New articles on Mathematical Physics


[1] 2504.16169

Symplectic approach to global stability

We present a new approach to the problem of proving global stability, based on symplectic geometry and with a focus on systems with several conserved quantities. We also provide a proof of instability for integrable systems whose momentum map is everywhere regular. Our results take root in the recently proposed notion of a confining function and are motivated by ghost-ridden systems, for whom we put forward the first geometric definition.


[2] 2504.16375

On Gromov--Witten invariants of $\mathbb{P}^1$-orbifolds and topological difference equations

Let $(m_1, m_2)$ be a pair of positive integers. Denote by $\mathbb{P}^1$ the complex projective line, and by $\mathbb{P}^1_{m_1,m_2}$ the orbifold complex projective line obtained from $\mathbb{P}^1$ by adding $\mathbb{Z}_{m_1}$ and $\mathbb{Z}_{m_2}$ orbifold points. In this paper we introduce a matrix linear difference equation, prove existence and uniqueness of its formal Puiseux-series solutions, and use them to give conjectural formulas for $k$-point ($k\ge2$) functions of Gromov--Witten invariants of $\mathbb{P}^1_{m_1,m_2}$. Explicit expressions of the unique solutions are also obtained. We carry out concrete computations of the first few invariants by using the conjectural formulas. For the case when one of $m_1,m_2$ equals 1, we prove validity of the conjectural formulas with $k\ge3$.


[3] 2504.16403

On the four-body limaçon choreography: maximal superintegrability and choreographic fragmentation

In this paper, as a continuation of [Fernandez-Guasti, \textit{Celest Mech Dyn Astron} 137, 4 (2025)], we demonstrate the maximal superintegrability of the reduced Hamiltonian, which governs the four-body choreographic planar motion along the lima\c{c}on trisectrix (resembling a folded figure eight), in the six-dimensional space of relative motion. The corresponding eleven integrals of motion in the Liouville-Arnold sense are presented explicitly. Specifically, it is shown that the reduced Hamiltonian admits complete separation of variables in Jacobi-like variables. The emergence of this choreography is not a direct consequence of maximal superintegrability. Rather, it originates from the existence of \textit{particular integrals} and the phenomenon of \textit{particular involution}. The fragmentation of a more general four-body choreographic motion into two isomorphic two-body choreographies is discussed in detail. This model combines choreographic motion with maximal superintegrability, a seldom-studied interplay in classical mechanics.


[4] 2504.16424

Complex tridiagonal quantum Hamiltonians and matrix continued fractions

Quantum resonances described by non-Hermitian tridiagonal-matrix Hamiltonians $H$ with complex energy eigenvalues $E_n \in {\mathbb C}$ are considered. The method of evaluation of quantities $\sigma_n=\sqrt{E_n^*E_n}$ known as the singular values of $H$ is proposed. Its basic idea is that the quantities $\sigma_n$ can be treated as square roots of eigenvalues of a certain auxiliary self-adjoint operator $\mathbb{H}$. As long as such an operator can be given a block-tridiagonal matrix form, we construct its resolvent as a matrix continued fraction. In an illustrative application of the formalism, a discrete version of conventional Hamiltonian $H=-d^2/dx^2+V(x)$ with complex local $V(x) \neq V^*(x)$ is considered. The numerical convergence of the recipe is found quick, supported also by a fixed-point-based formal proof.


[5] 2504.16701

Spinning top in quadratic potential and matrix dressing chain

We show that the equations of motion of the rigid body about a fixed point in the Newtonian field with a quadratic potential are special reduction of period-one closure of the Darboux dressing chain for the Schr\"odinger operators with matrix potentials. Some new explicit solutions of the corresponding matrix system and the spectral properties of the related Schr\"odinger operators are discussed.


[6] 2504.16259

Fundamental Limits Of Quickest Change-point Detection With Continuous-Variable Quantum States

We generalize the quantum CUSUM (QUSUM) algorithm for quickest change-point detection, analyzed in finite dimensions by Fanizza, Hirche, and Calsamiglia (Phys. Rev. Lett. 131, 020602, 2023), to infinite-dimensional quantum systems. Our analysis relies on a novel generalization of a result by Hayashi (Hayashi, J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 34, 3413, 2001) concerning the asymptotics of quantum relative entropy, which we establish for the infinite-dimensional setting. This enables us to prove that the QUSUM strategy retains its asymptotic optimality, characterized by the relationship between the expected detection delay and the average false alarm time for any pair of states with finite relative entropy. Consequently, our findings apply broadly, including continuous-variable systems (e.g., Gaussian states), facilitating the development of optimal change-point detection schemes in quantum optics and other physical platforms, and rendering experimental verification feasible.


[7] 2504.16425

Spectral stability of periodic traveling waves in Caudrey-Dodd-Gibbon-Sawada-Kotera Equation

We study the spectral stability of the one-dimensional small-amplitude periodic traveling wave solutions of the (1+1)-dimensional Caudrey-Dodd-Gibbon-Sawada-Kotera equation. We show that these waves are spectrally stable with respect to co-periodic as well as square integrable perturbations.


[8] 2504.16426

Qubit Geometry through Holomorphic Quantization

We develop a wave mechanics formalism for qubit geometry using holomorphic functions and Mobius transformations, providing a geometric perspective on quantum computation. This framework extends the standard Hilbert space description, offering a natural interpretation of standard quantum gates on the Riemann sphere that is examined through their Mobius action on holomorphic wavefunction. These wavefunctions emerge via a quantization process, with the Riemann sphere serving as the classical phase space of qubit geometry. We quantize this space using canonical group quantization with holomorphic polarization, yielding holomorphic wavefunctions and spin angular momentum operators that recover the standard $SU(2)$ algebra with interesting geometric properties. Such properties reveal how geometric transformations induce quantum logic gates on the Riemann sphere, providing a novel perspective in quantum information processing. This result provides a new direction for exploring quantum computation through Isham's canonical group quantization and its holomorphic polarization method.


[9] 2504.16462

Mass-Critical Neutron Stars in the Hartree-Fock and Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov Theories

We investigate the ground states of neutron stars and white dwarfs in the Hartree-Fock (HF) and Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) theories. It is known that the system is stable below a critical mass, which depends on the gravitational constant, while it becomes unstable if the total mass exceeds the critical mass. We prove that if the total mass is at the critical mass, then the HFB minimizers do not exist for any gravitational constant, while the HF minimizers exist for every gravitational constant except for a countable set, which is fully characterized by the Gagliardo-Nirenberg inequality for orthonormal systems. Our results complement the existence results in the sub-critical mass case established in [E. Lenzmann and M. Lewin, Duke Math. J., 2010].


[10] 2504.16599

A two-dimensional swarmalator model with higher-order interactions

We study a simple two-dimensional swarmalator model that incorporates higher-order phase interactions, uncovering a diverse range of collective states. The latter include spatially coherent and gas-like configurations, neither of which appear in models with only pairwise interactions. Additionally, we discover bistability between various states, a phenomenon that arises directly from the inclusion of higher-order interactions. By analyzing several of these emergent states analytically, both for identical and nonidentical populations of swarmalators, we gain deeper insights into their underlying mechanisms and stability conditions. Our findings broaden the understanding of swarmalator dynamics and open new avenues for exploring complex collective behaviors in systems governed by higher-order interactions.


[11] 2504.16687

Non-uniqueness of (Stochastic) Lagrangian Trajectories for Euler Equations

We are concerned with the (stochastic) Lagrangian trajectories associated with Euler or Navier-Stokes equations. First, we construct solutions to the 3D Euler equations which dissipate kinetic energy with $C_{t,x}^{1/3-}$ regularity, such that the associated Lagrangian trajectories are not unique. The proof is based on the non-uniqueness of positive solutions to the corresponding transport equations, in conjunction with the superposition principle. Second, in dimension $d\geq2$, for any $11+\frac1d$, we construct solutions to the Euler or Navier-Stokes equations in the space $C_tL^p\cap L_t^1W^{1,s}$, demonstrating that the associated (stochastic) Lagrangian trajectories are not unique. Our result is sharp in 2D in the sense that: (1) in the stochastic case, for any vector field $v\in C_tL^p$ with $p>2$, the associated stochastic Lagrangian trajectory associated with $v$ is unique (see \cite{KR05}); (2) in the deterministic case, the LPS condition guarantees that for any weak solution $v\in C_tL^p$ with $p>2$ to the Navier-Stokes equations, the associated (deterministic) Lagrangian trajectory is unique. Our result is also sharp in dimension $d\geq2$ in the sense that for any divergence-free vector field $v\in L_t^1W^{1,s}$ with $s>d$, the associated (deterministic) Lagrangian trajectory is unique (see \cite{CC21}).


[12] 2504.16816

Simple and accurate nonlinear pendulum motion for the full range of amplitudes

A simple closed-form formula for the period of a pendulum with finite amplitude is proposed. It reproduces the exact analytical forms both in the small and large amplitude limits, while in the mid-amplitude range maintains average error of 0.06% and maximum error of 0.17%. The accuracy should be sufficient for typical engineering applications. Its unique simplicity should be useful in a theoretical development that requires trackable mathematical framework or in an introductory physics course that aims to discuss a finite amplitude pendulum. A simple and formally exact solution of angular displacement for the full range of amplitudes is illustrated.


[13] 2504.16857

Physical ageing from generalised time-translation-invariance

A generalised form of time-translation-invariance permits to re-derive the known generic phenomenology of ageing, which arises in many-body systems after a quench from an initially disordered system to a temperature $T\leq T_c$, at or below the critical temperature $T_c$. Generalised time-translation-invariance is obtained, out of equilibrium, from a change of representation of the Lie algebra generators of the dynamical symmetries of scale-invariance and time-translation-invariance. Observable consequences include the algebraic form of the scaling functions for large arguments of the two-time auto-correlators and auto-responses, the equality of the auto-correlation and the auto-response exponents $\lambda_C=\lambda_R$, the cross-over scaling form for an initially magnetised critical system and the explanation of a novel finite-size scaling if the auto-correlator or auto-response converge for large arguments $y=t/s\gg 1$ to a plateau. For global two-time correlators, the time-dependence involving the initial critical slip exponent $\Theta$ is confirmed and is generalised to all temperatures below criticality and to the global two-time response function, and their finite-size scaling is derived as well. This also includes the time-dependence of the squared global order-parameter. The celebrate Janssen-Schaub-Schmittmann scaling relation with the auto-correlation exponent is thereby extended to all temperatures below the critical temperature. A simple criterion on the relevance of non-linear terms in the stochastic equation of motion is derived, taking the dimensionality of couplings into account. Its applicability in a wide class of models is confirmed, for temperatures $T\leq T_c$. Relevance to experiments is also discussed.


[14] 2504.16919

Boundary Witten effect in multi-axion insulators

We explore novel topological responses and axion-like phenomena in three-dimensional insulating systems with spacetime-dependent mass terms encoding domain walls. Via a dimensional-reduction approach, we derive a new axion-electromagnetic coupling term involving three axion fields. This term yields a topological current in the bulk and, under specific conditions of the axions, real-space topological defects such as magnetic-like monopoles and hopfions. Moreover, once one the axions acquires a constant value, a nontrivial boundary theory realizes a (2+1)-dimensional analog of the Witten effect, which shows that point-like vortices on the gapped boundary of the system acquire half-integer electric charge. Our findings reveal rich topological structures emerging from multi-axion theories, suggesting new avenues in the study of topological phases and defects.