Solvable nonlinear discrete-time evolutions and Diophantine findings
- DOI
- 10.1080/14029251.2018.1503395How to use a DOI?
- Abstract
Certain nonlinearly-coupled systems of N discrete-time evolution equations are identified, which can be solved by algebraic operations; and some remarkable Diophantine findings are thereby obtained. These results might be useful to test the accuracy of numerical routines yielding the N roots of polynomials of arbitrary degree N.
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- © 2018 The Authors. Published by Atlantis and Taylor & Francis
- Open Access
- This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC 4.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
1. Introduction and notation
As the reader will easily see, the results of this paper amount to a transfer—from continuous to discrete time, via the approach introduced in [1]—of the findings reported in [2] and [3] (see also Chapters 3 and 7 of [4]).
Throughout this paper the following notation is used: N and L are two arbitrary positive integers N ≥ 2, L ≥ 2), , the indices n and m run from 1 to N, the discrete-time variable ℓ = 0, 1, 2, ... takes all nonnegative integer values, the N dependent variables zn (ℓ) are generally complex numbers and. being generally defined (see below) as the N zeros of a polynomial of degree N in its (complex) argument z, they are the elements of an unordered set of N elements identified hereafter with the notation
2. Results
Proposition 2.1.
Consider the system of N second-order discrete-time evolution equations
Let this system of second-order discrete-time evolution equations, (2.1 a), be complemented by the following assignments of the two unordered sets
The solution z (ℓ) of the system of second-order discrete-time evolution equations (2.1a) is then given by the N roots of the following polynomial of degree N in z:
Proposition 2.1 is proven in the following Section. In the meantime the reader may immediately verify the validity of the formula (2.3) at ℓ = 0 and—via (2.2b)— at ℓ = 1.
Remark 2.1.
Note that—while in the formulation of this Proposition 2.1 we considered the system of N equations (2.2) as determining the N elements of the unordered set
Corollary 2.1.
At ℓ = L the unordered set
The validity of this Corollary 2.1 is an immediate consequence of the Proposition 2.1, being obtained by setting ℓ = L in (2.3). And it has an obvious Diophantine implication if the N, a priori arbitrary, numbers fm are chosen to be integers or rationals.
3. Proof
The starting point of the proof of Proposition 2.1 is the definition (2.3) of the polynomial ψN (z; ℓ). The consistency of this definition with the assignment of the initial data
4. Envoy
The result reported in the above Proposition 2.1 is likely to look, at least at first sight, somewhat remarkable, especially in view of the arbitrariness of the assignment of the 2N numbers zn(0) and fn (or, equivalently, zn(0) and zn(1); see the above Remark 2.1). But of course, after its validity has been proven, it shall be considered obvious—as all valid mathematical results in some sense are. A potential application of this finding is as a tool to test the accuracy of numerical routines to compute the zeros of polynomials of arbitrary degree N: by comparing, with the simple explicit outcome detailed in the above Corollary 2.1, the results yielded by the application of such routines in order to solve numerically—from the initial data detailed in Proposition 2.1, up to ℓ = L—the discrete-time evolution (2.1); which indeed requires finding the zeros of appropriate polynomials of degree N at every step of this discrete-time evolution. In this context the flexibility implied by the possibility to assign arbitrarily the two integers N and L and the 2N, generally complex, numbers zn(0) and fn might be quite useful. Specialists in numerical analysis might be interested to explore in detail the vistas implied by such possibilities: note for instance that, for N = 20 and fm = m, Corollary 2.1—for any arbitrary assignment of the parameters L and xn(0)—yields the 20 zeros of the perfidious Wilkinson polynomial [5].
An extension of the findings reported in this paper to the case in which the finite positive integer N is replaced by ∞ is of course possible, see [2].
A (perhaps less elegant) variant of the approach described in this paper—characterized by the replacement of the system of second-order discrete-time evolution equations (2.1a) by systems of first-order discrete-time evolution equations—is of course possible, in analogy to the treatments of the continuous-time cases, see [1],[2] and Chapter 3 of [4].
References
Cite this article
TY - JOUR AU - Francesco Calogero PY - 2021 DA - 2021/01/06 TI - Solvable nonlinear discrete-time evolutions and Diophantine findings JO - Journal of Nonlinear Mathematical Physics SP - 515 EP - 517 VL - 25 IS - 4 SN - 1776-0852 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/14029251.2018.1503395 DO - 10.1080/14029251.2018.1503395 ID - Calogero2021 ER -