The symbol denotes the nonstandard natural numbers. By the extension principle, this is a superset of . The set is nonempty. To see this, apply countable
saturation to the sequence of internal sets : A_n = \{k \in {^*\mathbf{N}}: k \geq n\} The sequence {{math|{
An}
n ∈
N}} has a nonempty intersection, proving the result. We begin with some definitions: Hyperreals
r,
s are
infinitely close if and only if : r \cong s \iff \forall \theta \in \mathbf{R}^+, \ |r - s| \leq \theta A hyperreal is
infinitesimal if and only if it is infinitely close to 0. For example, if is a
hyperinteger, i.e. an element of , then is an infinitesimal. A hyperreal is
limited (or
finite) if and only if its absolute value is dominated by (less than) a standard integer. The limited hyperreals form a subring of containing the reals. In this ring, the infinitesimal hyperreals are an
ideal. The set of limited hyperreals or the set of infinitesimal hyperreals are
external subsets of ; what this means in practice is that bounded quantification, where the bound is an internal set, never ranges over these sets.
Example: The plane with and ranging over is internal, and is a model of plane Euclidean geometry. The plane with and restricted to limited values (analogous to the
Dehn plane) is external, and in this limited plane the parallel postulate is violated. For example, any line passing through the point on the -axis and having infinitesimal slope is parallel to the -axis.
Theorem. For any limited hyperreal there is a unique standard real denoted infinitely close to . The mapping is a ring homomorphism from the ring of limited hyperreals to . The mapping st is also external. One way of thinking of the
standard part of a hyperreal, is in terms of
Dedekind cuts; any limited hyperreal defines a cut by considering the pair of sets where is the set of standard rationals less than and is the set of standard rationals greater than . The real number corresponding to can be seen to satisfy the condition of being the standard part of . One intuitive characterization of continuity is as follows:
Theorem. A real-valued function on the interval is continuous if and only if for every hyperreal in the interval , we have: . Similarly,
Theorem. A real-valued function is differentiable at the real value if and only if for every infinitesimal hyperreal number , the value : f'(x)= \operatorname{st} \left(\frac{{^*f}(x+h) - {^*f}(x)}{h}\right) exists and is independent of . In this case is a real number and is the derivative of at . == -saturation ==