In mathematics, the Jacobian conjecture is a celebrated problem on polynomials in several variables. It was first posed in 1939 by Ott-Heinrich Keller. It was later named and widely publicised by Shreeram Abhyankar, as an example of a question in the area of algebraic geometry that requires little beyond a knowledge of calculus to state.
For fixed N > 1 consider N polynomials Fi, for 1 ≤ i ≤ N in the variables
- X1, …, XN,
and with coefficients in the complex numbers C. The Jacobian determinant J of the Fi, considered as a vector-valued function
- F: Cn → Cn,
is by definition the determinant of the N × N matrix of the
- Fij,
where Fij is the partial derivative of Fi with respect to Xj.
The condition
- J ≠ 0
enters into the inverse function theorem in multivariable calculus. In fact that condition for smooth functions (and so a fortiori for polynomials) ensures the existence of a local inverse function to F, at any point where it holds.
On the other hand in the polynomial case J is itself a polynomial. Since the complex numbers form an algebraically closed field J will be zero for some complex values of X1, …, XN, unless we have the condition
- J is a constant.
Therefore it is a relatively elementary fact that
- if F has an inverse function defined everywhere, then J is a constant.
The Jacobian conjecture is the converse: it states that
- if J is a non-zero constant function, then F has an inverse function.
A proof for the two variable case was announced in 2004 by Carolyn Dean , and has been submitted for journal publication. Several sources have reported that her proof contains an error. A series of talks which she scheduled have been cancelled. See, for example,
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/JacobianConjecture.html.
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