In non-standard analysis, the standard part function is a function from the limited (finite) hyperreals to the reals, which associates to every hyperreal, the unique real infinitely close to it. As such, it is a mathematical implementation of the historical concept of adequality introduced by Pierre de Fermat.[1] The standard part function was first defined by Abraham Robinson as a key ingredient in defining the concepts of the calculus, such as the derivative and the integral, in non-standard analysis. The latter theory is a rigorous formalisation of calculations with infinitesimals.
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Nonstandard analysis deals primarily with the hyperreal line. The latter is an extension of the real line which contains, in addition to the reals, also infinitely small quantities. In the hyperreal line every real number has a collection of numbers (called a monad) of hyperreals infinitely close to it. The standard part function associates to a finite hyperreal x, the unique standard real number x0 which infinitely close to it. The relationship is expressed symbolically by writing
The standard part of any infinitesimal is 0. Thus if N is an infinite hypernatural, then 1/N is infinitesimal, and st(1/N) = 0.
The standard part function "st" is not defined by an internal set. There are several ways of explaining this. Perhaps the simplest is that its domain L, which is the collection of limited (i.e. finite) hyperreals, is not an internal set. Namely, since L is bounded (by any infinite hypernatural, for instance), L would have to have a least upper bound if L were internal, but L doesn't have a least upper bound. Alternatively, the range of "st" is which is not internal; in fact every internal subset of is necessarily finite, see (Goldblatt, 1998).
The standard part function is used to define the derivative of a function f. If f is a real function, and h is infinitesimal, and if f′(x) exists, then
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