An
additive group consists of a set of elements, an
associative addition operation that combines pairs of elements and returns a single element, an
identity element (or zero element) whose sum with any other element is the other element, and an
additive inverse operation such that the sum of any element and its inverse is zero. A group is a
linearly ordered group when, in addition, its elements can be
linearly ordered in a way that is compatible with the group operation: for all elements
x,
y, and
z, if
x ≤
y then
x +
z ≤
y +
z and
z +
x ≤
z +
y. The notation
na (where
n is a
natural number) stands for the group sum of
n copies of
a. An
Archimedean group (
G, +, ≤) is a linearly ordered group subject to the following additional condition, the Archimedean property: For every
a and
b in
G which are greater than 0, it is possible to find a natural number
n for which the inequality
b ≤
na holds. An equivalent definition is that an Archimedean group is a linearly ordered group without any bounded
cyclic subgroups: there does not exist a cyclic subgroup
S and an element
x with
x greater than all elements in
S. It is straightforward to see that this is equivalent to the other definition: the Archimedean property for a pair of elements
a and
b is just the statement that the cyclic subgroup generated by
a is not bounded by
b. ==Examples of Archimedean groups==