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Symmetric Jacobians

Michiel Bondt (2014)

Open Mathematics

This article is about polynomial maps with a certain symmetry and/or antisymmetry in their Jacobians, and whether the Jacobian Conjecture is satisfied for such maps, or whether it is sufficient to prove the Jacobian Conjecture for such maps. For instance, we show that it suffices to prove the Jacobian conjecture for polynomial maps x + H over ℂ such that satisfies all symmetries of the square, where H is homogeneous of arbitrary degree d ≥ 3.

The effect of rational maps on polynomial maps

Pierrette Cassou-Noguès (2001)

Annales Polonici Mathematici

We describe the polynomials P ∈ ℂ[x,y] such that P ( 1 / v , A v + A v 2 n + . . . + A m - 1 v n ( m - 1 ) + v n m - k w ) [ v , w ] . As applications we give new examples of bad field generators and examples of families of polynomials with smooth and irreducible fibers.

The Jacobian Conjecture for symmetric Drużkowski mappings

Michiel de Bondt, Arno van den Essen (2005)

Annales Polonici Mathematici

Let k be an algebraically closed field of characteristic zero and F : = x + ( A x ) * d : k k a Drużkowski mapping of degree ≥ 2 with det JF = 1. We classify all such mappings whose Jacobian matrix JF is symmetric. It follows that the Jacobian Conjecture holds for these mappings.

The Jacobian Conjecture: symmetric reduction and solution in the symmetric cubic linear case

Ludwik M. Drużkowski (2005)

Annales Polonici Mathematici

Let 𝕂 denote ℝ or ℂ, n > 1. The Jacobian Conjecture can be formulated as follows: If F:𝕂ⁿ → 𝕂ⁿ is a polynomial map with a constant nonzero jacobian, then F is a polynomial automorphism. Although the Jacobian Conjecture is still unsolved even in the case n = 2, it is convenient to consider the so-called Generalized Jacobian Conjecture (for short (GJC)): the Jacobian Conjecture holds for every n>1. We present the reduction of (GJC) to the case of F of degree 3 and of symmetric homogeneous...

The jacobian map, the jacobian group and the group of automorphisms of the Grassmann algebra

Vladimir V. Bavula (2010)

Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France

There are nontrivial dualities and parallels between polynomial algebras and the Grassmann algebras (e.g., the Grassmann algebras are dual of polynomial algebras as quadratic algebras). This paper is an attempt to look at the Grassmann algebras at the angle of the Jacobian conjecture for polynomial algebras (which is the question/conjecture about the Jacobian set– the set of all algebra endomorphisms of a polynomial algebra with the Jacobian 1 – the Jacobian conjecture claims that the Jacobian...

Triangularization properties of power linear maps and the Structural Conjecture

Michiel de Bondt, Dan Yan (2014)

Annales Polonici Mathematici

We discuss several additional properties a power linear Keller map may have. The Structural Conjecture of Drużkowski (1983) asserts that certain two such properties are equivalent, but we show that one of them is stronger than the other. We even show that the property of linear triangularizability is strictly in between. Furthermore, we give some positive results for small dimensions and small Jacobian ranks.

Vector fields from locally invertible polynomial maps in ℂⁿ

Alvaro Bustinduy, Luis Giraldo, Jesús Muciño-Raymundo (2015)

Colloquium Mathematicae

Let (F₁,..., Fₙ): ℂⁿ → ℂⁿ be a locally invertible polynomial map. We consider the canonical pull-back vector fields under this map, denoted by ∂/∂F₁,...,∂/∂Fₙ. Our main result is the following: if n-1 of the vector fields / F j have complete holomorphic flows along the typical fibers of the submersion ( F , . . . , F j - 1 , F j + 1 , . . . , F ) , then the inverse map exists. Several equivalent versions of this main hypothesis are given.

Wild Multidegrees of the Form (d,d₂,d₃) for Fixed d ≥ 3

Marek Karaś, Jakub Zygadło (2012)

Bulletin of the Polish Academy of Sciences. Mathematics

Let d be any integer greater than or equal to 3. We show that the intersection of the set mdeg(Aut(ℂ³))∖ mdeg(Tame(ℂ³)) with {(d₁,d₂,d₃) ∈ (ℕ ₊)³: d = d₁ ≤ d₂≤ d₃} has infinitely many elements, where mdeg h = (deg h₁,...,deg hₙ) denotes the multidegree of a polynomial mapping h = (h₁,...,hₙ): ℂⁿ → ℂⁿ. In other words, we show that there are infinitely many wild multidegrees of the form (d,d₂,d₃), with fixed d ≥ 3 and d ≤ d₂ ≤ d₃, where a sequence (d₁,...,dₙ)∈ ℕ ⁿ is a wild multidegree if there is...

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