What happens to sparse resultants under composition? More precisely, let f 1 , . . . , fn be homogeneous sparse polynomials in the variables y 1 , . . . , yn and g 1 , . . . , gn be homogeneous sparse polynomials in the variables x 1 , . . . , xn. Let f i • (g 1 , . . . , gn) be the sparse homogeneo
Dense resultant of composed polynomials: Mixed–mixed case
✍ Scribed by Manfred Minimair
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 181 KB
- Volume
- 36
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0747-7171
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✦ Synopsis
The main question of this paper is: What is the dense (Macaulay) resultant of composed polynomials? By a composed polynomial f • (g 1 , . . . , g n ), we mean the polynomial obtained from a polynomial f in the variables y 1 , . . . , y n by replacing y j by some polynomial g j . Cheng, McKay and Wang and Jouanolou have provided answers for two particular subcases. The main contribution of this paper is to complete these works by providing a uniform answer for all subcases. In short, it states that the dense resultant is the product of certain powers of the dense resultants of the component polynomials and of some of their leading forms. It is expected that these results can be applied to compute dense resultants of composed polynomials with improved efficiency. We also state a lemma of independent interest about the dense resultant under vanishing of leading forms.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
This paper is the second in a series of papers on sparse resultants of composed polynomials. In the first paper, "Sparse Resultant of Composed Polynomials I", Hong and Minimair (2000, http://minimair.org/HM2000.ps) considered the sparse resultant of polynomials having arbitrary (mixed) supports comp