Newton's identities

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In mathematics, Newton's identities, also known as the Girard–Newton formulae, give relations between two types of symmetric polynomials, namely between power sums and elementary symmetric polynomials. Evaluated at the roots of a monic polynomial P in one variable, they allow expressing the sums of the k-th powers of all roots of P (counted with their multiplicity) in terms of the coefficients of P, without actually finding those roots. These identities were found by Isaac Newton around 1666, apparently in ignorance of earlier work (1629) by Albert Girard. They have applications in many areas of mathematics, including Galois theory, invariant theory, group theory, combinatorics, as well as further applications outside mathematics, including general relativity.

Mathematical statement

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Formulation in terms of symmetric polynomials

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Let x1, ..., xn be variables, denote for k ≥ 1 by pk(x1, ..., xn) the k-th power sum:

 

and for k ≥ 0 denote by ek(x1, ..., xn) the elementary symmetric polynomial (that is, the sum of all distinct products of k distinct variables), so

 

Then Newton's identities can be stated as

 

valid for all nk ≥ 1.

Also, one has

 

for all k > n ≥ 1.

Concretely, one gets for the first few values of k:

 

The form and validity of these equations do not depend on the number n of variables (although the point where the left-hand side becomes 0 does, namely after the n-th identity), which makes it possible to state them as identities in the ring of symmetric functions. In that ring one has

 

and so on; here the left-hand sides never become zero. These equations allow to recursively express the ei in terms of the pk; to be able to do the inverse, one may rewrite them as

 

In general, we have

 

valid for all n ≥k ≥ 1.

Also, one has

 

for all k > n ≥ 1.

Application to the roots of a polynomial

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The polynomial with roots xi may be expanded as

 

where the coefficients   are the symmetric polynomials defined above. Given the power sums of the roots

 

the coefficients of the polynomial with roots   may be expressed recursively in terms of the power sums as

 

Formulating polynomials in this way is useful in using the method of Delves and Lyness[1] to find the zeros of an analytic function.

Application to the characteristic polynomial of a matrix

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When the polynomial above is the characteristic polynomial of a matrix   (in particular when   is the companion matrix of the polynomial), the roots   are the eigenvalues of the matrix, counted with their algebraic multiplicity. For any positive integer  , the matrix   has as eigenvalues the powers  , and each eigenvalue   of   contributes its multiplicity to that of the eigenvalue   of  . Then the coefficients of the characteristic polynomial of   are given by the elementary symmetric polynomials in those powers  . In particular, the sum of the  , which is the  -th power sum   of the roots of the characteristic polynomial of  , is given by its trace:

 

The Newton identities now relate the traces of the powers   to the coefficients of the characteristic polynomial of  . Using them in reverse to express the elementary symmetric polynomials in terms of the power sums, they can be used to find the characteristic polynomial by computing only the powers   and their traces.

This computation requires computing the traces of matrix powers   and solving a triangular system of equations. Both can be done in complexity class NC (solving a triangular system can be done by divide-and-conquer). Therefore, characteristic polynomial of a matrix can be computed in NC. By the Cayley–Hamilton theorem, every matrix satisfies its characteristic polynomial, and a simple transformation allows to find the adjugate matrix in NC.

Rearranging the computations into an efficient form leads to the Faddeev–LeVerrier algorithm (1840), a fast parallel implementation of it is due to L. Csanky (1976). Its disadvantage is that it requires division by integers, so in general the field should have characteristic 0.

Relation with Galois theory

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For a given n, the elementary symmetric polynomials ek(x1,...,xn) for k = 1,..., n form an algebraic basis for the space of symmetric polynomials in x1,.... xn: every polynomial expression in the xi that is invariant under all permutations of those variables is given by a polynomial expression in those elementary symmetric polynomials, and this expression is unique up to equivalence of polynomial expressions. This is a general fact known as the fundamental theorem of symmetric polynomials, and Newton's identities provide explicit formulae in the case of power sum symmetric polynomials. Applied to the monic polynomial   with all coefficients ak considered as free parameters, this means that every symmetric polynomial expression S(x1,...,xn) in its roots can be expressed instead as a polynomial expression P(a1,...,an) in terms of its coefficients only, in other words without requiring knowledge of the roots. This fact also follows from general considerations in Galois theory (one views the ak as elements of a base field with roots in an extension field whose Galois group permutes them according to the full symmetric group, and the field fixed under all elements of the Galois group is the base field).

The Newton identities also permit expressing the elementary symmetric polynomials in terms of the power sum symmetric polynomials, showing that any symmetric polynomial can also be expressed in the power sums. In fact the first n power sums also form an algebraic basis for the space of symmetric polynomials.

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There are a number of (families of) identities that, while they should be distinguished from Newton's identities, are very closely related to them.

A variant using complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials

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Denoting by hk the complete homogeneous symmetric polynomial (that is, the sum of all monomials of degree k), the power sum polynomials also satisfy identities similar to Newton's identities, but not involving any minus signs. Expressed as identities of in the ring of symmetric functions, they read

 

valid for all n ≥ k ≥ 1. Contrary to Newton's identities, the left-hand sides do not become zero for large k, and the right-hand sides contain ever more non-zero terms. For the first few values of k, one has

 

These relations can be justified by an argument analogous to the one by comparing coefficients in power series given above, based in this case on the generating function identity

 

Proofs of Newton's identities, like these given below, cannot be easily adapted to prove these variants of those identities.

Expressing elementary symmetric polynomials in terms of power sums

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As mentioned, Newton's identities can be used to recursively express elementary symmetric polynomials in terms of power sums. Doing so requires the introduction of integer denominators, so it can be done in the ring ΛQ of symmetric functions with rational coefficients:

 

and so forth.[2] The general formula can be conveniently expressed as

 

where the Bn is the complete exponential Bell polynomial. This expression also leads to the following identity for generating functions:

 

Applied to a monic polynomial, these formulae express the coefficients in terms of the power sums of the roots: replace each ei by ai and each pk by sk.

Expressing complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials in terms of power sums

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The analogous relations involving complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials can be similarly developed, giving equations

 

and so forth, in which there are only plus signs. In terms of the complete Bell polynomial,

 

These expressions correspond exactly to the cycle index polynomials of the symmetric groups, if one interprets the power sums pi as indeterminates: the coefficient in the expression for hk of any monomial p1m1p2m2...plml is equal to the fraction of all permutations of k that have m1 fixed points, m2 cycles of length 2, ..., and ml cycles of length l. Explicitly, this coefficient can be written as   where  ; this N is the number permutations commuting with any given permutation π of the given cycle type. The expressions for the elementary symmetric functions have coefficients with the same absolute value, but a sign equal to the sign of π, namely (−1)m2+m4+....

It can be proved by considering the following inductive step:

 

By analogy with the derivation of the generating function of the  , we can also obtain the generating function of the  , in terms of the power sums, as:

 

This generating function is thus the plethystic exponential of  .

Expressing power sums in terms of elementary symmetric polynomials

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One may also use Newton's identities to express power sums in terms of elementary symmetric polynomials, which does not introduce denominators:

 

The first four formulas were obtained by Albert Girard in 1629 (thus before Newton).[3]

The general formula (for all positive integers m) is:

 

This can be conveniently stated in terms of ordinary Bell polynomials as

 

or equivalently as the generating function:[4]

 

which is analogous to the Bell polynomial exponential generating function given in the previous subsection.

The multiple summation formula above can be proved by considering the following inductive step:

 

Expressing power sums in terms of complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials

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Finally one may use the variant identities involving complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials similarly to express power sums in term of them:

 

and so on. Apart from the replacement of each ei by the corresponding hi, the only change with respect to the previous family of identities is in the signs of the terms, which in this case depend just on the number of factors present: the sign of the monomial   is −(−1)m1+m2+m3+.... In particular the above description of the absolute value of the coefficients applies here as well.

The general formula (for all non-negative integers m) is:

 

Expressions as determinants

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One can obtain explicit formulas for the above expressions in the form of determinants, by considering the first n of Newton's identities (or it counterparts for the complete homogeneous polynomials) as linear equations in which the elementary symmetric functions are known and the power sums are unknowns (or vice versa), and apply Cramer's rule to find the solution for the final unknown. For instance taking Newton's identities in the form

 

we consider   and   as unknowns, and solve for the final one, giving

 

Solving for   instead of for   is similar, as the analogous computations for the complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials; in each case the details are slightly messier than the final results, which are (Macdonald 1979, p. 20):

 

Note that the use of determinants makes that the formula for   has additional minus signs compared to the one for  , while the situation for the expanded form given earlier is opposite. As remarked in (Littlewood 1950, p. 84) one can alternatively obtain the formula for   by taking the permanent of the matrix for   instead of the determinant, and more generally an expression for any Schur polynomial can be obtained by taking the corresponding immanant of this matrix.

Derivation of the identities

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Each of Newton's identities can easily be checked by elementary algebra; however, their validity in general needs a proof. Here are some possible derivations.

From the special case n = k

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One can obtain the k-th Newton identity in k variables by substitution into

 

as follows. Substituting xj for t gives

 

Summing over all j gives

 

where the terms for i = 0 were taken out of the sum because p0 is (usually) not defined. This equation immediately gives the k-th Newton identity in k variables. Since this is an identity of symmetric polynomials (homogeneous) of degree k, its validity for any number of variables follows from its validity for k variables. Concretely, the identities in n < k variables can be deduced by setting k − n variables to zero. The k-th Newton identity in n > k variables contains more terms on both sides of the equation than the one in k variables, but its validity will be assured if the coefficients of any monomial match. Because no individual monomial involves more than k of the variables, the monomial will survive the substitution of zero for some set of n − k (other) variables, after which the equality of coefficients is one that arises in the k-th Newton identity in k (suitably chosen) variables.

Comparing coefficients in series

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Another derivation can be obtained by computations in the ring of formal power series R[[t]], where R is Z[x1,..., xn], the ring of polynomials in n variables x1,..., xn over the integers.

Starting again from the basic relation

 

and "reversing the polynomials" by substituting 1/t for t and then multiplying both sides by tn to remove negative powers of t, gives

 

(the above computation should be performed in the field of fractions of R[[t]]; alternatively, the identity can be obtained simply by evaluating the product on the left side)

Swapping sides and expressing the ai as the elementary symmetric polynomials they stand for gives the identity

 

One formally differentiates both sides with respect to t, and then (for convenience) multiplies by t, to obtain

 

where the polynomial on the right hand side was first rewritten as a rational function in order to be able to factor out a product out of the summation, then the fraction in the summand was developed as a series in t, using the formula

 

and finally the coefficient of each t j was collected, giving a power sum. (The series in t is a formal power series, but may alternatively be thought of as a series expansion for t sufficiently close to 0, for those more comfortable with that; in fact one is not interested in the function here, but only in the coefficients of the series.) Comparing coefficients of tk on both sides one obtains

 

which gives the k-th Newton identity.

As a telescopic sum of symmetric function identities

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The following derivation, given essentially in (Mead, 1992), is formulated in the ring of symmetric functions for clarity (all identities are independent of the number of variables). Fix some k > 0, and define the symmetric function r(i) for 2 ≤ i ≤ k as the sum of all distinct monomials of degree k obtained by multiplying one variable raised to the power i with k − i distinct other variables (this is the monomial symmetric function mγ where γ is a hook shape (i,1,1,...,1)). In particular r(k) = pk; for r(1) the description would amount to that of ek, but this case was excluded since here monomials no longer have any distinguished variable. All products pieki can be expressed in terms of the r(j) with the first and last case being somewhat special. One has

 

since each product of terms on the left involving distinct variables contributes to r(i), while those where the variable from pi already occurs among the variables of the term from eki contributes to r(i + 1), and all terms on the right are so obtained exactly once. For i = k one multiplies by e0 = 1, giving trivially

 

Finally the product p1ek−1 for i = 1 gives contributions to r(i + 1) = r(2) like for other values i < k, but the remaining contributions produce k times each monomial of ek, since any one of the variables may come from the factor p1; thus

 

The k-th Newton identity is now obtained by taking the alternating sum of these equations, in which all terms of the form r(i) cancel out.

Combinatorial Proof

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A short combinatorial proof of Newton's Identities is given in (Zeilberger, 1984)[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Delves, L. M. (1967). "A Numerical Method of Locating the Zeros of an Analytic Function". Mathematics of Computation. 21 (100): 543–560. doi:10.2307/2004999. JSTOR 2004999.
  2. ^ N.b., the coefficients of the weighted product terms in the sum given by the identity above are related to the M2 numbers in Section 26.4 of the DLMF and/or the coefficients involved in the expansions of Faa di Bruno's formula
  3. ^ Tignol, Jean-Pierre (2004). Galois' theory of algebraic equations (Reprinted ed.). River Edge, NJ: World Scientific. pp. 37–38. ISBN 981-02-4541-6.
  4. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Symmetric Polynomial". MathWorld.
  5. ^ Zeilberger, Doron (1984). "A Combinatorial Proof of Newton's Identities". Discrete Mathematics. 49 (3): 319. doi:10.1016/0012-365X(84)90171-7.
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