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The following is a question I've been pondering for a while. I was reminded of it by a recent dicussion on the question How to tell $i$ from $-i$?

Can you find a field that is abstractly isomorphic to $\mathbb{C}$, but that does not have a canonical choice of square root of $-1$?

I mean canonical in the following sense: if you were to hand your field to one thousand mathematicians with the instructions "Pick out the most obvious square root of -1 in this field. Your goal is to make the same choice as most other mathematicians," there should be be a fairly even division of answers.

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    All the answers so far work with a somewhat informal definition of “canonical” — hence their somewhat unsatisfactory debatability. One possible formalisation of the question is “Is there a definition in ZFC of a field, ZFC-provably isomorphic to C, but with no ZFC-definable square root of –1?” (Feel free to replace ZFC with your preferred foundational system, of course.)2012-08-12

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$\overline{\mathbb{Q}_5}$. The square roots of $-1$ actually already lie in $\mathbb{Z}_5$ and can be computed using Hensel's lemma but there's no reason to prefer the one congruent to $2 \bmod 5$ over the one congruent to $3 \bmod 5$ or vice versa.

I am not sure this would pass the test as it is possible that most mathematicians would give you the one congruent to $2 \bmod 5$ just because it is the first square root of $-1$ in $\mathbb{Z}/5\mathbb{Z}$ you find as you start from $0$ and add $1$, so take a larger prime congruent to $1 \bmod 4$ instead of $5$, maybe, to force them to try something smarter (say a prime large enough that it is not feasible to compute $\left( \frac{p-1}{2} \right)! \bmod p$).

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    I hadn't noticed this answer until today! Very good!2012-08-18
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You can model the complex numbers by linear combinations of the $2\times 2$ unit matrix $\mathbb{I}$ and a real $2\times 2$ skew-symmetric matrix with square $-\mathbb I$, of which there are two, $\begin{pmatrix}0 & -1\\1 & 0\end{pmatrix}$ and $\begin{pmatrix}0 & 1\\-1 & 0\end{pmatrix}$. I see no obvious reason to prefer one over the other.

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    This one seems very persuasive. I would expect a majority for $-1$ at the top right corner, but not necessarily an overwhelming majority.2012-08-12
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I don't feel that the question is really a coherent one. Let me try to illustrate that as follows.

Suppose I hand you the field $\overline{\mathbb{C}} = \{a - bi \ | \ a+bi \in \mathbb{C} \}$. It seems that in your sense of canonical, the canonical square root of $-1$ in this field is $-i$.

But wait: $\overline{\mathbb{C}}$ is not a(n even set-theoretically) different field from $\mathbb{C}$! It is just being presented differently: namely starting with the incarnation you usually have of $\mathbb{C}$ (which you have not specified in your question, but is rather implicit in its formulation that you have one) and compose it with the complex conjugation automorphism. The point here is that it doesn't make sense to distinguish between the fields $\mathbb{C}$ and $\overline{\mathbb{C}}$, only to distinguish between different identifications of these fields.

In summary, whenever your field has an automorphism which moves an element $x$ such that $x^2 = -1$, there is no canonical choice between $x$ and $-x$, at least not in any mathematically robust sense.

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    @Pink Elephants:$I$think you are missing the point. For instance, suppose I change notation and refer to $\mathbb{C}$ as the set of all numbers $a+bI$ such that $a,b \in \mathbb{R}$ and $I^2 = -1$. There is no way to tell from this description whether $I$ means $i$ or $-i$. Maybe your question has a psychological coherence to it, but mathematically there is no distinction to be made.2012-08-12
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A field abstractly isomorphic to $\mathbb{C}$ but does not have a canonical choice of square root of $-1$ is $\mathbb{C}$ itself. There is nothing canonical about which square root of $-1$ to call $i$ and which square root to call $-i.$ By calling one of the square roots $i$ you have just set up notation, nothing more. The fact that there is a field automorphism of $\mathbb{C}$ which interchanges the two square roots confirms this, as it preserves all algebraic structure. Even more, it preserves the natural metric structure of $\mathbb{C}.$

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    @Pete: Yes, I think your answer appeared as I was writing mine. We are saying essentially the same thing, I agree.2012-08-12
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The answer to one possible formalization of the question is yes. It is consistent that there is a definable field isomorphic to $\mathbb{C}$ with no definable imaginary unit. To construct such a thing, we need a pair of sets $\{X,Y\}$ that is definable, but such that neither $X$ nor $Y$ is definable. It is consistent for such a strange object to exist: see François's answer to the question Does every nonempty definable finite set have a definable member?)

Now let $\mathbb{C}$ be your favorite construction of the complex field. One of its imaginary units, $i$, is definable, or else we are done. Define the structure $F = (\mathbb{C} \times \{X,Y\}) / \mathord{\sim}$ where $(a+bi, X) \sim (a-bi, Y)$ for all $a,b \in \mathbb{R}$. Then $F$ is a definable structure isomorphic to $\mathbb{C}$ and its imaginary units are $\{(i,X),(-i,Y)\}$ and $\{(-i,X),(i,Y)\}$. Neither of these imaginary units can be definable, or else $X$ and $Y$ would be definable from $i$ and therefore definable.

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I think "Potato"'s answer is good, and "Pink Elephants"' response is also good, noting that "canonical" is not literally canonical. :) To manufacture another example that prevents an arguably natural choice of this sort, we might try to construct a field that contains a copy of $\mathbb C$, but which is "hidden" a little. For example, real matrices of the form $\pmatrix{a & b \cr -b & a}$?

While it is defensible to choose $a=1$, $b=1$ there, then what about $\pmatrix{a&-b\cr b & a}$? :)

Or, just varying Potato's example, $\mathbb R[x]/\langle x^2+2\rangle$?

Or from among the simple factors of $\mathbb R[x]/\langle x^4+4\rangle$?

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    These matrices can be constructed abstractly as follows: let $V$ be a real $2$-dimensional inner product space. Then we obtain these matrices as the endomorphism algebra of $V$ as a representation of $\text{SO}(V)$. Choosing a square root of$-1$more or less corresponds to choosing an orientation on $V$.2012-08-11
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One such field is $\Bbb R[X]/(X^2+1)$. There's no good reason to choose $X$ over $-X$ (or vice versa) to map to $i$ in the automorphism to $\mathbb{C}$.

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    @Qiaochu But $-x$ is also a universal square root of $-1$. If $F$ is the functor from $\mathbf{R}$-algebras to sets sending $R$ to the roots of $X^2+1$ in $R$, then you're saying the pair $(A,x)$ represents $F$, where $A=\mathbf{R}[x]/(x^2+1)$. But $(A,-x)$ also represents this functor, so I don't see how from this viewpoint $x$ is any more canonical than $-x$.2012-09-18
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The splitting field for $x^4+1$ over the reals.

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    (I'm sorry, I don't mean to be pedantic, but although I do not doubt the correctness of your answer you need to explain your point for people to understand you. Although the question is, perhaps, quite deep, it is also very natural and one that can be grasped by a first-year student, or even a bright high-school-er, and your answer is not going to be understood by them!)2012-09-12