Stanley's reciprocity theorem

In combinatorial mathematics, Stanley's reciprocity theorem, named after MIT mathematician Richard P. Stanley, states that a certain functional equation is satisfied by the generating function of any rational cone (defined below) and the generating function of the cone's interior.

Definitions

A rational cone is the set of all d-tuples

(a1, ..., ad)

of nonnegative integers satisfying a system of inequalities

where M is a matrix of integers. A d-tuple satisfying the corresponding strict inequalities, i.e., with ">" rather than "≥", is in the interior of the cone.

The generating function of such a cone is

The generating function Fint(x1, ..., xd) of the interior of the cone is defined in the same way, but one sums over d-tuples in the interior rather than in the whole cone.

It can be shown that these are rational functions.

Formulation

Stanley's reciprocity theorem states that for a rational cone as above, we have

Matthias Beck and Mike Develin have shown how to prove this by using the calculus of residues. Develin has said that this amounts to proving the result "without doing any work".

Stanley's reciprocity theorem generalizes Ehrhart-Macdonald reciprocity for Ehrhart polynomials of rational convex polytopes.

gollark: Apparently people think it is and hire CEOs accordingly, although it's possible there isn't really much innovation in company structure which would encourage them not to do that.
gollark: Unless they're the CEO.
gollark: In any case, if whoever was making the decisions at these companies considered it a problem, they could presumably just pay the CEOs less.
gollark: Also (ideally) long-term strategic planning things, which are not yet automated.
gollark: I'm not exactly sure what they do, but plausibly a lot of it is "networking" and such, which is hard to automate.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.