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From Freudenthal's Spectral Theorem to projectable hulls of unital Archimedean lattice-groups, through compactifications of minimal spectra

We use a landmark result in the theory of Riesz spaces - Freudenthal's 1936 Spectral Theorem - to canonically represent any Archimedean lattice-ordered group $G$ with a strong unit as a (non-separating) lattice-group of real valued continuous functions on an appropriate $G$-indexed zero-dimensional compactification $w_GZ_G$ of its space $Z_G$ of \emph{minimal} prime ideals. The two further ingredients needed to establish this representation are the Yosida representation of $G$ on its space $X_G$ of \emph{maximal} ideals, and the well-known continuous surjection of $Z_G$ onto $X_G$. We then establish our main result by showing that the inclusion-minimal extension of this representation of $G$ that separates the points of $Z_G$ - namely, the sublattice subgroup of ${\rm C}\,(Z_G)$ generated by the image of $G$ along with all characteristic functions of clopen (closed and open) subsets of $Z_G$ which are determined by elements of $G$ - is precisely the classical projectable hull of $G$. Our main result thus reveals a fundamental relationship between projectable hulls and minimal spectra, and provides the most direct and explicit construction of projectable hulls to date. Our techniques do require the presence of a strong unit.

preprint2015arXivOpen access

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