On the Newton polytope of the resultant (Q1321592)

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On the Newton polytope of the resultant
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    On the Newton polytope of the resultant (English)
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    31 May 1994
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    The reviewed paper continues the researches of Gelfand, Kapranov, Zelevinsky and others on the study of Newton polytopes of resultants and discriminants. Let \({\mathcal A}_ 0,{\mathcal A}_ 1,\dots,{\mathcal A}_ n\subset{\mathbf Z}^ n\) be subsets which jointly span the affine lattice \({\mathbf Z}^ n\), and \(\text{card}({\mathcal A}_ i)= m_ i\). Then \(\mathcal R\) is the unique (up to scaling) irreducible polynomial in \(m= m_ 0+ m_ 1+\cdots+ m_ n\) variables \(c_{i,{\mathbf a}}\), which vanishes whenever the Laurent polynomials \[ f_ i(x_ 1,\dots,x_ n)=\sum_{{\mathbf {a}}\in{\mathcal A}_ i}c_{i,{\mathbf{a}}} {\mathbf{x}}^{\mathbf a}\quad (i=0,1,\dots,n) \] have a common zero in \(({\mathbf C}^*)^ n\). The Newton polytope \({\mathcal N}({\mathcal R})\) is the convex hull in \({\mathbf R}^ m\) of the exponent vectors of all monomials appearing with nonzero coefficient in \(\mathcal R\). The main result is a combinatorial construction of the Newton polytope \({\mathcal N}({\mathcal R})\) of the sparse mixed resultant \(\mathcal R\). Moreover, the paper is organized as follows. In Section 1 the author collects some basics, including the precise definition of the sparse mixed resultant, and a dimension formula for the variety of solvable systems. Section 2 deals with the monomials corresponding to vertices of \({\mathcal N}({\mathcal R})\), which are called the extreme monomials. The author presents a combinatorial construction for the extreme monomials of \(\mathcal R\) using mixed polyhedral decomposition of \(Q\). In Section 3 he generalizes the Canny-Emiris formula by showing that for each extreme monomial \(m\) of \(\mathcal R\) there exists a determinant as in the paper by \textit{J. Canny} and \textit{I. Emiris} [An efficient algorithm for the sparse mixed resultant, Lect. Notes Comput. Sci. 263, 89-104 (1993; Zbl 0789.65034)], for which \(m\) appears as a factor of the main diagonal product. In Section 4 the author proves that all faces of resultant polytopes are Minkowski sums of resultant polytopes, expresses each initial form \(\text{init}_ \omega({\mathcal R})\) of the sparse mixed resultant as a product of resultants corresponding to subsets of the \({\mathcal A}_ i\) and for each extreme monomial \(\mathcal R\) determines the exact coefficient, which is either \(-1\) or \(+1\). In Section 5 he examines the relationship between the sparse mixed resultants and the \(\mathcal A\)- discriminants. In Section 6 combinatorial properties of resultant polytopes are explored. The author characterizes the edges of \({\mathcal N}({\mathcal R})\) in terms of mixed circuits, and uses this to show that the resultant polytope has the same dimension as the fiber polytope from the Section 5, namely \(\dim({\mathcal N}({\mathcal R}))= m- 2n-1\). Moreover, he characterizes all resultant polytopes of dimensions 2 and 3.
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    elimination theory
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    mixed subdivision
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    Newton polytopes
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    resultants
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    Laurent polynomials
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    sparse mixed resultant
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    extreme monomials
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    mixed polyhedral decomposition
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    mixed circuits
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    fiber polytope
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