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Tropical geometry

In mathematics, tropical geometry is the study of polynomials and their geometric properties when addition is replaced with minimization and multiplication is replaced with ordinary addition:

A tropical cubic curve

So for example, the classical polynomial would become . Such polynomials and their solutions have important applications in optimization problems, for example the problem of optimizing departure times for a network of trains.

Tropical geometry is a variant of algebraic geometry in which polynomial graphs resemble piecewise linear meshes, and in which numbers belong to the tropical semiring instead of a field. Because classical and tropical geometry are closely related, results and methods can be converted between them. Algebraic varieties can be mapped to a tropical counterpart and, since this process still retains some geometric information about the original variety, it can be used to help prove and generalize classical results from algebraic geometry, such as the Brill–Noether theorem, using the tools of tropical geometry.[1]

History edit

The basic ideas of tropical analysis were developed independently using the same notation by mathematicians working in various fields.[2] The central ideas of tropical geometry appeared in different forms in a number of earlier works. For example, Victor Pavlovich Maslov introduced a tropical version of the process of integration. He also noticed that the Legendre transformation and solutions of the Hamilton–Jacobi equation are linear operations in the tropical sense.[3] However, only since the late 1990s has an effort been made to consolidate the basic definitions of the theory. This was motivated by its application to enumerative algebraic geometry, with ideas from Maxim Kontsevich[4] and works by Grigory Mikhalkin[5] among others.

The adjective tropical was coined by French mathematicians in honor of the Hungarian-born Brazilian computer scientist Imre Simon, who wrote on the field. Jean-Éric Pin attributes the coinage to Dominique Perrin,[6] whereas Simon himself attributes the word to Christian Choffrut.[7]

Algebra background edit

Tropical geometry is based on the tropical semiring. This is defined in two ways, depending on max or min convention.

The min tropical semiring is the semiring  , with the operations:

 
 

The operations   and   are referred to as tropical addition and tropical multiplication respectively. The identity element for   is  , and the identity element for   is 0.

Similarly, the max tropical semiring is the semiring  , with operations:

 
 

The identity element for   is  , and the identity element for   is 0.

These semirings are isomorphic, under negation  , and generally one of these is chosen and referred to simply as the tropical semiring. Conventions differ between authors and subfields: some use the min convention, some use the max convention.

The tropical semiring operations model how valuations behave under addition and multiplication in a valued field.

Some common valued fields encountered in tropical geometry (with min convention) are:

  •   or   with the trivial valuation,   for all  .
  •   or its extensions with the p-adic valuation,   for a and b coprime to p.
  • The field of Laurent series   (integer powers), or the field of (complex) Puiseux series  , with valuation returning the smallest exponent of t appearing in the series.

Tropical polynomials edit

A tropical polynomial is a function   that can be expressed as the tropical sum of a finite number of monomial terms. A monomial term is a tropical product (and/or quotient) of a constant and variables from  . Thus a tropical polynomial F is the minimum of a finite collection of affine-linear functions in which the variables have integer coefficients, so it is concave, continuous, and piecewise linear.[8]

 

Given a polynomial f in the Laurent polynomial ring   where K is a valued field, the tropicalization of f, denoted  , is the tropical polynomial obtained from f by replacing multiplication and addition by their tropical counterparts and each constant in K by its valuation. That is, if

 

then

 

The set of points where a tropical polynomial F is non-differentiable is called its associated tropical hypersurface, denoted   (in analogy to the vanishing set of a polynomial). Equivalently,   is the set of points where the minimum among the terms of F is achieved at least twice. When   for a Laurent polynomial f, this latter characterization of   reflects the fact that at any solution to  , the minimum valuation of the terms of f must be achieved at least twice in order for them all to cancel.[9]

Tropical varieties edit

Definitions edit

For X an algebraic variety in the algebraic torus  , the tropical variety of X or tropicalization of X, denoted  , is a subset of   that can be defined in several ways. The equivalence of these definitions is referred to as the Fundamental Theorem of Tropical Geometry.[9]

Intersection of tropical hypersurfaces edit

Let   be the ideal of Laurent polynomials that vanish on X in  . Define

 

When X is a hypersurface, its vanishing ideal   is a principal ideal generated by a Laurent polynomial f, and the tropical variety   is precisely the tropical hypersurface  .

Every tropical variety is the intersection of a finite number of tropical hypersurfaces. A finite set of polynomials   is called a tropical basis for X if   is the intersection of the tropical hypersurfaces of  . In general, a generating set of   is not sufficient to form a tropical basis. The intersection of a finite number of a tropical hypersurfaces is called a tropical prevariety and in general is not a tropical variety.[9]

Initial ideals edit

Choosing a vector   in   defines a map from the monomial terms of   to   by sending the term m to  . For a Laurent polynomial  , define the initial form of f to be the sum of the terms   of f for which   is minimal. For the ideal  , define its initial ideal with respect to   to be

 

Then define

 

Since we are working in the Laurent ring, this is the same as the set of weight vectors for which   does not contain a monomial.

When K has trivial valuation,   is precisely the initial ideal of   with respect to the monomial order given by a weight vector  . It follows that   is a subfan of the Gröbner fan of  .

Image of the valuation map edit

Suppose that X is a variety over a field K with valuation v whose image is dense in   (for example a field of Puiseux series). By acting coordinate-wise, v defines a map from the algebraic torus   to  . Then define

 

where the overline indicates the closure in the Euclidean topology. If the valuation of K is not dense in  , then the above definition can be adapted by extending scalars to larger field which does have a dense valuation.

This definition shows that   is the non-Archimedean amoeba over an algebraically closed non-Archimedean field K.[10]

If X is a variety over  ,   can be considered as the limiting object of the amoeba   as the base t of the logarithm map goes to infinity.[11]

Polyhedral complex edit

The following characterization describes tropical varieties intrinsically without reference to algebraic varieties and tropicalization. A set V in   is an irreducible tropical variety if it is the support of a weighted polyhedral complex of pure dimension d that satisfies the zero-tension condition and is connected in codimension one. When d is one, the zero-tension condition means that around each vertex, the weighted-sum of the out-going directions of edges equals zero. For higher dimension, sums are taken instead around each cell of dimension   after quotienting out the affine span of the cell.[8] The property that V is connected in codimension one means for any two points lying on dimension d cells, there is a path connecting them that does not pass through any cells of dimension less than  .[12]

Tropical curves edit

The study of tropical curves (tropical varieties of dimension one) is particularly well developed and is strongly related to graph theory. For instance, the theory of divisors of tropical curves are related to chip-firing games on graphs associated to the tropical curves.[13]

Many classical theorems of algebraic geometry have counterparts in tropical geometry, including:

Oleg Viro used tropical curves to classify real curves of degree 7 in the plane up to isotopy. His method of patchworking gives a procedure to build a real curve of a given isotopy class from its tropical curve.

Applications edit

A tropical line appeared in Paul Klemperer's design of auctions used by the Bank of England during the financial crisis in 2007.[17] Yoshinori Shiozawa defined subtropical algebra as max-times or min-times semiring (instead of max-plus and min-plus). He found that Ricardian trade theory (international trade without input trade) can be interpreted as subtropical convex algebra.[18] Tropical geometry has also been used for analyzing the complexity of feedforward neural networks with ReLU activation.[19]

Moreover, several optimization problems arising for instance in job scheduling, location analysis, transportation networks, decision making and discrete event dynamical systems can be formulated and solved in the framework of tropical geometry.[20] A tropical counterpart of the Abel–Jacobi map can be applied to a crystal design.[21] The weights in a weighted finite-state transducer are often required to be a tropical semiring. Tropical geometry can show self-organized criticality.[22]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hartnett, Kevin (5 September 2018). "Tinkertoy Models Produce New Geometric Insights". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  2. ^ See Cuninghame-Green, Raymond A. (1979). Minimax algebra. Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Sciences. Vol. 166. Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-09113-4 and references therein.
  3. ^ Maslov, Victor (1987). "On a new superposition principle for optimization problems". Russian Mathematical Surveys. 42 (3): 43–54. Bibcode:1987RuMaS..42...43M. doi:10.1070/RM1987v042n03ABEH001439. S2CID 250889913.
  4. ^ Kontsevich, Maxim; Soibelman, Yan (7 November 2000). "Homological mirror symmetry and torus fibrations". arXiv:math/0011041.
  5. ^ Mikhalkin, Grigory (2005). "Enumerative tropical algebraic geometry in R2" (PDF). Journal of the American Mathematical Society. 18 (2): 313–377. arXiv:math/0312530. doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-05-00477-7.
  6. ^ Pin, Jean-Eric (1998). "Tropical semirings" (PDF). In Gunawardena, J. (ed.). Idempotency. Publications of the Newton Institute. Vol. 11. Cambridge University Press. pp. 50–69. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511662508.004. ISBN 9780511662508.
  7. ^ Simon, Imre (1988). "Recognizable sets with multiplicities in the tropical semiring". Mathematical Foundations of Computer Science 1988. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 324. pp. 107–120. doi:10.1007/BFb0017135. ISBN 978-3-540-50110-7.
  8. ^ a b Speyer, David; Sturmfels, Bernd (2009), "Tropical mathematics" (PDF), Mathematics Magazine, 82 (3): 163–173, doi:10.1080/0025570X.2009.11953615, S2CID 15278805
  9. ^ a b c Maclagan, Diane; Sturmfels, Bernd (2015). Introduction to Tropical Geometry. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 9780821851982.
  10. ^ Mikhalkin, Grigory (2004). "Amoebas of algebraic varieties and tropical geometry". In Donaldson, Simon; Eliashberg, Yakov; Gromov, Mikhael (eds.). Different faces of geometry. International Mathematical Series. Vol. 3. New York, NY: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. pp. 257–300. ISBN 978-0-306-48657-9. Zbl 1072.14013.
  11. ^ Katz, Eric (2017), "What is Tropical Geometry?" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 64 (4): 380–382, doi:10.1090/noti1507
  12. ^ Cartwright, Dustin; Payne, Sam (2012), "Connectivity of tropicalizations", Mathematical Research Letters, 19 (5): 1089–1095, arXiv:1204.6589, Bibcode:2012arXiv1204.6589C, doi:10.4310/MRL.2012.v19.n5.a10, S2CID 51767353
  13. ^ Hladký, Jan; Králʼ, Daniel; Norine, Serguei (1 September 2013). "Rank of divisors on tropical curves". Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A. 120 (7): 1521–1538. arXiv:0709.4485. doi:10.1016/j.jcta.2013.05.002. ISSN 0097-3165. S2CID 3045053.
  14. ^ Tabera, Luis Felipe (1 January 2005). "Tropical constructive Pappus' theorem". International Mathematics Research Notices. 2005 (39): 2373–2389. arXiv:math/0409126. doi:10.1155/IMRN.2005.2373. ISSN 1073-7928. S2CID 14250249.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  15. ^ Kerber, Michael; Gathmann, Andreas (1 May 2008). "A Riemann–Roch theorem in tropical geometry". Mathematische Zeitschrift. 259 (1): 217–230. arXiv:math/0612129. doi:10.1007/s00209-007-0222-4. ISSN 1432-1823. S2CID 15239772.
  16. ^ Chan, Melody; Sturmfels, Bernd (2013). "Elliptic curves in honeycomb form". In Brugallé, Erwan (ed.). Algebraic and combinatorial aspects of tropical geometry. Proceedings based on the CIEM workshop on tropical geometry, International Centre for Mathematical Meetings (CIEM), Castro Urdiales, Spain, December 12–16, 2011. Contemporary Mathematics. Vol. 589. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. pp. 87–107. arXiv:1203.2356. Bibcode:2012arXiv1203.2356C. ISBN 978-0-8218-9146-9. Zbl 1312.14142.
  17. ^ "How geometry came to the rescue during the banking crisis". Department of Economics, University of Oxford. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  18. ^ Shiozawa, Yoshinori (2015). "International trade theory and exotic algebras". Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review. 12: 177–212. doi:10.1007/s40844-015-0012-3. S2CID 155827635. This is a digest of Y. Shiozawa, "Subtropical Convex Geometry as the Ricardian Theory of International Trade" draft paper.
  19. ^ Zhang, Liwen; Naitzat, Gregory; Lim, Lek-Heng (2018). "Tropical Geometry of Deep Neural Networks". Proceedings of the 35th International Conference on Machine Learning. 35th International Conference on Machine Learning. pp. 5824–5832.
  20. ^ Krivulin, Nikolai (2014). "Tropical optimization problems". In Leon A. Petrosyan; David W. K. Yeung; Joseph V. Romanovsky (eds.). Advances in Economics and Optimization: Collected Scientific Studies Dedicated to the Memory of L. V. Kantorovich. New York: Nova Science Publishers. pp. 195–214. arXiv:1408.0313. ISBN 978-1-63117-073-7.
  21. ^ Sunada, T. (2012). Topological Crystallography: With a View Towards Discrete Geometric Analysis. Surveys and Tutorials in the Applied Mathematical Sciences. Vol. 6. Springer Japan. ISBN 9784431541769.
  22. ^ Kalinin, N.; Guzmán-Sáenz, A.; Prieto, Y.; Shkolnikov, M.; Kalinina, V.; Lupercio, E. (15 August 2018). "Self-organized criticality and pattern emergence through the lens of tropical geometry". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 115 (35): E8135–E8142. arXiv:1806.09153. Bibcode:2018PNAS..115E8135K. doi:10.1073/pnas.1805847115. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 6126730. PMID 30111541.

References edit

  • Maslov, Victor (1986). "New superposition principle for optimization problems", Séminaire sur les Équations aux Dérivées Partielles 1985/6, Centre de Mathématiques de l’École Polytechnique, Palaiseau, exposé 24.
  • Maslov, Victor (1987). "Méthodes Opératorielles". Moscou, Mir, 707 p. (See Chapter 8, Théorie linéaire sur semi moduli, pp. 652–701).
  • Bogart, Tristram; Jensen, Anders; Speyer, David; Sturmfels, Bernd; Thomas, Rekha (2005). "Computing Tropical Varieties". Journal of Symbolic Computation. 42 (1–2): 54–73. arXiv:math/0507563. Bibcode:2005math......7563B. doi:10.1016/j.jsc.2006.02.004. S2CID 24788157.
  • Einsiedler, Manfred; Kapranov, Mikhail; Lind, Douglas (2006). "Non-archimedean amoebas and tropical varieties". J. Reine Angew. Math. 601: 139–157. arXiv:math/0408311. Bibcode:2004math......8311E.
  • Gathmann, Andreas (2006). "Tropical algebraic geometry". arXiv:math/0601322v1.
  • Gross, Mark (2010). Tropical geometry and mirror symmetry. Providence, R.I.: Published for the Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences by the American Mathematical Society with support from the National Science Foundation. ISBN 9780821852323.
  • Itenberg, Illia; Grigory Mikhalkin; Eugenii Shustin (2009). Tropical algebraic geometry (2nd ed.). Basel: Birkhäuser Basel. ISBN 9783034600484. Zbl 1165.14002.
  • Maclagan, Diane; Sturmfels, Bernd (2015). Introduction to tropical geometry. American Mathematical Soc. ISBN 9780821851982.
  • Mikhalkin, Grigory (2006). "Tropical Geometry and its applications". arXiv:math/0601041v2.
  • Mikhalkin, Grigory (2004). "Enumerative tropical algebraic geometry in R2". arXiv:math/0312530v4.
  • Mikhalkin, Grigory (2004). "Amoebas of algebraic varieties and tropical geometry". arXiv:math/0403015v1.
  • Pachter, Lior; Sturmfels, Bernd (2004). "Tropical geometry of statistical models". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 101 (46): 16132–16137. arXiv:q-bio/0311009. Bibcode:2004PNAS..10116132P. doi:10.1073/pnas.0406010101. PMC 528960. PMID 15534224. Zbl 1135.62302.
  • Speyer, David E. (2003). "The Tropical Grassmannian". arXiv:math/0304218v3.
  • Speyer, David; Sturmfels, Bernd (2009) [2004]. "Tropical Mathematics". Mathematics Magazine. 82 (3): 163–173. arXiv:math/0408099. doi:10.4169/193009809x468760. S2CID 119142649. Zbl 1227.14051.
  • Theobald, Thorsten (2003). "First steps in tropical geometry". arXiv:math/0306366v2.

Further reading edit

  • Amini, Omid; Baker, Matthew; Faber, Xander, eds. (2013). Tropical and non-Archimedean geometry. Bellairs workshop in number theory, tropical and non-Archimedean geometry, Bellairs Research Institute, Holetown, Barbados, USA, May 6–13, 2011. Contemporary Mathematics. Vol. 605. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-1-4704-1021-6. Zbl 1281.14002.

External links edit

  • Tropical Geometry, I

tropical, geometry, mathematics, tropical, geometry, study, polynomials, their, geometric, properties, when, addition, replaced, with, minimization, multiplication, replaced, with, ordinary, addition, tropical, cubic, curve, displaystyle, oplus, displaystyle, . In mathematics tropical geometry is the study of polynomials and their geometric properties when addition is replaced with minimization and multiplication is replaced with ordinary addition A tropical cubic curve x y min x y displaystyle x oplus y min x y x y x y displaystyle x otimes y x y So for example the classical polynomial x3 2xy y4 displaystyle x 3 2xy y 4 would become min x x x 2 x y y y y y displaystyle min x x x 2 x y y y y y Such polynomials and their solutions have important applications in optimization problems for example the problem of optimizing departure times for a network of trains Tropical geometry is a variant of algebraic geometry in which polynomial graphs resemble piecewise linear meshes and in which numbers belong to the tropical semiring instead of a field Because classical and tropical geometry are closely related results and methods can be converted between them Algebraic varieties can be mapped to a tropical counterpart and since this process still retains some geometric information about the original variety it can be used to help prove and generalize classical results from algebraic geometry such as the Brill Noether theorem using the tools of tropical geometry 1 Contents 1 History 2 Algebra background 3 Tropical polynomials 4 Tropical varieties 4 1 Definitions 4 1 1 Intersection of tropical hypersurfaces 4 1 2 Initial ideals 4 1 3 Image of the valuation map 4 1 4 Polyhedral complex 4 2 Tropical curves 5 Applications 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editThe basic ideas of tropical analysis were developed independently using the same notation by mathematicians working in various fields 2 The central ideas of tropical geometry appeared in different forms in a number of earlier works For example Victor Pavlovich Maslov introduced a tropical version of the process of integration He also noticed that the Legendre transformation and solutions of the Hamilton Jacobi equation are linear operations in the tropical sense 3 However only since the late 1990s has an effort been made to consolidate the basic definitions of the theory This was motivated by its application to enumerative algebraic geometry with ideas from Maxim Kontsevich 4 and works by Grigory Mikhalkin 5 among others The adjective tropical was coined by French mathematicians in honor of the Hungarian born Brazilian computer scientist Imre Simon who wrote on the field Jean Eric Pin attributes the coinage to Dominique Perrin 6 whereas Simon himself attributes the word to Christian Choffrut 7 Algebra background editFurther information Tropical semiring Tropical geometry is based on the tropical semiring This is defined in two ways depending on max or min convention The min tropical semiring is the semiring R displaystyle mathbb R cup infty oplus otimes nbsp with the operations x y min x y displaystyle x oplus y min x y nbsp x y x y displaystyle x otimes y x y nbsp The operations displaystyle oplus nbsp and displaystyle otimes nbsp are referred to as tropical addition and tropical multiplication respectively The identity element for displaystyle oplus nbsp is displaystyle infty nbsp and the identity element for displaystyle otimes nbsp is 0 Similarly the max tropical semiring is the semiring R displaystyle mathbb R cup infty oplus otimes nbsp with operations x y max x y displaystyle x oplus y max x y nbsp x y x y displaystyle x otimes y x y nbsp The identity element for displaystyle oplus nbsp is displaystyle infty nbsp and the identity element for displaystyle otimes nbsp is 0 These semirings are isomorphic under negation x x displaystyle x mapsto x nbsp and generally one of these is chosen and referred to simply as the tropical semiring Conventions differ between authors and subfields some use the min convention some use the max convention The tropical semiring operations model how valuations behave under addition and multiplication in a valued field Some common valued fields encountered in tropical geometry with min convention are Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp or C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp with the trivial valuation v a 0 displaystyle v a 0 nbsp for all a 0 displaystyle a neq 0 nbsp Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp or its extensions with the p adic valuation vp pna b n displaystyle v p p n a b n nbsp for a and b coprime to p The field of Laurent series C t displaystyle mathbb C t nbsp integer powers or the field of complex Puiseux series C t displaystyle mathbb C t nbsp with valuation returning the smallest exponent of t appearing in the series Tropical polynomials editA tropical polynomial is a function F Rn R displaystyle F colon mathbb R n to mathbb R nbsp that can be expressed as the tropical sum of a finite number of monomial terms A monomial term is a tropical product and or quotient of a constant and variables from X1 Xn displaystyle X 1 ldots X n nbsp Thus a tropical polynomial F is the minimum of a finite collection of affine linear functions in which the variables have integer coefficients so it is concave continuous and piecewise linear 8 F X1 Xn C1 X1 a11 Xn an1 Cs X1 a1s Xn ans min C1 a11X1 an1Xn Cs a1sX1 ansXn displaystyle begin aligned F X 1 ldots X n amp left C 1 otimes X 1 otimes a 11 otimes cdots otimes X n otimes a n1 right oplus cdots oplus left C s otimes X 1 otimes a 1s otimes cdots otimes X n otimes a ns right amp min C 1 a 11 X 1 cdots a n1 X n ldots C s a 1s X 1 cdots a ns X n end aligned nbsp Given a polynomial f in the Laurent polynomial ring K x1 1 xn 1 displaystyle K x 1 pm 1 ldots x n pm 1 nbsp where K is a valued field the tropicalization of f denoted Trop f displaystyle operatorname Trop f nbsp is the tropical polynomial obtained from f by replacing multiplication and addition by their tropical counterparts and each constant in K by its valuation That is if f i 1scixAi with A1 As Zn displaystyle f sum i 1 s c i x A i quad text with A 1 ldots A s in mathbb Z n nbsp then Trop f i 1sv ci X Ai displaystyle operatorname Trop f bigoplus i 1 s v c i otimes X otimes A i nbsp The set of points where a tropical polynomial F is non differentiable is called its associated tropical hypersurface denoted V F displaystyle mathrm V F nbsp in analogy to the vanishing set of a polynomial Equivalently V F displaystyle mathrm V F nbsp is the set of points where the minimum among the terms of F is achieved at least twice When F Trop f displaystyle F operatorname Trop f nbsp for a Laurent polynomial f this latter characterization of V F displaystyle mathrm V F nbsp reflects the fact that at any solution to f 0 displaystyle f 0 nbsp the minimum valuation of the terms of f must be achieved at least twice in order for them all to cancel 9 Tropical varieties editDefinitions edit For X an algebraic variety in the algebraic torus K n displaystyle K times n nbsp the tropical variety of X or tropicalization of X denoted Trop X displaystyle operatorname Trop X nbsp is a subset of Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp that can be defined in several ways The equivalence of these definitions is referred to as the Fundamental Theorem of Tropical Geometry 9 Intersection of tropical hypersurfaces edit Let I X displaystyle mathrm I X nbsp be the ideal of Laurent polynomials that vanish on X in K x1 1 xn 1 displaystyle K x 1 pm 1 ldots x n pm 1 nbsp Define Trop X f I X V Trop f Rn displaystyle operatorname Trop X bigcap f in mathrm I X mathrm V operatorname Trop f subseteq mathbb R n nbsp When X is a hypersurface its vanishing ideal I X displaystyle mathrm I X nbsp is a principal ideal generated by a Laurent polynomial f and the tropical variety Trop X displaystyle operatorname Trop X nbsp is precisely the tropical hypersurface V Trop f displaystyle mathrm V operatorname Trop f nbsp Every tropical variety is the intersection of a finite number of tropical hypersurfaces A finite set of polynomials f1 fr I X displaystyle f 1 ldots f r subseteq mathrm I X nbsp is called a tropical basis for X if Trop X displaystyle operatorname Trop X nbsp is the intersection of the tropical hypersurfaces of Trop f1 Trop fr displaystyle operatorname Trop f 1 ldots operatorname Trop f r nbsp In general a generating set of I X displaystyle mathrm I X nbsp is not sufficient to form a tropical basis The intersection of a finite number of a tropical hypersurfaces is called a tropical prevariety and in general is not a tropical variety 9 Initial ideals edit Choosing a vector w displaystyle mathbf w nbsp in Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp defines a map from the monomial terms of K x1 1 xn 1 displaystyle K x 1 pm 1 ldots x n pm 1 nbsp to R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp by sending the term m to Trop m w displaystyle operatorname Trop m mathbf w nbsp For a Laurent polynomial f m1 ms displaystyle f m 1 cdots m s nbsp define the initial form of f to be the sum of the terms mi displaystyle m i nbsp of f for which Trop mi w displaystyle operatorname Trop m i mathbf w nbsp is minimal For the ideal I X displaystyle mathrm I X nbsp define its initial ideal with respect to w displaystyle mathbf w nbsp to be inw I X inw f f I X displaystyle operatorname in mathbf w mathrm I X operatorname in mathbf w f f in mathrm I X nbsp Then define Trop X w Rn inw I X 1 displaystyle operatorname Trop X mathbf w in mathbb R n operatorname in mathbf w mathrm I X neq 1 nbsp Since we are working in the Laurent ring this is the same as the set of weight vectors for which inw I X displaystyle operatorname in mathbf w mathrm I X nbsp does not contain a monomial When K has trivial valuation inw I X displaystyle operatorname in mathbf w mathrm I X nbsp is precisely the initial ideal of I X displaystyle mathrm I X nbsp with respect to the monomial order given by a weight vector w displaystyle mathbf w nbsp It follows that Trop X displaystyle operatorname Trop X nbsp is a subfan of the Grobner fan of I X displaystyle mathrm I X nbsp Image of the valuation map edit Suppose that X is a variety over a field K with valuation v whose image is dense in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp for example a field of Puiseux series By acting coordinate wise v defines a map from the algebraic torus K n displaystyle K times n nbsp to Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp Then define Trop X v x1 v xn x1 xn X displaystyle operatorname Trop X overline v x 1 ldots v x n x 1 ldots x n in X nbsp where the overline indicates the closure in the Euclidean topology If the valuation of K is not dense in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp then the above definition can be adapted by extending scalars to larger field which does have a dense valuation This definition shows that Trop X displaystyle operatorname Trop X nbsp is the non Archimedean amoeba over an algebraically closed non Archimedean field K 10 If X is a variety over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp Trop X displaystyle operatorname Trop X nbsp can be considered as the limiting object of the amoeba Logt X displaystyle operatorname Log t X nbsp as the base t of the logarithm map goes to infinity 11 Polyhedral complex edit The following characterization describes tropical varieties intrinsically without reference to algebraic varieties and tropicalization A set V in Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp is an irreducible tropical variety if it is the support of a weighted polyhedral complex of pure dimension d that satisfies the zero tension condition and is connected in codimension one When d is one the zero tension condition means that around each vertex the weighted sum of the out going directions of edges equals zero For higher dimension sums are taken instead around each cell of dimension d 1 displaystyle d 1 nbsp after quotienting out the affine span of the cell 8 The property that V is connected in codimension one means for any two points lying on dimension d cells there is a path connecting them that does not pass through any cells of dimension less than d 1 displaystyle d 1 nbsp 12 Tropical curves edit The study of tropical curves tropical varieties of dimension one is particularly well developed and is strongly related to graph theory For instance the theory of divisors of tropical curves are related to chip firing games on graphs associated to the tropical curves 13 Many classical theorems of algebraic geometry have counterparts in tropical geometry including Pappus s hexagon theorem 14 Bezout s theorem The degree genus formula The Riemann Roch theorem 15 The group law of the cubics 16 Oleg Viro used tropical curves to classify real curves of degree 7 in the plane up to isotopy His method of patchworking gives a procedure to build a real curve of a given isotopy class from its tropical curve Applications editA tropical line appeared in Paul Klemperer s design of auctions used by the Bank of England during the financial crisis in 2007 17 Yoshinori Shiozawa defined subtropical algebra as max times or min times semiring instead of max plus and min plus He found that Ricardian trade theory international trade without input trade can be interpreted as subtropical convex algebra 18 Tropical geometry has also been used for analyzing the complexity of feedforward neural networks with ReLU activation 19 Moreover several optimization problems arising for instance in job scheduling location analysis transportation networks decision making and discrete event dynamical systems can be formulated and solved in the framework of tropical geometry 20 A tropical counterpart of the Abel Jacobi map can be applied to a crystal design 21 The weights in a weighted finite state transducer are often required to be a tropical semiring Tropical geometry can show self organized criticality 22 See also editTropical analysis Tropical compactificationNotes edit Hartnett Kevin 5 September 2018 Tinkertoy Models Produce New Geometric Insights Quanta Magazine Retrieved 12 December 2018 See Cuninghame Green Raymond A 1979 Minimax algebra Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Sciences Vol 166 Springer ISBN 978 3 540 09113 4 and references therein Maslov Victor 1987 On a new superposition principle for optimization problems Russian Mathematical Surveys 42 3 43 54 Bibcode 1987RuMaS 42 43M doi 10 1070 RM1987v042n03ABEH001439 S2CID 250889913 Kontsevich Maxim Soibelman Yan 7 November 2000 Homological mirror symmetry and torus fibrations arXiv math 0011041 Mikhalkin Grigory 2005 Enumerative tropical algebraic geometry in R2 PDF Journal of the American Mathematical Society 18 2 313 377 arXiv math 0312530 doi 10 1090 S0894 0347 05 00477 7 Pin Jean Eric 1998 Tropical semirings PDF In Gunawardena J ed Idempotency Publications of the Newton Institute Vol 11 Cambridge University Press pp 50 69 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511662508 004 ISBN 9780511662508 Simon Imre 1988 Recognizable sets with multiplicities in the tropical semiring Mathematical Foundations of Computer Science 1988 Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 324 pp 107 120 doi 10 1007 BFb0017135 ISBN 978 3 540 50110 7 a b Speyer David Sturmfels Bernd 2009 Tropical mathematics PDF Mathematics Magazine 82 3 163 173 doi 10 1080 0025570X 2009 11953615 S2CID 15278805 a b c Maclagan Diane Sturmfels Bernd 2015 Introduction to Tropical Geometry American Mathematical Society ISBN 9780821851982 Mikhalkin Grigory 2004 Amoebas of algebraic varieties and tropical geometry In Donaldson Simon Eliashberg Yakov Gromov Mikhael eds Different faces of geometry International Mathematical Series Vol 3 New York NY Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers pp 257 300 ISBN 978 0 306 48657 9 Zbl 1072 14013 Katz Eric 2017 What is Tropical Geometry PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 64 4 380 382 doi 10 1090 noti1507 Cartwright Dustin Payne Sam 2012 Connectivity of tropicalizations Mathematical Research Letters 19 5 1089 1095 arXiv 1204 6589 Bibcode 2012arXiv1204 6589C doi 10 4310 MRL 2012 v19 n5 a10 S2CID 51767353 Hladky Jan Kralʼ Daniel Norine Serguei 1 September 2013 Rank of divisors on tropical curves Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series A 120 7 1521 1538 arXiv 0709 4485 doi 10 1016 j jcta 2013 05 002 ISSN 0097 3165 S2CID 3045053 Tabera Luis Felipe 1 January 2005 Tropical constructive Pappus theorem International Mathematics Research Notices 2005 39 2373 2389 arXiv math 0409126 doi 10 1155 IMRN 2005 2373 ISSN 1073 7928 S2CID 14250249 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unflagged free DOI link Kerber Michael Gathmann Andreas 1 May 2008 A Riemann Roch theorem in tropical geometry Mathematische Zeitschrift 259 1 217 230 arXiv math 0612129 doi 10 1007 s00209 007 0222 4 ISSN 1432 1823 S2CID 15239772 Chan Melody Sturmfels Bernd 2013 Elliptic curves in honeycomb form In Brugalle Erwan ed Algebraic and combinatorial aspects of tropical geometry Proceedings based on the CIEM workshop on tropical geometry International Centre for Mathematical Meetings CIEM Castro Urdiales Spain December 12 16 2011 Contemporary Mathematics Vol 589 Providence RI American Mathematical Society pp 87 107 arXiv 1203 2356 Bibcode 2012arXiv1203 2356C ISBN 978 0 8218 9146 9 Zbl 1312 14142 How geometry came to the rescue during the banking crisis Department of Economics University of Oxford Retrieved 24 March 2014 Shiozawa Yoshinori 2015 International trade theory and exotic algebras Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review 12 177 212 doi 10 1007 s40844 015 0012 3 S2CID 155827635 This is a digest of Y Shiozawa Subtropical Convex Geometry as the Ricardian Theory of International Trade draft paper Zhang Liwen Naitzat Gregory Lim Lek Heng 2018 Tropical Geometry of Deep Neural Networks Proceedings of the 35th International Conference on Machine Learning 35th International Conference on Machine Learning pp 5824 5832 Krivulin Nikolai 2014 Tropical optimization problems In Leon A Petrosyan David W K Yeung Joseph V Romanovsky eds Advances in Economics and Optimization Collected Scientific Studies Dedicated to the Memory of L V Kantorovich New York Nova Science Publishers pp 195 214 arXiv 1408 0313 ISBN 978 1 63117 073 7 Sunada T 2012 Topological Crystallography With a View Towards Discrete Geometric Analysis Surveys and Tutorials in the Applied Mathematical Sciences Vol 6 Springer Japan ISBN 9784431541769 Kalinin N Guzman Saenz A Prieto Y Shkolnikov M Kalinina V Lupercio E 15 August 2018 Self organized criticality and pattern emergence through the lens of tropical geometry Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 115 35 E8135 E8142 arXiv 1806 09153 Bibcode 2018PNAS 115E8135K doi 10 1073 pnas 1805847115 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 6126730 PMID 30111541 References editMaslov Victor 1986 New superposition principle for optimization problems Seminaire sur les Equations aux Derivees Partielles 1985 6 Centre de Mathematiques de l Ecole Polytechnique Palaiseau expose 24 Maslov Victor 1987 Methodes Operatorielles Moscou Mir 707 p See Chapter 8 Theorie lineaire sur semi moduli pp 652 701 Bogart Tristram Jensen Anders Speyer David Sturmfels Bernd Thomas Rekha 2005 Computing Tropical Varieties Journal of Symbolic Computation 42 1 2 54 73 arXiv math 0507563 Bibcode 2005math 7563B doi 10 1016 j jsc 2006 02 004 S2CID 24788157 Einsiedler Manfred Kapranov Mikhail Lind Douglas 2006 Non archimedean amoebas and tropical varieties J Reine Angew Math 601 139 157 arXiv math 0408311 Bibcode 2004math 8311E Gathmann Andreas 2006 Tropical algebraic geometry arXiv math 0601322v1 Gross Mark 2010 Tropical geometry and mirror symmetry Providence R I Published for the Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences by the American Mathematical Society with support from the National Science Foundation ISBN 9780821852323 Itenberg Illia Grigory Mikhalkin Eugenii Shustin 2009 Tropical algebraic geometry 2nd ed Basel Birkhauser Basel ISBN 9783034600484 Zbl 1165 14002 Maclagan Diane Sturmfels Bernd 2015 Introduction to tropical geometry American Mathematical Soc ISBN 9780821851982 Mikhalkin Grigory 2006 Tropical Geometry and its applications arXiv math 0601041v2 Mikhalkin Grigory 2004 Enumerative tropical algebraic geometry in R2 arXiv math 0312530v4 Mikhalkin Grigory 2004 Amoebas of algebraic varieties and tropical geometry arXiv math 0403015v1 Pachter Lior Sturmfels Bernd 2004 Tropical geometry of statistical models Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 101 46 16132 16137 arXiv q bio 0311009 Bibcode 2004PNAS 10116132P doi 10 1073 pnas 0406010101 PMC 528960 PMID 15534224 Zbl 1135 62302 Speyer David E 2003 The Tropical Grassmannian arXiv math 0304218v3 Speyer David Sturmfels Bernd 2009 2004 Tropical Mathematics Mathematics Magazine 82 3 163 173 arXiv math 0408099 doi 10 4169 193009809x468760 S2CID 119142649 Zbl 1227 14051 Theobald Thorsten 2003 First steps in tropical geometry arXiv math 0306366v2 Further reading editAmini Omid Baker Matthew Faber Xander eds 2013 Tropical and non Archimedean geometry Bellairs workshop in number theory tropical and non Archimedean geometry Bellairs Research Institute Holetown Barbados USA May 6 13 2011 Contemporary Mathematics Vol 605 Providence RI American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 1 4704 1021 6 Zbl 1281 14002 Tropical geometry and mirror symmetryExternal links editTropical Geometry I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tropical geometry amp oldid 1213918264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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