The B. and M. Shapiro conjecture in real algebraic geometry and the Bethe ansatz (Q731203)

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The B. and M. Shapiro conjecture in real algebraic geometry and the Bethe ansatz
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    The B. and M. Shapiro conjecture in real algebraic geometry and the Bethe ansatz (English)
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    2 October 2009
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    Let \(V\) be an \(r+1\) dimensional complex linear subspace of \(\mathbb{C}[x]\). The Wronskian of \(V\) is defined as the Wronskian of an ordered basis of \(V\); hence it is defined up to multiplication by a non-zero scalar. The main result of the paper is the proof of the following theorem (earlier B. and M. Shapiro conjecture): If the roots of the Wronskian \(Wr\) of \(V\) are real, then \(V\subset \mathbb{R}[x] \subset \mathbb{C}[x]\). A continuity argument shows that it is enough to prove this theorem in the case when \(Wr\) has simple roots. The authors recall a Schubert calculus argument to find an upper bound for the number of subspaces \(V \subset C[x]\) with a given exponent at infinity (degrees of a basis) and \(Wr=\prod (x-z_i)\), where the \(z_i\)'s are distinct. In Sections 2 and 3 the Bethe ansatz construction for a Gaudin model is studied and used to construct the expected number of subspaces with given exponent and given \(Wr\). A thorough study of the Gaudin Hamiltonians shows that the constructed subspaces \(V\) are all real if the roots of \(Wr\) are all real. This proves the main theorem. The authors also discuss some related topics. They show that their main theorem implies that if the ramified points of a map \(\phi: \mathbb{C}\mathbb{P}^1 \to \mathbb{C}\mathbb{P}^r\) are contained in a circle in \(\mathbb{C}\mathbb{P}^1\), then \(\phi\) of this circle is contained in an (appropriate) \(\mathbb{R}\mathbb{P}^r \subset \mathbb{C}\mathbb{P}^r\). They also prove a statement about how the transversality of intersections of Schubert cycles in Grassmannians is related to the simplicity of the spectrum of Gaudin Hamiltonians. In Appendix B they show that their results imply the reality of orbits of critical points of master functions for the root systems A, B, and C; and conjecture this statement in general.
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    real Schubert calculus
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    B. \& M. Shapiro conjecture
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    Bethe ansatz
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    Gaudin model
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