A collection of equations satisfies the Hasse principle if, whenever one of the equations has solutions in
and
all the
, then the equations have solutions in the
Rationals
. Examples include the set of equations
with
,
, and
Integers, and the set of equations
for
rational. The trivial solution
is usually not taken into account when deciding if a collection of
homogeneous equations satisfies the Hasse principle. The Hasse principle is sometimes called the
Local-Global Principle.
See also Local Field
© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein
1999-05-25