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{{Short description|Function from the limited hyperreal to the real numbers}}
In [[nonstandard analysis]], the '''standard part function''' is a function from the limited (finite) [[hyperreal number]]s to the real numbers. Briefly, the standard part function "rounds off" a finite hyperreal to the nearest real. It associates to every such hyperreal <math>x</math>, the unique real <math>x_0</math> infinitely close to it, i.e. <math>x-x_0</math> is [[infinitesimal]]. As such, it is a mathematical implementation of the historical concept of [[adequality]] introduced by [[Pierre de Fermat]],<ref>
The standard part function was first defined by [[Abraham Robinson]] who used the notation <math>{}^{\circ}x</math> for the standard part of a hyperreal <math>x</math> (see Robinson 1974). This concept plays a key role in defining the concepts of the calculus, such as continuity, the derivative, and the integral, in [[nonstandard analysis]]. The latter theory is a rigorous formalization of calculations with [[infinitesimal]]s. The standard part of ''x'' is sometimes referred to as its '''shadow'''.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bascelli |first1=Tiziana |last2=Bottazzi |first2=Emanuele |last3=Herzberg |first3=Frederik |last4=Kanovei |first4=Vladimir |last5=Katz |first5=Karin U. |last6=Katz |first6=Mikhail G. |last7=Nowik |first7=Tahl |last8=Sherry |first8=David |last9=Shnider |first9=Steven |title=Fermat, Leibniz, Euler, and the Gang: The True History of the Concepts of Limit and Shadow |journal=Notices of the American Mathematical Society |date=1 September 2014 |volume=61 |issue=8 |pages=848 |doi=10.1090/noti1149 |url=https://community.ams.org/journals/notices/201408/rnoti-p848.pdf}}</ref>
==Definition==
[[File:Standard part function with two continua.svg|360px|thumb|right|The standard part function "rounds off" a finite hyperreal to the nearest real number. The "infinitesimal microscope" is used to view an infinitesimal neighborhood of a standard real.]]
Nonstandard analysis deals primarily with the pair <math>\R \subseteq {}^*\R</math>, where the [[hyperreal number|hyperreal]]s <math>{}^*\R</math> are an [[ordered field]] extension of the reals <math>\R</math>, and contain infinitesimals, in addition to the reals.
:<math>\operatorname{st}(x) = x_0.</math>
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==Not internal==
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 <math>\R\subseteq {}^*\R</math>, which is not internal; in fact every internal set in <math>{}^*\R</math> that is a subset of <math>\R</math> is necessarily ''finite''
==Applications==
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*[[Nonstandard calculus]]
==
{{Reflist}}
==Further
*[[H. Jerome Keisler]]. ''[[Elementary Calculus: An Infinitesimal Approach]]''. First edition 1976; 2nd edition 1986. (This book is now out of print. The publisher has reverted the copyright to the author, who has made available the 2nd edition in .pdf format available for downloading at http://www.math.wisc.edu/~keisler/calc.html.)
*[[Abraham Robinson]]. Non-standard analysis. Reprint of the second (1974) edition. With a foreword by [[Wilhelmus A. J. Luxemburg]]. Princeton Landmarks in Mathematics. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1996. xx+293 pp. {{isbn|0-691-04490-2}}
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