On solutions and Waring’s formulas for systems of $n$ algebraic equations for $n$ unknowns
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5501094
DOI10.1090/spmj/1361zbMath1394.11031OpenAlexW1171814795MaRDI QIDQ5501094
V. R. Kulikov, Vitaly Anatolievich Stepanenko
Publication date: 12 August 2015
Published in: St. Petersburg Mathematical Journal (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1090/spmj/1361
Other hypergeometric functions and integrals in several variables (33C70) Diophantine equations in many variables (11D72)
Related Items
On probabilistic algorithm for solving almost all instances of the set partition problem ⋮ An explanation of Mellin's 1921 paper ⋮ Computational problems of multivariate hypergeometric theory ⋮ On tangent lines to affine hypersurfaces ⋮ Rational expressions for multiple roots of algebraic equations ⋮ Residue integrals and Waring’s formulas for algebraic or even transcendental systems ⋮ Residue integrals and Waring formulas for algebraic and transcendent systems of equations ⋮ Hypergeometric Series and the Mellin-Barnes Integrals for Zeros of a System of Laurent Polynomials ⋮ Analytic Continuation for Solutions to the System of Trinomial Algebraic Equations ⋮ On Some Examples of Systems of Transcendent Equations
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Analytic continuations of a general algebraic function by means of Puiseux series
- Solving algebraic equations in terms of \(\mathcal A\)-hypergeometric series
- Studying the multiple Mellin--Barnes integrals by means of multidimensional residues
- Hypergeometric functions and toric varieties
- The discriminant locus of a system of $ n$ Laurent polynomials in $ n$ variables
- Inversion of many-dimensional Mellin transforms and solutions of algebraic equations
- On the Horn system of partial differential equations and series of hypergeometric type
This page was built for publication: On solutions and Waring’s formulas for systems of $n$ algebraic equations for $n$ unknowns