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Canonical Number Systems on Polynomial Quotients: A Finite-Generators Pipeline

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23 November 2025

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24 November 2025

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Abstract
I introduce an n-dimensional canonical number system (CNS) on modules: a finite base frame b, an E-linear shift T, and a finite digit set D yield unique finite expansions along places \( \{T^{k}(b_i)\} \). For a finitely generated ring \( R=\mathbb Z[a_1,\dots,a_n] \), I use the presentation \( R\cong \mathbb Z[x_1,\dots,x_n]/\ker(\phi) \) and compute \( \ker(\phi) \) via a graph-ideal elimination scheme. When the quotient has finitely many standard monomials, choosing a non–zero-divisor prime p equips R with a base-p CNS (pre-folding) that uses those monomials as places. A digit-folding lemma then compresses coordinates whenever some place has only finitely many powers, preserving uniqueness. This provides a constructive pipeline from presentations of finitely generated, countable rings to explicit multi-dimensional CNS representations, supporting the conjecture that every such ring is isomorphic to an n-dimensional CNS.
Keywords: 
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1. Introduction

Conjecture 1.Let R be a ring with | R | 0 that is finitely generated. Then R is isomorphic to an n-dimensional-base canonical number system (CNS).
The main results of this paper are the following theorems.
Definition 1 
(Canonical number system; following laus Scheicher and Jörg M. Thuswaldner [1], and Christiaan E. van de Woestijne [2]). Let R be a commutative ring and φ : R R a homomorphism with finite cokernel (i.e. [ R : φ ( R ) ] < ). A finite set D R is adigit setif it is a complete set of representatives of R / φ ( R ) (contains exactly one element from each coset). We call ( R , φ , D ) acanonical number system (CNS)if every r R admits afinite expansion
r = k = 0 φ k ( d k ) with d k D ,
and the expansion isuniquewhenever D is irredundant (a true transversal).
Polynomial/base specialization. Let P ( x ) Z [ x ] be monic with | P ( 0 ) | 2 , put R = Z [ x ] / ( P ) , and let x ¯ be the class of x in R. With the digit set N = { 0 , 1 , , | P ( 0 ) | 1 } (a transversal of R / x ¯ R ), we say ( P , N ) (or equivalently ( R , x ¯ , N ) ) is a CNS if every γ R has a unique finite expansion
γ = k = 0 n k x ¯ k , n k N .
If P is irreducible and α is a root, this is the same as unique finite α-expansions in R Z [ α ] ; in this case α is called aCNS base.
Definition 2 
(n–dimensional CNS). Let E be a commutative ring and let L be an E–module.
Digits. Fix finite digit alphabets
D 1 , D 2 , , D n E , | D i | < for each i ,
and set the product digit set
D : = D 1 × D 2 × × D n .
Base. Fix a finite base frame
b = ( b 1 , , b n ) L n | b | = n < .
Places. Fix a countable index set I = N 0 and an E–linear “shift” endomorphism T : L L . The place set is
B : = { T k ( b i ) : i = 1 , , n , k I } L .
Expansion. For d = ( d 1 , , d n ) D write d , b : = i = 1 n d i b i L . We say ( L , T , b , D ) is ann–dimensional canonical number systemif every r L admits a unique finite expansion
r = k I finite d k , T k b , d k D .
Equivalently (by E–linearity of T),
r = k I finite T k d k , b .
Lemma 1  
(Finite–generators presentation). Let R be a commutative ring with 1 and suppose R = Z [ a 1 , , a n ] for some a 1 , , a n R . Then there exists a surjective ring homomorphism
ϕ : Z [ x 1 , , x n ] R , ϕ ( x i ) = a i ( 1 i n ) ,
and hence an isomorphism of rings
R Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / ker ( ϕ ) .
Proof. 
By the universal property of the polynomial algebra on a finite set of indeterminates (Stacks Project, Tag 00S0 [3]), there exists a unique ring morphism
ϕ : Z [ x 1 , , x n ] R with ϕ | Z = id Z , ϕ ( x i ) = a i .
Then
Im ( ϕ ) Z [ ϕ ( x 1 ) , , ϕ ( x n ) ] = Z [ a 1 , , a n ] = R ,
hence Im ( ϕ ) = R and ϕ is surjective. The first isomorphism theorem yields
R Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / ker ( ϕ ) .
Fix j { 1 , , n } , E : = Z [ x 1 , , x j ^ , , x n ] = { f Z [ x 1 , , x n ] : deg x j f = 0 } = Z [ x 1 , , x j 1 , x j + 1 , , x n ] L : = Z [ x 1 , , x n ] , T : L L , T ( h ) = x j h , b = ( 1 ) L , g , b = g E .
f L ! g 0 , , g d E : f = k = 0 d T k g k , b = k = 0 d g k x j k .
Lemma 2  
(Digit folding for an n–dimensional CNS). Let E be a commutative ring, L an E–module, and let T , U End E ( L ) commute ( T U = U T ). Fix a finite base frame b = ( b 1 , , b m ) L m and an integer M 1 . Form the expanded base
b ˜ : = ( U 0 b 1 , , U M 1 b 1 ; ; U 0 b m , , U M 1 b m ) L m M .
Let the digit alphabets be finite D 1 , , D m E and set D : = D 1 × × D m , D ˜ : = D M (blockwise Cartesian product).
Assume ( L , T , b ˜ , D ˜ ) is an m M –dimensional CNS, i.e. every r L has a unique finite expansion
r = k 0 finite d ˜ k , T k b ˜ , d ˜ k = d k , i , j 1 i m , 0 j < M D ˜ .
Define thefolded digit set
D i : = j = 0 M 1 d j u j | d j D i E [ u ] / ( u M ) ( 1 i m ) , D : = D 1 × × D m ,
and let E [ u ] act on L via u · v : = U ( v ) .
Then every r L admits a finitefoldedCNS expansion with base b :
r = k 0 finite e k , T k b , e k = ( e k , 1 , , e k , m ) D , e k , i = j = 0 M 1 d k , i , j u j .
If the original expansion with ( b ˜ , D ˜ ) is unique and T is injective, then the folded expansion with ( b , D ) is also unique.

2. Proofs of Main Results

In this section, we will prove the Conjecture Section 1
From the Lemma 1 and Conjecture Section 1 we need to know the ker ( ϕ )
Setup 1 [Finite–generators presentation] Let R be a commutative ring with 1, generated (as a ring) by a 1 , , a n R . Choose a presentation
R Z [ y 1 , , y m ] / J
for some ideal J Z [ y 1 , , y m ] , and polynomials p i ( y ) Z [ y 1 , , y m ] such that the image of p i ( y ) in R equals a i . Define
ϕ : Z [ x 1 , , x n ] R , ϕ ( x i ) = a i .
Setup 2 [Big ring and graph ideal] Set the big ring
S : = Z [ x 1 , , x n , y 1 , , y m ] .
Define the graph ideal in S by
I : = J + x 1 p 1 ( y ) , , x n p n ( y ) S .
Proposition 1  
(Kernel as an elimination ideal). With I as above,
ker ( ϕ ) = I Z [ x 1 , , x n ] .
Because
Proposition 2.  
Let ϕ : Z [ x 1 , , x n ] R be a ring homomorphism and put K : = ker ( ϕ ) Z [ x 1 , , x n ] . If K = ( f 1 , , f r ) for some f i Z [ x 1 , , x n ] , then
Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / K Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / ( f 1 , , f r ) .
Proof. 
Set J : = ( f 1 , , f r ) . Since J = K , define
Ψ : Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / J Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / K , Ψ ( a + J ) : = a + K .
This is a well-defined ring homomorphism because a + J = b + J a b J = K a + K = b + K . Define Θ : Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / K Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / J by Θ ( a + K ) : = a + J . Then
( Θ Ψ ) ( a + J ) = a + J , ( Ψ Θ ) ( a + K ) = a + K ,
so Ψ is an isomorphism with inverse Θ . □
Thus we have
Lemma 3  
(Third isomorphism for quotients). Let A be a ring and let J K be ideals. The canonical map
π : A / J A / K , a ¯ a ¯
is surjective with kernel K / J . Hence
( A / J ) / ( K / J ) A / K .
In particular, if K = ( f 1 , , f r ) then A / K A / ( f 1 , , f r ) .
Proof. 
By the correspondence theorem for ideals, the ideals of A / J are exactly the quotients L / J with L an ideal of A containing J; in particular K / J is an ideal of A / J . The map π is clearly surjective, and ker π = { a ¯ A / J : a K } = K / J . Apply the first isomorphism theorem. See, e.g., ([4], Prop. 1.1 and Cor. 1.3) or ([3], Isomorphism theorems for rings). □
Lemma 4  
(Finite standard monomials). Assume there exist integers M 1 , , M n 1 such that in R every monomial x α = x 1 α 1 x n α n is congruent to a Z –linear combination of monomials with α i < M i for each i. Equivalently, the set
B : = x α ¯ R : 0 α i < M i ( 1 i n )
is a finite Z –basis of R. Let m : = | B | and list b = ( b 1 , , b m ) the elements of B .
Lemma 5  
(Digits and place map). Fix a prime p which is not a zero divisor in R and define
T : R R , T ( r ) : = p r , D : = j = 1 m d j b j | d j { 0 , 1 , , p 1 } R .
Theorem 1  
(Folded CNS). Assume the pre–folding CNS of Theorem 2 is realized in the module form by commuting endomorphisms T , U End E ( L ) and data
b ˜ = U 0 b 1 , , U M 1 b 1 ; ; U 0 b m , , U M 1 b m , D ˜ = D M ,
for some finite frame b = ( b 1 , , b m ) and M 1 . Then there exists afoldeddigit set D E [ u ] / ( u M ) and the same base frame b such that every r L has a finite folded expansion
r = k 0 finite e k , T k b , e k D .
If the pre–folding expansion is unique and T is injective, then the folded expansion is also unique. Consequently, ( L , T , b , D ) is an m–dimensional CNS.
Proof. 
Apply Lemma 2 with the given ( L , T , U , b , M ) . The lemma constructs D and yields the folded expansion; its final clause gives uniqueness under the stated hypothesis on T. □
Thus from Lemma 1 and Lemma Section 2 we have
Let ϕ : Z [ x 1 , , x n ] R , K : = ker ( ϕ ) .
R Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / K Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / ( f 1 , , f r )
Thus from Lemma 1
Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / ( f 1 , , f r ) is an n - dimensional CNS
R an n - dimensional CNS .

3. Example

Example 1 
(Pipeline on). Z [ i ] Z [ x ] / ( x 2 + 1 ) Step 1: Presentation and kernel via graph ideal.Let R = Z [ t ] / ( t 2 + 1 ) and set a 1 = t ¯ R . Define ϕ : Z [ x ] R , ϕ ( x ) = a 1 . Build the big ring S = Z [ x , y ] and the graph ideal
I : = ( y 2 + 1 , x y ) S .
Then K : = ker ( ϕ ) = I Z [ x ] = ( x 2 + 1 ) (eliminating y gives x 2 + 1 ). Hence
R Z [ x ] / K Z [ x ] / ( x 2 + 1 ) .
(This mirrors the “big ring & graph ideal” step and kernel elimination in the paper.) [3]
Step 2: Finite standard monomials and pre–folding CNS. In Z [ x ] / ( x 2 + 1 ) every monomial reduces to a Z –combination of { 1 , x } , so B = { 1 ¯ , x ¯ } is a finite Z –basis. Fix a prime p = 5 (a non–zero–divisor in R), put
T : R R , T ( r ) = 5 r , D : = { d 0 · 1 ¯ + d 1 · x ¯ : d 0 , d 1 { 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 } } .
Then every r = a + b x ¯ R has a (unique)pre–foldingbase–5 expansion
r = k = 0 5 k d k , 0 · 1 ¯ + d k , 1 · x ¯ , a = k d k , 0 5 k , b = k d k , 1 5 k , d k , j { 0 , , 4 } .
Concrete digits. Take r = 37 + 11 x ¯ . Write 37 = 2 + 2 · 5 + 1 · 5 2 and 11 = 1 + 2 · 5 . Thus
r = ( 2 + 1 x ¯ ) k = 0 + 5 ( 2 + 2 x ¯ ) k = 1 + 5 2 ( 1 + 0 x ¯ ) k = 2 .
Step 3: Fold along a finite–power coordinate (digit folding). Let U be multiplication by x ¯ ; since x ¯ 2 = 1 , only the two powers x ¯ 0 , x ¯ 1 survive in normal form ( M = 2 ). Apply the folding lemma with base frame b = ( 1 ¯ ) , so the expanded frame is ( 1 ¯ , x ¯ ) . Pack each pair of coefficients at level k into a single folded digit e k = d k , 0 + d k , 1 u Z [ u ] / ( u 2 ) , where u acts on R by u · v : = U ( v ) = x ¯ v . For our r:
e 0 = 2 + 1 u , e 1 = 2 + 2 u , e 2 = 1 + 0 u .
The folded CNS expansion is
r = k = 0 2 5 k e k , T k b = ( 2 + 1 u ) + 5 ( 2 + 2 u ) + 5 2 ( 1 + 0 u ) ,
which is unique because the pre–folding expansion was unique and T is injective.
Conclusion. We exhibited the full pipeline:
Z [ i ] Z [ x ] / ( x 2 + 1 ) pre folding base 5 CNS on { 1 ¯ , x ¯ } folded 1 dim CNS on ( 1 ¯ ) .
This exemplifies the definitions and the folding mechanism used in the paper.
Example 2. 
F 3 (and F 3 n ) as a CNS Step 1 (Presentation via a kernel). Let ϕ : Z F 3 be the reduction mod 3 map, ϕ ( 1 ) = 1 ¯ . Then ker ( ϕ ) = 3 Z and
F 3 Z / ker ( ϕ ) = Z / ( 3 ) .
Equivalently, for any n 1 one may take
Φ : Z [ x 1 , , x n ] F 3 , Φ | Z = mod 3 , Φ ( x i ) = 0 ,
with ker ( Φ ) = ( 3 , x 1 , , x n ) , so F 3 Z [ x 1 , , x n ] / ( 3 , x 1 , , x n ) .
Step 2 (CNS on F 3 ).Work with the 1–dimensional module form of Definition 2:
E = Z , L = Z , T : L L , T ( m ) = 3 m , b = ( 1 ) , D = { 0 , 1 , 2 } L .
Passing to the quotient L / 3 L F 3 , every a ¯ F 3 has the uniquefiniteexpansion (indeed, length 0)
a ¯ = d 0 , T 0 b = d 0 · 1 ¯ , d 0 { 0 , 1 , 2 } .
Here the “place” exponents are just 0 (so the ‘exponential vector’ is trivially 1 1 ), and the digit set is exactly { 0 , 1 , 2 } .
Step 3 (n–dimensional version with identity frame).Let L = Z n with the standard basis b = ( e 1 , , e n ) (theidentity vector frame), keep T = 3 id L , and take the product digit set
D = { 0 , 1 , 2 } n = { ( d 1 , , d n ) : d i { 0 , 1 , 2 } } .
Modulo 3, we obtain L / 3 L F 3 n , and every v ¯ F 3 n has a unique expansion of length 0:
v ¯ = d 0 , T 0 b = d 1 e ¯ 1 + + d n e ¯ n , d 0 = ( d 1 , , d n ) { 0 , 1 , 2 } n .
Thus F 3 (and, with the identity frame, F 3 n ) is a canonical n–dimensional number system whose digit vectors are drawn from { 0 , 1 , 2 } n and whose “place exponents” are the all–ones multiindex 1 n (i.e. only the k = 0 place occurs after mod 3).

References

  1. Klaus Scheicher and Jörg M. Thuswaldner, On the characterization of canonical number systems, Osaka Journal of Mathematics, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 327–351, 2004.
  2. Christiaan E. van de Woestijne, Number systems and the Chinese Remainder Theorem, arXiv:1106.4219 [math.NT], 2011.ms, Osaka Journal of Mathematics, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 327–351, 2004. arXiv:1106.4219 [math.NT], 2011.ms, Osaka Journal of Mathematics, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 327–351, 2004.
  3. The Stacks Project Authors, The Stacks Project. Tag 00S0 (Presentations of algebras; polynomial algebras on an arbitrary set of indeterminates).
  4. M. F. Atiyah and I. G. Macdonald, Introduction to Commutative Algebra, Addison–Wesley, 1969.
  5. The Stacks Project Authors, The Stacks Project, available online.
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