Schwarz's List
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In the mathematical theory of special functions, Schwarz's list or the Schwartz table is the list of 15 cases found by when hypergeometric functions can be expressed algebraically. More precisely, it is a listing of parameters determining the cases in which the hypergeometric equation has a finite monodromy group, or equivalently has two independent solutions that are algebraic functions. It lists 15 cases, divided up by the isomorphism class of the monodromy group (excluding the case of a cyclic group), and was first derived by Schwarz by methods of complex analytic geometry. Correspondingly the statement is not directly in terms of the parameters specifying the hypergeometric equation, but in terms of quantities used to describe certain
spherical triangle Spherical trigonometry is the branch of spherical geometry that deals with the metrical relationships between the sides and angles of spherical triangles, traditionally expressed using trigonometric functions. On the sphere, geodesics are grea ...
s. The wider importance of the table, for general second-order differential equations in the complex plane, was shown by Felix Klein, who proved a result to the effect that cases of finite monodromy for such equations and regular singularities could be attributed to changes of variable (complex analytic mappings of the
Riemann sphere In mathematics, the Riemann sphere, named after Bernhard Riemann, is a model of the extended complex plane: the complex plane plus one point at infinity. This extended plane represents the extended complex numbers, that is, the complex numbers pl ...
to itself) that reduce the equation to hypergeometric form. In fact more is true: Schwarz's list underlies all second-order equations with regular singularities on compact
Riemann surface In mathematics, particularly in complex analysis, a Riemann surface is a connected one-dimensional complex manifold. These surfaces were first studied by and are named after Bernhard Riemann. Riemann surfaces can be thought of as deformed vers ...
s having finite monodromy, by a pullback from the hypergeometric equation on the Riemann sphere by a complex analytic mapping, of degree computable from the equation's data. The numbers \lambda, \mu, \nu are (up to permutations, sign changes and addition of (\ell,m,n) \in \mathbb^3 with \ell+m+n even) the differences 1-c, c-a-b,b-a of the exponents of the hypergeometric differential equation at the three singular points 0,1,\infty. They are rational numbers if and only if a,b and c are, a point that matters in arithmetic rather than geometric approaches to the theory.


Further work

An extension of Schwarz's results was given by T. Kimura, who dealt with cases where the identity component of the
differential Galois group In mathematics, differential Galois theory studies the Galois groups of differential equations. Overview Whereas algebraic Galois theory studies extensions of algebraic fields, differential Galois theory studies extensions of differential field ...
of the hypergeometric equation is a solvable group. A general result connecting the differential Galois group ''G'' and the monodromy group Γ states that ''G'' is the
Zariski closure In algebraic geometry and commutative algebra, the Zariski topology is a topology which is primarily defined by its closed sets. It is very different from topologies which are commonly used in the real or complex analysis; in particular, it is no ...
of Γ — this theorem is attributed in the book of Matsuda to
Michio Kuga was a mathematician who received his Ph.D. from University of Tokyo in 1960. His work helped lead to a proof of the Ramanujan conjecture which partly follows from the proof of the Weil conjectures by . In 1963–1964, he introduced Kuga fib ...
. By general differential Galois theory, the resulting Kimura-Schwarz table classifies cases of integrability of the equation by algebraic functions and quadratures. Another relevant list is that of K. Takeuchi, who classified the (hyperbolic) triangle groups that are
arithmetic group In mathematics, an arithmetic group is a group obtained as the integer points of an algebraic group, for example \mathrm_2(\Z). They arise naturally in the study of arithmetic properties of quadratic forms and other classical topics in number theor ...
s (85 examples).
Émile Picard Charles Émile Picard (; 24 July 1856 – 11 December 1941) was a French mathematician. He was elected the fifteenth member to occupy seat 1 of the Académie française in 1924. Life He was born in Paris on 24 July 1856 and educated there at th ...
sought to extend the work of Schwarz in complex geometry, by means of a generalized hypergeometric function, to construct cases of equations where the monodromy was a discrete group in the projective unitary group ''PU''(1, ''n''). Pierre Deligne and
George Mostow George Daniel Mostow (July 4, 1923 – April 4, 2017) was an American mathematician, renowned for his contributions to Lie theory. He was the Henry Ford II (emeritus) Professor of Mathematics at Yale University, a member of the National Academy o ...
used his ideas to construct lattices in the projective unitary group. This work recovers in the classical case the finiteness of Takeuchi's list, and by means of a characterisation of the lattices they construct that are arithmetic groups, provided new examples of non-arithmetic lattices in ''PU''(1, ''n''). Baldassari applied the Klein universality, to discuss algebraic solutions of the
Lamé equation Lamé may refer to: *Lamé (fabric), a clothing fabric with metallic strands *Lamé (fencing), a jacket used for detecting hits * Lamé (crater) on the Moon * Ngeté-Herdé language, also known as Lamé, spoken in Chad *Peve language, also known ...
by means of the Schwarz list. Other hypergeometric functions which can be expressed algebraically, like those on Schwarz's list, arise in theoretical physics in the context of T \overline deformations of two-dimensional gauge theories.


See also

*
Schwarz triangle In geometry, a Schwarz triangle, named after Hermann Schwarz, is a spherical triangle that can be used to tile a sphere (spherical tiling), possibly overlapping, through reflections in its edges. They were classified in . These can be defined mor ...


Notes


References

* *{{cite journal , last1=Schwarz , first1=H. A. , title=Ueber diejenigen Fälle in welchen die Gaussische hypergeometrische Reihe eine algebraische Function ihres vierten Elementes darstellt , url=http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?GDZPPN002155206 , year=1873 , volume=75 , journal= Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik , issn=0075-4102 , pages=292–335


External links


''Towards a nonlinear Schwarz's list'' (PDF)
Hypergeometric functions