
In
mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, tropical geometry is the study of
polynomial
In mathematics, a polynomial is a Expression (mathematics), mathematical expression consisting of indeterminate (variable), indeterminates (also called variable (mathematics), variables) and coefficients, that involves only the operations of addit ...
s and their
geometric properties when addition is replaced with
minimization and multiplication is replaced with ordinary addition:
:
,
:
.
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
Algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics which uses abstract algebraic techniques, mainly from commutative algebra, to solve geometry, geometrical problems. Classically, it studies zero of a function, zeros of multivariate polynomials; th ...
in which polynomial graphs resemble
piecewise linear meshes, and in which numbers belong to the
tropical semiring
In idempotent analysis, the tropical semiring is a semiring of extended real numbers with the operations of minimum (or maximum) and addition replacing the usual ("classical") operations of addition and multiplication, respectively.
The tropical s ...
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 or computing
Gromov–Witten invariants, using the tools of tropical geometry.
History
The basic ideas of tropical analysis were developed independently using the same notation by mathematicians working in various fields. 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
In mathematics, the Legendre transformation (or Legendre transform), first introduced by Adrien-Marie Legendre in 1787 when studying the minimal surface problem, is an involutive transformation on real-valued functions that are convex on a rea ...
and solutions of the
Hamilton–Jacobi equation
In physics, the Hamilton–Jacobi equation, named after William Rowan Hamilton and Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi, is an alternative formulation of classical mechanics, equivalent to other formulations such as Newton's laws of motion, Lagrangian mecha ...
are linear operations in the tropical sense. 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
Maxim Lvovich Kontsevich (, ; born 25 August 1964) is a Russian and French mathematician and mathematical physicist. He is a professor at the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques and a distinguished professor at the University of Miami. He ...
and works by Grigory Mikhalkin among others.
The adjective ''
tropical
The tropics are the regions of Earth surrounding the equator, where the sun may shine directly overhead. This contrasts with the temperate or polar regions of Earth, where the Sun can never be directly overhead. This is because of Earth's ax ...
'' was coined by French mathematicians in honor of the
Hungarian-born
Brazil
Brazil, officially the Federative Republic of Brazil, is the largest country in South America. It is the world's List of countries and dependencies by area, fifth-largest country by area and the List of countries and dependencies by population ...
ian computer scientist
Imre Simon, who wrote on the field.
Jean-Éric Pin
Jean-Éric Pin is a French mathematician and theoretical computer scientist known for his contributions to the algebraic automata theory and semigroup theory. He is a CNRS research director.
Biography
Pin earned his undergraduate degree from ENS ...
attributes the coinage to
Dominique Perrin
Dominique Pierre Perrin (b. 1946) is a French mathematician and theoretical computer scientist known for his contributions to coding theory and to combinatorics on words. He is a professor of the University of Marne-la-Vallée and currently serv ...
,
whereas Simon himself attributes the word to Christian Choffrut.
Algebra background
Tropical geometry is based on the
tropical semiring
In idempotent analysis, the tropical semiring is a semiring of extended real numbers with the operations of minimum (or maximum) and addition replacing the usual ("classical") operations of addition and multiplication, respectively.
The tropical s ...
. This is defined in two ways, depending on max or min convention.
The ''min tropical semiring''
is the
semiring
In abstract algebra, a semiring is an algebraic structure. Semirings are a generalization of rings, dropping the requirement that each element must have an additive inverse. At the same time, semirings are a generalization of bounded distribu ...
, with the operations:
:
,
:
.
The operations
and
are referred to as ''tropical addition'' and ''tropical multiplication'' respectively. The
identity element
In mathematics, an identity element or neutral element of a binary operation is an element that leaves unchanged every element when the operation is applied. For example, 0 is an identity element of the addition of real numbers. This concept is use ...
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
In number theory, the valuation or -adic order of an integer is the exponent of the highest power of the prime number that divides .
It is denoted \nu_p(n).
Equivalently, \nu_p(n) is the exponent to which p appears in the prime factorization of ...
,
for ''a'' and ''b'' coprime to ''p''.
* The field of
Laurent series
In mathematics, the Laurent series of a complex function f(z) is a representation of that function as a power series which includes terms of negative degree. It may be used to express complex functions in cases where a Taylor series expansio ...
(integer powers), or the field of (complex)
Puiseux series
In mathematics, Puiseux series are a generalization of power series that allow for negative and fractional exponents of the indeterminate. For example, the series
: \begin
x^ &+ 2x^ + x^ + 2x^ + x^ + x^5 + \cdots\\
&=x^+ 2x^ + x^ + 2x^ + x^ + ...
, with valuation returning the smallest exponent of ''t'' appearing in the series.
Tropical polynomials
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
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.
:
Given a polynomial
in the
Laurent polynomial ring