A counterexample to the strong real Jacobian conjecture (Q1340941)

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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 704933
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    A counterexample to the strong real Jacobian conjecture
    scientific article; zbMATH DE number 704933

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      A counterexample to the strong real Jacobian conjecture (English)
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      21 December 1994
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      Let \(p(x,y)\), \(q(x,y)\) be polynomials with real or complex coefficients and let \(F=(p,q)\) be a corresponding polynomial mapping from \(\mathbb{R}^2(\mathbb{C}^2)\) to itself. We will denote by \(J(p,q)\) the Jacobian of \(F\), i.e., \[ J(p,q)= {\partial p\over\partial x} {\partial q\over\partial y}-{\partial p\over\partial y} {\partial q\over\partial x}. \] The classical Jacobian problem (conjecture) is to show that if \(J(p,q)=1\), then \(F\) is invertible. This conjecture was first posed by \textit{O. H. Keller} [Monatsh. Math. Phys. 47, 299-306 (1939; Zbl 0021.15303)] and after more than 50 years it still remains an open problem. A survey of a number of the partial results and a historical account one can find in the paper of \textit{H. Bass}, \textit{E. H. Connell} and \textit{D. Wright} [Bull. Am. Math. Soc., New Ser. 7, 287-330 (1982; Zbl 0539.13012)]. It is worth to notice that in most of the papers on the Jacobian conjecture, the authors tried to prove it and only few of them discussed the possibility of a counterexample. We want to mention the paper of \textit{A. G. Vitushkin} [Proc. int. Conf. Manifold, rel. Top. Topol., Tokyo 1973, 415-417 (1975; Zbl 0309.14010)], who presented some topological arguments in favor of a negative solution of the Jacobian conjecture. In this paper, we construct a counterexample to the so-called real Jacobian conjecture (see, for example, \textit{J. D. Randall} [Proc. Sympos. Pure Math. 40, Part 2, 411-414 (1983; Zbl 0524.26009)]), which is stronger than the classical one and asks whether a polynomial mapping \(F:\mathbb{R}^2\to\mathbb{R}^2\) with a nonvanishing Jacobian \(J(F)\) is a global diffeomorphism from \(\mathbb{R}^2\) onto \(\mathbb{R}^2\).
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      strong real Jacobian conjecture
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      counterexample
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      polynomial mapping
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      nonvanishing Jacobian
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      global diffeomorphism
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