b),overset{large b,ne, 0}Rightarrow, 0 = bar f(b),,$ so, subtracting $,f_0$ from both sides yields $$-f_0 =, b,(f_1!+f_2 b+,cdots+f_n b^{n-1}), Rightarrow,bmid f_0, overset{large color{#0a0}{f_0,ne, 0}}Rightarrow, |b| le |f_0|qquad {bf QED}qquadquad$$
Remark $ $ Thus uniqueness of radix rep is essentially a special case of the Rational Root Test,
add a comment |
Hint $ $ Uniqueness of radix rep can be deduced intuitively from the simple fact that an integer root of an integer coef polynomial divides the least degree coef (i.e. Rational Root Test). For example
$qquad11001_2 = g(2),, g(x) = x^4+x^3+1$
$qquad 10011_2 = h(2), h(x) = x^4+x+1$
If they're equal $, 0 = g(2)-h(2) =: f(2),$ for $,f = g-h = x(x^2-1),$ so $,2,$ is a root of $,x^2-1,$ so $, 2^2 = 1,Rightarrow, 2mid 1,,$ contradiction. This idea works generally - the nonzero coef's of $g-h$ are $pm1$ contra the root $2$ must divide the least degree such coef. Below is the proof for general radix.
If $,g(x) = sum g_i x^i$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,g_i,$ such that $,0le g_i < b,$ and $,g(b) = n,$ then we call $,(g,b),$ a radix $,b,$ representation of $,n.,$ It is unique: $ $ if $,n,$ has another rep $,(h,b),,$ with $,g(x) ne h(x),,$ then $,f(x)= g(x)-h(x)ne 0,$ has root $,b,$ but all coefficients $,color{#c00}{|f_i| < b},,$ contra the below slight generalization of: $ $ integer roots of integer polynomials divide their constant term.
Theorem $ $ If $,f(x) = x^k(color{#0a0}{f_0}!+f_1 x +cdots + f_n x^n)=x^kbar f(x),$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,f_i,$ and with $,color{#0a0}{f_0ne 0},$ then an integer root $,bne 0,$ satisfies $,bmid f_0,,$ so $,color{#c00}{|b| le |f_0|}$
Proof $ 0 = f(b) = b^k bar f(b),overset{large b,ne, 0}Rightarrow, 0 = bar f(b),,$ so, subtracting $,f_0$ from both sides yields $$-f_0 =, b,(f_1!+f_2 b+,cdots+f_n b^{n-1}), Rightarrow,bmid f_0, overset{large color{#0a0}{f_0,ne, 0}}Rightarrow, |b| le |f_0|qquad {bf QED}qquadquad$$
Remark $ $ Thus uniqueness of radix rep is essentially a special case of the Rational Root Test,
Hint $ $ Uniqueness of radix rep can be deduced intuitively from the simple fact that an integer root of an integer coef polynomial divides the least degree coef (i.e. Rational Root Test). For example
$qquad11001_2 = g(2),, g(x) = x^4+x^3+1$
$qquad 10011_2 = h(2), h(x) = x^4+x+1$
If they're equal $, 0 = g(2)-h(2) =: f(2),$ for $,f = g-h = x(x^2-1),$ so $,2,$ is a root of $,x^2-1,$ so $, 2^2 = 1,Rightarrow, 2mid 1,,$ contradiction. This idea works generally - the nonzero coef's of $g-h$ are $pm1$ contra the root $2$ must divide the least degree such coef. Below is the proof for general radix.
If $,g(x) = sum g_i x^i$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,g_i,$ such that $,0le g_i < b,$ and $,g(b) = n,$ then we call $,(g,b),$ a radix $,b,$ representation of $,n.,$ It is unique: $ $ if $,n,$ has another rep $,(h,b),,$ with $,g(x) ne h(x),,$ then $,f(x)= g(x)-h(x)ne 0,$ has root $,b,$ but all coefficients $,color{#c00}{|f_i| < b},,$ contra the below slight generalization of: $ $ integer roots of integer polynomials divide their constant term.
Theorem $ $ If $,f(x) = x^k(color{#0a0}{f_0}!+f_1 x +cdots + f_n x^n)=x^kbar f(x),$ is a polynomial with integer coefficients $,f_i,$ and with $,color{#0a0}{f_0ne 0},$ then an integer root $,bne 0,$ satisfies $,bmid f_0,,$ so $,color{#c00}{|b| le |f_0|}$
Proof $ 0 = f(b) = b^k bar f(b),overset{large b,ne, 0}Rightarrow, 0 = bar f(b),,$ so, subtracting $,f_0$ from both sides yields $$-f_0 =, b,(f_1!+f_2 b+,cdots+f_n b^{n-1}), Rightarrow,bmid f_0, overset{large color{#0a0}{f_0,ne, 0}}Rightarrow, |b| le |f_0|qquad {bf QED}qquadquad$$
Remark $ $ Thus uniqueness of radix rep is essentially a special case of the Rational Root Test,
edited Nov 28 '18 at 17:58
answered Nov 28 '18 at 17:04
Bill Dubuque
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A very simple proof is by the pigeonhole principle. The key observation is that not only does any natural number $n$ have a binary expansion $$n = sum_{j=0}^m epsilon_j(n) 2^j,$$ but if $0leq n<2^N$ then we need no powers of $2$ above $2^{N-1}$ so we can take $m=N-1$. Now, for any fixed $N$, there are $2^N$ natural numbers $n$ such that $0leq n<2^N$ and $2^N$ different ways of choosing $epsilon_j(n)in{0,1}$ for each $j$ from $0$ to $N-1$. So, all $2^N$ of these binary expansions must have distinct sums, or else they would not be able to represent all $2^N$ of the different values of $n$.
This proves that for any $N$, a natural number $n$ has at most one binary expansion using powers of $2$ up to $2^{N-1}$. It follows that $n$ has only one binary expansion, up to adding $0$s at the start (since given two expansions of different lengths, you can always extend one by $0$s to make them the same length, and then they must become the same).
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A very simple proof is by the pigeonhole principle. The key observation is that not only does any natural number $n$ have a binary expansion $$n = sum_{j=0}^m epsilon_j(n) 2^j,$$ but if $0leq n<2^N$ then we need no powers of $2$ above $2^{N-1}$ so we can take $m=N-1$. Now, for any fixed $N$, there are $2^N$ natural numbers $n$ such that $0leq n<2^N$ and $2^N$ different ways of choosing $epsilon_j(n)in{0,1}$ for each $j$ from $0$ to $N-1$. So, all $2^N$ of these binary expansions must have distinct sums, or else they would not be able to represent all $2^N$ of the different values of $n$.
This proves that for any $N$, a natural number $n$ has at most one binary expansion using powers of $2$ up to $2^{N-1}$. It follows that $n$ has only one binary expansion, up to adding $0$s at the start (since given two expansions of different lengths, you can always extend one by $0$s to make them the same length, and then they must become the same).
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A very simple proof is by the pigeonhole principle. The key observation is that not only does any natural number $n$ have a binary expansion $$n = sum_{j=0}^m epsilon_j(n) 2^j,$$ but if $0leq n<2^N$ then we need no powers of $2$ above $2^{N-1}$ so we can take $m=N-1$. Now, for any fixed $N$, there are $2^N$ natural numbers $n$ such that $0leq n<2^N$ and $2^N$ different ways of choosing $epsilon_j(n)in{0,1}$ for each $j$ from $0$ to $N-1$. So, all $2^N$ of these binary expansions must have distinct sums, or else they would not be able to represent all $2^N$ of the different values of $n$.
This proves that for any $N$, a natural number $n$ has at most one binary expansion using powers of $2$ up to $2^{N-1}$. It follows that $n$ has only one binary expansion, up to adding $0$s at the start (since given two expansions of different lengths, you can always extend one by $0$s to make them the same length, and then they must become the same).
A very simple proof is by the pigeonhole principle. The key observation is that not only does any natural number $n$ have a binary expansion $$n = sum_{j=0}^m epsilon_j(n) 2^j,$$ but if $0leq n<2^N$ then we need no powers of $2$ above $2^{N-1}$ so we can take $m=N-1$. Now, for any fixed $N$, there are $2^N$ natural numbers $n$ such that $0leq n<2^N$ and $2^N$ different ways of choosing $epsilon_j(n)in{0,1}$ for each $j$ from $0$ to $N-1$. So, all $2^N$ of these binary expansions must have distinct sums, or else they would not be able to represent all $2^N$ of the different values of $n$.
This proves that for any $N$, a natural number $n$ has at most one binary expansion using powers of $2$ up to $2^{N-1}$. It follows that $n$ has only one binary expansion, up to adding $0$s at the start (since given two expansions of different lengths, you can always extend one by $0$s to make them the same length, and then they must become the same).
answered Nov 28 '18 at 23:10
Eric Wofsey
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This argument is very basic but I think the notation is easy to follow:
Suppose a number has two different expansions ${a_i}$ and ${b_i}$. Then
$$ sum_{i=0}^m a_i(n) 2^i = sum_{i=0}^m b_i(n) 2^i $$ Break off the first term in both sums and you can get $$ a_o(n) - b_0(n) = 2sum_{i=1}^m (b_i(n)-a_i(n)) 2^{i-1}$$
The l.h.s can only be ($0-0$), ($0-1$), ($1-0$), or ($1-1$), and it must be divisible by $2$, so it must equal $0$, i.e. $a_0(n) = b_0(n)$. Then you can divide by the $2$ in front of the sum, and repeat the argument (or use induction) to get $a_i(n) = b_i(n)$ for all $i$.
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This argument is very basic but I think the notation is easy to follow:
Suppose a number has two different expansions ${a_i}$ and ${b_i}$. Then
$$ sum_{i=0}^m a_i(n) 2^i = sum_{i=0}^m b_i(n) 2^i $$ Break off the first term in both sums and you can get $$ a_o(n) - b_0(n) = 2sum_{i=1}^m (b_i(n)-a_i(n)) 2^{i-1}$$
The l.h.s can only be ($0-0$), ($0-1$), ($1-0$), or ($1-1$), and it must be divisible by $2$, so it must equal $0$, i.e. $a_0(n) = b_0(n)$. Then you can divide by the $2$ in front of the sum, and repeat the argument (or use induction) to get $a_i(n) = b_i(n)$ for all $i$.
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This argument is very basic but I think the notation is easy to follow:
Suppose a number has two different expansions ${a_i}$ and ${b_i}$. Then
$$ sum_{i=0}^m a_i(n) 2^i = sum_{i=0}^m b_i(n) 2^i $$ Break off the first term in both sums and you can get $$ a_o(n) - b_0(n) = 2sum_{i=1}^m (b_i(n)-a_i(n)) 2^{i-1}$$
The l.h.s can only be ($0-0$), ($0-1$), ($1-0$), or ($1-1$), and it must be divisible by $2$, so it must equal $0$, i.e. $a_0(n) = b_0(n)$. Then you can divide by the $2$ in front of the sum, and repeat the argument (or use induction) to get $a_i(n) = b_i(n)$ for all $i$.
This argument is very basic but I think the notation is easy to follow:
Suppose a number has two different expansions ${a_i}$ and ${b_i}$. Then
$$ sum_{i=0}^m a_i(n) 2^i = sum_{i=0}^m b_i(n) 2^i $$ Break off the first term in both sums and you can get $$ a_o(n) - b_0(n) = 2sum_{i=1}^m (b_i(n)-a_i(n)) 2^{i-1}$$
The l.h.s can only be ($0-0$), ($0-1$), ($1-0$), or ($1-1$), and it must be divisible by $2$, so it must equal $0$, i.e. $a_0(n) = b_0(n)$. Then you can divide by the $2$ in front of the sum, and repeat the argument (or use induction) to get $a_i(n) = b_i(n)$ for all $i$.
answered Nov 29 '18 at 0:26
JonathanZ
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8
Have you tried induction?
– saulspatz
Nov 28 '18 at 16:12
8
@stanleydodds Why are you answering in a comment?
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:17
4
@stanleydodds Outlines of answers are still answers. Even one-line hints belong in answer posts in my opinion
– Arthur
Nov 28 '18 at 16:19
Index $j$ should start at $0$. If it starts at $1$ then RHS is even.
– drhab
Nov 28 '18 at 16:30
3
As presented, such expansions are not unique. For uniqueness, you need to add the constraint that $$epsilon_m(n) = 1$$. Otherwise, an arbitrary number of additional leading 0 terms can be included to produce distinct expansions of the same n.
– John Bollinger
Nov 28 '18 at 17:54