In complex analysis, a discipline in mathematics, and in statistical physics, the Asano contraction or Asano–Ruelle contraction is a transformation on a separately affine multivariate polynomial. It was first presented in 1970 by Taro Asano to prove the Lee–Yang theorem in the Heisenberg spin model case. This also yielded a simple proof of the Lee–Yang theorem in the Ising model. David Ruelle proved a general theorem relating the location of the roots of a contracted polynomial to that of the original. Asano contractions have also been used to study polynomials in graph theory.
Let
\Phi(z1,z2,\ldots,zn)
a+bz1+cz2+dz1z2
\Phi(zi,zj)=a+bzi+czj+dzizj
(zi,zj)\mapstoz
\Phi
\tilde{\Phi}=a+dz
Asano contractions are often used in the context of theorems about the location of roots. Asano originally used them because they preserve the property of having no roots when all the variables have magnitude greater than 1.[2] Ruelle provided a more general relationship which allowed the contractions to be used in more applications.[3] He showed that if there are closed sets
M1,M2,\ldots,Mn
\Phi
zi\inMi
i
\tilde{\Phi}=((zj,zk)\mapstoz)(\Phi)
zi\inMi
i ≠ k,j
z\in-MjMk
-MjMk=\{-ab;a\inMj,b\inMk\}
Asano contractions can be used in statistical physics to gain information about a system from its subsystems. For example, suppose we have a system with a finite set
Λ
zx
P(zΛ)=\sumX\subseteqcXzX
X=\prod | |
z | |
x\inX |
zx
-\betaU(X) | |
c | |
X=e |
U(X)
X
Λ=Λ1\capΛ2
P(zΛ)
P(z | |
Λ1 |
)P(z | |
Λ2 |
)
P(z | |
Λ1 |
)
P(z | |
Λ2 |
)
Ruelle has also used Asano contractions to find information about the location of roots of a generalization of matching polynomials which he calls graph-counting polynomials. He assigns a variable to each edge. For each vertex, he computes a symmetric polynomial in the variables corresponding to the edges incident on that vertex. The symmetric polynomial contains the terms of degree equal to the allowed degree for that node. He then multiplies these symmetric polynomials together and uses Asano contractions to only keep terms where the edge is present at both its endpoints. By using the Grace–Walsh–Szegő theorem and intersecting all the sets that can be obtained, Ruelle gives sets containing the roots of several types of these symmetric polynomials. Since the graph-counting polynomial was obtained from these by Asano contractions, most of the remaining work is computing products of these sets.[5]