New articles on Mathematical Physics


[1] 2604.13196

Deferred Cyclotomic Representation for Stable and Exact Evaluation of q-Hypergeometric Series

We introduce a cyclotomic representation for finite $q$-hypergeometric series and $q$-deformed amplitudes that separates algebraic structure from evaluation. By expressing each summand in a sparse exponent basis over irreducible cyclotomic polynomials, all products and ratios of quantum factorials reduce to integer vector arithmetic. This ensures that cancellations between numerator and denominator are resolved exactly prior to any evaluation. This formulation yields the deferred cyclotomic representation (DCR), a parameter-independent combinatorial object of the series, from which evaluation in any target field is realized as a ring homomorphism. For quantum recoupling coefficients, we demonstrate that this framework achieves linear memory scaling in the compilation phase, eliminates intermediate expression swell in exact arithmetic, and substantially extends the range of reliable double-precision computation by reducing cancellation-induced error amplification. Beyond its computational advantages, the DCR provides a unified perspective on $q$-deformed amplitudes. Structural properties like admissibility at roots of unity, and the classical limit all emerge as intrinsic properties of a single underlying combinatorial object.


[2] 2604.13250

Continuation of Hamiltonian dynamics from the plane to constant-curvature surfaces

We investigate the deformation of symmetry on cotangent bundles from the Euclidean plane to two-dimensional constant-curvature surfaces and the continuation of local dynamics aspects in Hamiltonian systems. For a fixed curvature sign $\sigma\in\{+1,-1\}$, the curved problem is set up either on the sphere $(\sigma=+1)$ or on the hyperbolic plane $(\sigma=-1)$, both with radius $R=1/\varepsilon$, recovering flat space in the limit $\varepsilon\to 0$. The symmetry of these spaces is taken into account by using the Inönü--Wigner contraction of Lie algebras from $\mathfrak{so}(3)$ or $\mathfrak{so}(2,1)$ to $\mathfrak{se}(2)$. We use Riemannian exponential coordinates centred at the North pole together with the pull-back the associated momentum map and the symplectic form. Within this geometric setting we use a local slice construction and prove the persistence from flat to curved spaces of non-degenerate relative equilibria and relative periodic orbits of general cotangent bundle Hamiltonian systems. We apply the resulting framework to the Newtonian $n$-body problem.


[3] 2604.13582

A note on spinor fields in spherical symmetry

By employing the polar re-formulation, we show that there are no solutions of the Dirac equations in spherical symmetry when the spinor is required to satisfy the same symmetries as the space-time via the Lie derivative.


[4] 2604.13781

On Exponentially Long Prethermalization Timescales in Isolated Quantum Systems

We study prethermalization in time-independent quantum many-body systems on a $d$-dimensional lattice with an extensive local Hamiltonian $H=N+\varepsilon P$, in the regime where $\varepsilon \ll 1$. We show that the prethermalization time is exponentially large in $\varepsilon_0/\varepsilon$, where $\varepsilon_0$ is the ratio between an effective spectral gap width and the local norm of $P$. We prove also that for exponentially long times, there exist two quasi-conserved quantities up to exponentially small errors.


[5] 2604.13838

On hyperbolic and rational solutions of the cubically nonlinear Schrödinger equation

In a previous article we have proved non-existence of certain "solutions" of the cubically nonlinear Schrödinger equation in the general case, and presented solutions in the non-generic case. -- In the present article we describe a further family of solutions enlarging the set of non-generic solutions.


[6] 2604.14077

Open WDVV equations and $\bigvee$-systems

The idea of a $\bigvee$-system was introduced by Veselov in the study of rational solutions of the WDVV equations of associativity. These are algebraic/geometric conditions on the set of covectors that appear in rational solutions to the WDVV equations. Here, this idea is generalized to open WDVV equations, which are an additional set of PDEs originating from open Gromow-Witten Theory. We develop -- for rank-one extensions -- algebraic/geometric conditions on the covectors that supplement the $\bigvee$-system to give rational solutions to the open WDVV equations. Examples, and the relation to superpotentials and to Dubrovin almost-duality, are given.


[7] 2602.06378

Projective Time, Cayley Transformations and the Schwarzian Geometry of the Free Particle--Oscillator Correspondence

We investigate the relation between the one--dimensional free particle and the harmonic oscillator from a unified viewpoint based on projective geometry, Cayley transformations, and the Schwarzian derivative. Treating time as a projective coordinate on $\mathbb {RP}^1$ clarifies the $SL(2,\mathbb R)\cong Sp(2,\mathbb R)$ conformal sector of the Schrödinger--Jacobi symmetry and provides a common framework for two seemingly different correspondences: the Cayley--Niederer (lens) map between the time--dependent Schrödinger equations and the conformal bridge transformation relating the stationary problems. We formulate these relations as canonical transformations on the extended phase space and as their metaplectic lifts, identifying the quantum Cayley map with the Bargmann transform. General time reparametrizations induce oscillator--type terms governed universally by the Schwarzian cocycle, connecting the present construction to broader appearances of Schwarzian dynamics.


[8] 2604.11902

Universal formulae for correlators of a broad class of models

A simple method is presented for deriving universal formulae for the correlators, frequently denoted $W_{g,n}(\{z_i\}), i=1,..n$, of a wide range of models of physical and mathematical interest. While many alternative methods exist for constructing such correlators, these formulae can be simply written in terms of one defining function and its derivatives. The method has been applied to the Airy and Bessel models, various minimal string and superstring theories, and their associated intersection theory settings, ordinary and various kinds of supersymmetric Weil-Petersson volumes, and more besides. For all these cases, their $W_{g,n}(\{z_i\})$ are just all specializations of the {\it same} universal formulae. A special variant of the method useful for ${N}{=}1$ supersymmetric cases is also presented. It allows for swift derivations of Norbury's three closed-form formulae for the volumes $V_{g,n}$ ($g{=}1,2,3$) of ${ N}{=}1$ supersymmetric Weil-Petersson volumes, and generalizations of them to a wider set of models. Moreover a new closed-form formula for the genus 4 case $V_{4,n}$ is derived. The straightforward method for how to derive such formulae for $g{>}4$ cases is described. Throughout, crucial roles are played by the underlying integrable KdV flows, as well as the Gel'fand-Dikii equation.


[9] 2604.13163

Covariant phase space approach to noncommutativity in tensile and tensionless open strings

We study noncommutativity in open strings using the covariant phase space formalism. For tensile open strings in a constant Kalb-Ramond background, we show that the (pre)-symplectic current splits into a bulk kinetic term plus an exact boundary term, recovering the Seiberg-Witten noncommutativity parameter. We then extend the analysis to intrinsically tensionless strings. In the absence of background fields, the reduced phase space is degenerate and carries no intrinsic Poisson structure. In the presence of a constant Kalb-Ramond field, the symplectic current localises entirely on the boundary, so that the physical phase space becomes purely boundary-supported and the endpoint coordinates acquire a noncommutative Poisson algebra. Including a boundary gauge-field coupling similarly leads to a boundary symplectic form governed by the effective Born-Infeld combination on the D-brane. Our results provide a unified description of noncommutativity in both tensile and tensionless open strings.


[10] 2604.13182

Bilinear products and the orthogonality of quasinormal modes on hyperboloidal foliations

We explore the properties of bilinear products for black-hole quasinormal modes (QNMs) formulated on hyperboloidal foliations. We find that, although QNM solutions are smooth and finite on future-directed hyperboloids, the integrand of the bilinear form with respect to which the modes are orthogonal is still divergent. This is a result of the reflection (equivalently, CPT) transformation required in the definition of the products, which modifies the behaviour of the integrand at the boundaries. We present several regularisation procedures that yield a finite and well-defined bilinear form. In addition, we examine an alternative definition of the bilinear products that incorporates flux contributions, discussing its advantages and limitations. Finally, we define the QNM excitation factors and coefficients within the hyperboloidal framework in terms of the bilinear products, and compute them explicitly for a choice of mode numbers and constant initial data. For concreteness, we work with the QNMs associated to scalar perturbations of the Schwarzschild family of spacetimes.


[11] 2604.13362

Quasi-Local Celestial Charges and Multipoles

We extend Penrose's quasi-local mass definition to include higher-spin charges associated with the celestial $Lw_{1+\infty}$ symmetries and relate them to traditional definitions of multipoles. The resulting formulae provide explicit expressions that can be computed on finite 2-surfaces, given a choice of null hypersurface. They yield a geometric definition of celestial symmetries and multipoles in generic spacetimes in terms of higher-valence solutions to the twistor equations. This, in turn, gives rise to natural flux-balance laws along the null hypersurface. We also present a first-principles phase-space derivation of these charges, starting from a twistor space action for self-dual gravity that can be identified with the standard gravitational asymptotic phase space at null infinity, performing a large gauge transformation analysis and using the Penrose transform to connect with the corresponding spacetime expressions. Finally, we formulate the spacetime analysis in the Plebanski gauge and relate the celestial symmetries to the integrability of self-dual gravity in the case of a self-dual background.


[12] 2604.13387

Multiradial Schramm-Loewner evolution: Infinite-time large deviations and transience

In previous work [AHP24], we proved a finite-time large deviation principle in the Hausdorff metric for multiradial Schramm-Loewner evolution, SLE$(\kappa)$, as $\kappa \to 0$, with good rate function being the multiradial Loewner energy. Here, we extend this result to infinite time in the topology of common-capacity-parameterized curves, and streamline the proof. A main step is to derive detailed escape probability estimates for multiradial SLE$(\kappa)$ curves in the common parameterization, which extend the single-curve estimates achieved in [AP26]. As a by-product, we also get that multiradial SLE$(\kappa)$ curves, with $\kappa \leq 8/3$, are transient at their common terminal point, generalizing [FL15, HL21]. As a corollary to the LDP result, we obtain explicit asymptotics of the Brownian loop measure interaction term for finite-energy radial multichords, which is linear in the capacity-time and coincides with a certain choice of a cocycle for the Virasoro algebra.


[13] 2604.13415

Membrane Tension Governs Particle Wrapping-Unwrapping Transitions and Stalling

Membrane wrapping underlies nanoparticle uptake during endocytosis, whereas the reverse process of membrane unwrapping accompanies particle expulsion and membrane fusion events. Existing theoretical descriptions typically focus on adhesion and bending energies within the particle-membrane contact region and often neglect the deformation energy of the membrane outside the contact zone. This approximation is valid only in the limit of vanishing membrane tension, where the non-contact membrane assumes a catenoid-like configuration with negligible bending energy. However, at finite tension the deformation of the non-contact membrane becomes a dominant energetic contribution. Here we show that this tension-dependent non-contact energy governs the progression of particle wrapping. By analyzing the variation of the total membrane energy with wrapping degree, we uncover a competition between particle adhesion, membrane tension and particle size that determines whether wrapping proceeds, stalls, or reverses into spontaneous unwrapping. This framework reveals a stalling boundary separating regimes of particle uptake and expulsion. To capture the non-contact deformation efficiently, we derive a compact analytical approximation that accurately reproduces the full numerical solution of the membrane shape. The resulting energetic map provides a unified physical description of particle wrapping and unwrapping, with implications for endocytosis, membrane fusion, and nanoparticle design.


[14] 2604.13599

Observability from measurable sets for strongly coupled parabolic systems via single-component observation

We establish an observability inequality from space-time measurable sets for a class of strongly coupled parabolic systems consisting of two equations, where the observation acts on a single-component. The model is motivated by parabolic equations with complex coefficients and serves as a prototypical example of strongly coupled systems. The main difficulty lies in the fact that, unlike in the scalar and weakly coupled cases, pointwise-in-time interpolation observability estimates fail, as the observed component may exhibit high-frequency oscillatory cancellations induced by the coupling. To overcome this difficulty, we develop a new integral-type interpolation observability inequality based on a Remez-type inequality. With the aid of this integral-type interpolation observability inequality and the strategy developed in [Phung and Wang, JEMS, (2013), 681--703] and [Apraiz, Escauriaza,Wang and Zhang, JEMS, (2014), 2433--2475] for deriving observability from measurable sets, we obtain the desired observability inequality.


[15] 2604.13639

Non-Hermitian Exceptional Dynamics in First-Order Heat Transport

Heat transport exhibits distinct regimes ranging from ballistic propagation to diffusive relaxation, traditionally described by disparate theoretical frameworks. Here, we introduce a unified first-order operator formulation in which temperature and heat flux are treated as a coupled state vector, yielding a minimal dynamical closure of heat transport. The resulting generator is intrinsically non-Hermitian and gives rise to a spectral structure governed by an exceptional point that separates overdamped diffusion from underdamped wave-like propagation. In this framework, Fourier law emerges as a singular limit of a hyperbolic dissipative system, while the Cattaneo equation arises naturally as the minimal hydrodynamic closure of kinetic theory. We show that the exceptional point induces nonanalytic spectral transitions, nonmodal transient dynamics, and a breakdown of conventional modal decomposition. The theory further generalizes to anisotropic media, where direction-dependent exceptional surfaces enable intrinsic steering of heat flow. Our results establish a unified non-Hermitian dynamical framework for heat transport and reveal exceptional-point physics as a fundamental organizing principle underlying thermal dynamics across scales.


[16] 2604.13782

On the discrete Painlevé equivalence problem, non-conjugate translations and nodal curves

We consider several examples of nonautonomous systems of difference equations coming from semi-classical orthogonal polynomials via recurrence coefficients and ladder operators, with respect to various generalisations of Laguerre and Meixner weights. We identify these as discrete Painlevé equations and establish their types in the Sakai classification scheme in terms of the associated rational surfaces. In particular, we find examples which come from different weights and share a common surface type $D_5^{(1)}$ but are inequivalent in two ways. First, their dynamics are generated by non-conjugate elements of $\widehat{W}(A_3^{(1)})$. Second, some of the examples have associated surfaces being non-generic in the sense of having nodal curves. The symmetries of these examples form subgroups of the generic symmetry group, which we compute. In particular, we find $(W(A_1^{(1)})\times W(A_1^{(1)}))\rtimes \mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$. These examples give further weight to the argument that any correspondence between different weights and the Sakai classification should make use of the refined version of the discrete Painlevé equivalence problem, which takes into account not just surface type, but also the group elements generating the dynamics as well as parameter constraints, e.g. those corresponding to nodal curves.


[17] 2604.13790

Spatial deformation of a ferromagnetic elastic rod

Ferromagnetic elastic slender structures offer the potential for large actuation displacements under modest external magnetic fields, due to the magneto-mechanical coupling. This paper investigates the phase portraits of the Hamiltonian governing the three-dimensional deformation of inextensible ferromagnetic elastic rods subjected to combined terminal tension and twisting moment in the presence of a longitudinal magnetic field. The total energy functional is formulated by combining the Kirchhoff elastic strain energy with micromagnetic energy contributions appropriate to soft and hard ferromagnetic materials: magnetostatic (demagnetization) energy for the former, and exchange and Zeeman energies for the latter. Exploiting the circular cross-sectional symmetry and the integrable structure of the governing equations, conserved Casimir invariants are identified and the Hamiltonian is reduced to a single-degree-of-freedom system in the Euler polar angle. Analysis of the resulting phase portraits reveals that purely elastic and hard ferromagnetic rods undergo a supercritical Hamiltonian Hopf pitchfork bifurcation, whereas soft ferromagnetic rods exhibit this bifurcation only within a restricted range of the magnetoelastic parameter, $0<\tilde{K}_{dM}<1/8$. Both helical and localized post-buckling configurations are analyzed, and the corresponding load-deformation relationships are systematically characterized across a range of loading scenarios. Localized buckling modes, corresponding to homoclinic orbits in the Hamiltonian phase space, are constructed numerically. In contrast to the purely elastic case, the localized configurations of soft ferromagnetic rods exhibit non-collinear extended straight segments, a geometrically distinctive feature arising directly from the magnetoelastic coupling.


[18] 2604.13845

Minkowski content construction of the CLE gasket measure

We show for $\kappa \in (4,8)$ that the canonical conformally covariant measure on the conformal loop ensemble (CLE$_\kappa$) gasket, previously constructed indirectly by the first co-author and Schoug, can be realized as the limit of several natural approximation schemes. These include the Euclidean Minkowski content and its box-count variants, the properly renormalized number of dyadic squares that intersect the gasket, and the properly renormalized minimal number of balls of radius $\delta$ necessary to cover the gasket with respect to both its canonical geodesic and resistance metrics. This in particular allows us to identify the CLE$_6$ gasket measure with the conformally covariant measure constructed by Garban-Pete-Schramm as a scaling limit of the number of vertices in a macroscopic critical percolation cluster on the triangular lattice. Along the way, we show that the CLE gasket measure of every fixed compact set has finite moments of all orders; previously this was only known for first moments.


[19] 2604.13852

First Passage Times for Variable-Order Time-Fractional Diffusion

We derive the asymptotic first passage time (FPT) distribution for space-dependent variable-order time-fractional diffusion, where the fractional exponent $\alpha(x)$ varies with position. For any sufficiently smooth $\alpha(x)$ on a finite domain with absorbing and reflecting boundaries, we show that the survival probability decays as $\Psi(t)\sim C\,t^{-\alpha_*}/(\ln t)^{\nu}$, where $\alpha_*$ is the minimum value of the fractional exponent and $\nu$ is determined by the location and shape of the minimum. For a constant fractional exponent $\nu=0$ and this provides a theoretical prediction that can identify spatially heterogeneous anomalous transport in experiments. We validate the theory against exact Laplace-space solutions and Monte Carlo simulations for linear and nonlinear profiles of $\alpha(x)$.


[20] 2604.13894

Wandering range of robust quantum symmetries

This paper introduces the concept of the wandering range of a robust symmetry $S$ of a Hamiltonian $H$. This quantity measures how the perturbed time evolution $\mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}t(H+\varepsilon V)} S \mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i} t(H+\varepsilon V)}$ deviates from its unperturbed counterpart $\mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i} tH} S\mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i} tH} = S$. Although the wandering range does not necessarily scale linearly with the perturbation strength $\varepsilon$, we identify conditions under which this linear behavior is recovered and we obtain explicit nonperturbative bounds.


[21] 2604.14122

The scaling limit of random walk and the intrinsic metric on planar critical percolation

We consider critical site percolation ($p=p_c=1/2$) on the triangular lattice $\mathbf{T}$ in two dimensions. We show that the simple random walk on the clusters of open vertices converges in the scaling limit to a continuous diffusion which lives in the gasket of a conformal loop ensemble with parameter $\kappa = 6$ $\big(\mathrm{CLE}_6\big)$, the so-called $\mathrm{CLE}_6$ Brownian motion. We also show that the intrinsic (i.e., chemical distance) metric converges in the scaling limit to the geodesic $\mathrm{CLE}_6$ metric. As a consequence, we deduce the existence of the chemical distance exponent, the resistance exponent, and the spectral dimension of the critical percolation clusters. Moreover, we show that the exponents satisfy the Einstein relations.


[22] 2604.14127

Lagrangian correspondences for moduli spaces of Higgs bundles and holomorphic connections

On a compact connected Riemann surface $C$ of genus at least $2$, we construct Lagrangian correspondences between moduli spaces of rank-$n$ Higgs bundles (respectively, holomorphic connections) and the Hilbert schemes of points on $T^\ast C$ (respectively, the twisted cotangent bundles of $C$). Central to these constructions are Higgs bundles (respectively, holomorphic connections) which are transversal to line subbundles of the underlying bundles: these naturally induce divisors on $C$ together with auxiliary parameters, namely lifts to divisors on spectral curves for Higgs bundles and residue parameters of apparent singularities for holomorphic connections. We discuss the evidence showing that the Dolbeault geometric Langlands correspondence is generically realized by these Lagrangian correspondences; we expect that the de Rham geometric Langlands correspondence can be realized by their quantization, following Drinfeld's construction of Hecke eigensheaves. We also discuss the relations of our constructions to various topics, including reductions of Kapustin-Witten equations, the conformal limit, separation of variables, and degenerate fields in conformal field theories.


[23] 2505.10629

The HZ character expansion and a hyperbolic extension of torus knots

The HOMFLY-PT polynomial is a two-parameter knot polynomial that admits a character expansion, expressed as a sum of Schur functions over Young diagrams. The Harer-Zagier (HZ) transform, which converts the HOMFLY--PT polynomial into a rational function, can be applied directly to the characters, yielding hence the HZ character expansion. This illuminates the structure of the HZ functions and articulates conditions for their factorisability, including that non-vanishing contributions should come from hook-shaped Young diagrams. An infinite HZ-factorisable family of hyperbolic knots, that can be thought of as a hyperbolic extension of torus knots, is constructed by full twists, partial full twists and Jucys-Murphy twists, which are braid operations that preserve HZ factorisability. Among them, of interest is a family of pretzel links, which are the Coxeter links for E type Dynkin diagrams. Moreover, when the HZ function is non-factorisable, which occurs for the vast majority of knots and links, we conjecture that it can be decomposed into a sum of factorised terms. In the 3-strand case, this is proven using the symmetries of Young diagrams.


[24] 2507.04988

Ballistic Transport for Discrete Multi-Dimensional Schrödinger Operators With Decaying Potential

We consider the discrete Schrödinger operator $H = -\Delta + V$ on $\ell^2(\mathbb{Z}^d)$ with a decaying potential, in arbitrary lattice dimension $d\in\mathbb{N}^*$, where $\Delta$ is the standard discrete Laplacian and $V_n = o(|n|^{-1})$ as $|n| \to \infty$. We prove the absence of singular continuous spectrum for $H$. For the unitary evolution $e^{-i tH}$, we prove that it exhibits ballistic transport in the sense that, for any $r > 0$, the weighted $\ell^2-$norm $$\|e^{-i tH}u\|_r:=\left(\sum_{n\in\mathbb{Z}^d} (1+|n|^2)^{r} |(e^{-i tH}u)_n|^2\right)^\frac12 $$ grows at rate $\simeq t^r$ as $t\to \infty$, provided that the initial state $u$ is in the absolutely continuous subspace and satisfies $\|u\|_r<\infty$. The proof relies on commutator methods and a refined Mourre estimate, which yields quantitative lower bounds on transport for operators with purely absolutely continuous spectrum over appropriate spectral intervals. Compactness arguments and localized spectral projections are used to extend the result to perturbed operators, extending the classical result for the free Laplacian to a broader class of decaying potentials.


[25] 2511.04509

Triviality vs perturbation theory: an analysis for mean-field $φ^4$-theory in four dimensions

We have constructed the mean-field trivial solution of the $\varphi^4$ theory $O(N)$ model in four dimensions in two previous papers using the flow equations of the renormalization group. Here we establish a relation between the trivial solutions we constructed and perturbation theory. We show that if an UV-cutoff is maintained, we can define a renormalized coupling constant $g$ and obtain the perturbative solutions of the mean-field flow equations at each order in perturbation theory. We prove the local Borel-summability of the renormalized mean-field perturbation theory in the presence of an UV cutoff and show that it is asymptotic to the non-perturbative solution.


[26] 2603.09535

Pseudo-Riemannian Lie algebras with coisotropic ideals and integrating the Laplace-Beltrami equation on Lie groups

We identify a class of left-invariant pseudo-Riemannian metrics on Lie groups for which the Laplace-Beltrami equation reduces to a first-order PDE and admits exact solutions. The defining condition is the existence of a commutative ideal $\mathfrak{h}$ in the Lie algebra $\mathfrak{g}$ whose orthogonal complement satisfies $\mathfrak{h}^\perp\subseteq\mathfrak{h}$. Using the noncommutative integration method based on the orbit method and generalized Fourier transforms, we reduce the Laplace--Beltrami equation to a first-order linear PDE, which can then be integrated explicitly. The symmetry of the reduced equation gives rise, via the inverse transform, to nonlocal symmetry operators for the original equation. These operators are generically integro-differential, contrasting with the polynomial symmetries appearing in previously studied classes. The method is illustrated by two examples: the Heisenberg group $\mathrm{H}_3(\mathbb{R})$ with a Lorentzian metric and a four-dimensional non-unimodular group with a metric of signature $(2,2)$. In the latter, classical separation of variables is not directly applicable, yet the noncommutative approach yields explicit solutions and reveals the predicted nonlocal symmetry.


[27] 2604.12111

Quantum mechanical model for charge excitation: Surface binding and dispersion

By an idealized quantum mechanical model, we formally describe the dispersion of nonretarded electromagnetic waves that express charge density oscillations near a fixed plane in three spatial dimensions (3D) at zero temperature. Our goal is to capture the interplay of microscopic scales that include a confinement length in the emergence of the surface plasmon, a collective low-energy charge excitation in the vicinity of the plane. We start with a time-dependent Hartree-type equation in 3D. This model accounts for particle binding to the plane and the repulsive Coulomb interaction associated with the induced charge density relative to the ground state. By linearizing the equation of motion, we formulate a homogeneous integral equation for the scattering amplitude of the particle wave function in the (z-) coordinate vertical to the plane. For a binding potential proportional to a negative delta function and symmetric-in-z wave function, we apply the Laplace transform with respect to positive z and convert the integral equation into a functional equation that involves several values of the transformed solution. The scattering amplitude and dispersion relation are derived exactly in terms of rapidly convergent series via the Mittag-Leffler theorem. In the semiclassical regime, our result furnishes an asymptotic expansion for the energy excitation spectrum. The leading-order term is found in agreement with the prediction of a classical hydrodynamic model based on a projected-Euler-Poisson system.


[28] 2401.12814

$b$-Hurwitz numbers from Whittaker vectors for $\mathcal{W}$-algebras

We show that $b$-Hurwitz numbers with a rational weight are obtained by taking an explicit limit of a Whittaker vector for the $\mathcal{W}$-algebra of type $A$. Our result is a vast generalization of several previous results that treated the monotone case, and the cases of quadratic and cubic polynomial weights. It also provides an interpretation of the associated Whittaker vector in terms of generalized branched coverings that might be of independent interest. Our result is new even in the special case $b=0$ that corresponds to classical hypergeometric Hurwitz numbers, and implies that they are governed by the topological recursion of Eynard-Orantin. This gives an independent proof of the recent result of Bychkov-Dunin-Barkowski-Kazarian-Shadrin.


[29] 2409.07501

A compact QUBO encoding of computational logic formulae demonstrated on cryptography constructions

We aim to advance the state-of-the-art in Quadratic Unconstrained Binary Optimization formulation with a focus on cryptography algorithms. As the minimal QUBO encoding of the linear constraints of optimization problems emerges as the solution of integer linear programming (ILP) problems, by solving special boolean logic formulas (like ANF and DNF) for their integer coefficients it is straightforward to handle any normal form, or any substitution for multi-input AND, OR or XOR operations in a QUBO form. To showcase the efficiency of the proposed approach we considered the most widespread cryptography algorithms including AES-128/192/256, MD5, SHA1 and SHA256. For each of these, we achieved QUBO instances reduced by thousands of logical variables compared to previously published results, while keeping the QUBO matrix sparse and the magnitude of the coefficients low. In the particular case of AES-256 cryptography function we obtained more than 8x reduction in variable count compared to previous results. The demonstrated reduction in QUBO sizes notably increases the vulnerability of cryptography algorithms against future quantum annealers, capable of embedding around $30$ thousands of logical variables.


[30] 2502.13208

Finite cutoff JT gravity: Baby universes, Matrix dual, and (Krylov) Complexity

In this paper, as an application of the `Complexity = Volume' proposal, we calculate the growth of the interior of a black hole at late times for finite cutoff JT gravity. Due to this integrable, irrelevant deformation, the spectral properties are modified non-trivially. The Einstein-Rosen Bridge (ERB) length saturates faster than pure JT gravity. We comment on the possible connection between Krylov Complexity and ERB length for the deformed theory. Apart from this, we compute the emission probability of baby universes in the deformed theory and find that it changes due to the deformation parameter only if we turn on Lorentzian evolution. We also find that the saturation time of the deformed theory relative to the undeformed one depends on the inverse temperature. We also highlight the subtleties involved in the dual matrix model and comment on the possible one-cut universality. Finally, we comment on the possible correction to the volume of the moduli space arising from the non-perturbative correction of the spectral curve induced by the finite boundary cutoff.


[31] 2503.02795

Large deviations of SLE(0+) variants in the capacity parameterization

We prove large deviation principles (LDPs) for full chordal, radial, and multichordal SLE(0+) curves parameterized by capacity. The rate function is given by the appropriate variant of the Loewner energy. There are two key novelties in the present work. First, we strengthen the topology in the known chordal LDPs into the topology of full parameterized curves including all curve endpoints. We also obtain LDPs in the space of unparameterized curves. Second, we address the radial case, which requires in part different methods from the chordal case, due to the different topological setup. We establish our main results via proving an exponential tightness property and combining it with detailed curve escape probability estimates, in the spirit of exponentially good approximations in LDP theory. In the radial case, additional work is required to refine the estimates appearing in the literature. Notably, since we manage to prove a finite-time LDP in a better topology than in earlier literature, escape energy estimates follow as a consequence of the escape probability estimates.


[32] 2506.18127

An Extended Model of Non-Integer-Dimensional Space for Anisotropic Solids with q-Deformed Derivatives

We propose a non-integer-dimensional spatial model for anisotropic solids by incorporating a q-deformed derivative operator, inspired by the Tsallis nonadditive entropy framework. This generalization provides an analytical framework to explore anisotropic thermal properties, within a unified and flexible mathematical formalism. We derive explicit expressions for the phonon density of states and specific heat capacity, highlighting the impact of the deformation parameter q on the thermodynamic behavior. We apply the model to various solid-state materials, achieving excellent agreement with experimental data across a wide temperature range, and demonstrating its effectiveness in capturing anisotropic and subextensive effects in real systems. Beyond providing accurate fits, we anchor the q-deformation in a microscopic disorder/kinetics exponent \mu emerging from conformable dynamics, thereby linking nonextensive statistics to measurable heterogeneity and memory effects.


[33] 2507.13269

Two-sided heat kernel bounds for $\sqrt{8/3}$-Liouville Brownian motion

Liouville Brownian motion (LBM) is the canonical diffusion process on a Liouville quantum gravity (LQG) surface. In this work, we establish upper and lower bounds for the heat kernel for LBM when $\gamma=\sqrt{8/3}$ in terms of the $\sqrt{8/3}$-LQG metric which are sharp up to a polylogarithmic factor in the exponential.


[34] 2509.03398

Multi-Wavelength Machine Learning for High-Precision Colorimetric Sensing

Conventional colorimetric sensing methods typically rely on signal intensity at a single wavelength, often selected heuristically based on peak visual modulation. This approach overlooks the structured information embedded in full-spectrum transmission profiles, particularly in intensity-based systems where linear models may be highly effective. In this study, we experimentally demonstrate that applying a forward feature selection strategy to normalized transmission spectra, combined with linear regression and ten-fold cross-validation, yields significant improvements in predictive accuracy. Using food dye dilutions as a model system, the mean squared error was reduced from over 22,000 with a single wavelength to 3.87 using twelve selected features, corresponding to a more than 5,700-fold enhancement. These results validate that full-spectrum modeling enables precise concentration prediction without requiring changes to the sensing hardware. The approach is broadly applicable to colorimetric assays used in medical diagnostics, environmental monitoring, and industrial analysis, offering a scalable pathway to improve sensitivity and reliability in existing platforms.


[35] 2601.19515

Mode stability of self-similar wave maps without symmetry in higher dimensions

We consider wave maps from $(1+d)$-dimensional Minkowski space into the $d$-sphere. For every $d \geq 3$, there exists an explicit self-similar solution that exhibits finite time blowup. This solution is corotational and its mode stability in the class of corotational functions is known. Recently, Weissenbacher, Koch, and the first author proved mode stability without symmetry assumptions in $d =3$. In this paper we extend this result to all $d \geq 4$. On a technical level, this is the first successful implementation of the quasi-solution method where two additional parameters are present.


[36] 2603.01466

Violation of Bell-type Inequalities on Mutually-commuting von Neumann Algebra Models of Entanglement Swapping Networks

Violation of Bell inequalities in bipartite systems represented by mutually-commuting von Neumann algebras has pioneered the study of vacuum entanglement in algebraic quantum field theory. It is unexpected that the maximal violation of Bell inequality can discover algebraic structures. In the paper, we establish the mutually-commuting von Neumann algebra model for entanglement swapping networks and Bell-type inequalities on this model. It generalizes the bipartite case to the ternary case. These algebras are all general von Neumann algebras, which provide a natural perspective to investigate Bell nonlocality in quantum networks in the infinitely-many-degree-of-freedom setting. We determine various bounds for Bell-type inequalities based on the structure of von Neumann algebras, and identify the algebraic structural conditions required for their violation. Finally, we show that the maximal violation of Bell-type inequalities in entanglement swapping networks can be used to determine partially the type classification of the underlying von Neumann algebras.