Tau functions are an important ingredient in the modern mathematical theory of
integrable system
In mathematics, integrability is a property of certain dynamical systems. While there are several distinct formal definitions, informally speaking, an integrable system is a dynamical system with sufficiently many conserved quantities, or first i ...
s, and have numerous applications in a variety of other domains. They were originally introduced by
Ryogo Hirota in his ''direct method'' approach to
soliton
In mathematics and physics, a soliton or solitary wave is a self-reinforcing wave packet that maintains its shape while it propagates at a constant velocity. Solitons are caused by a cancellation of nonlinear and dispersive effects in the mediu ...
equations, based on expressing them in an equivalent bilinear form.
The term tau function, or
-function, was first used systematically by
Mikio Sato
is a Japanese mathematician known for founding the fields of algebraic analysis, hyperfunctions, and holonomic quantum fields. He is a professor at the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Kyoto.
Education
Sato studied at the Unive ...
[ Sato, Mikio, "Soliton equations as dynamical systems on infinite dimensional Grassmann manifolds", ''Kokyuroku, RIMS, Kyoto Univ.'', 30–46 (1981).] and his students
in the specific context of the
Kadomtsev–Petviashvili (or KP) equation and related
integrable hierarchies. It is a central ingredient in the theory of
solitons
In mathematics and physics, a soliton or solitary wave is a self-reinforcing wave packet that maintains its shape while it propagates at a constant velocity. Solitons are caused by a cancellation of nonlinear and dispersive effects in the mediu ...
. In this setting, given any
-function satisfying a Hirota-type system of bilinear equations (see below), the corresponding solutions of the equations of the integrable hierarchy are explicitly expressible in terms of it and its logarithmic derivatives up to a finite order. Tau functions also appear as
matrix model partition functions in the spectral theory of
random matrices
In probability theory and mathematical physics, a random matrix is a matrix-valued random variable—that is, a matrix in which some or all elements are random variables. Many important properties of physical systems can be represented mathemat ...
,
[ ][ ][ ] and may also serve as
generating function
In mathematics, a generating function is a way of encoding an infinite sequence of numbers () by treating them as the coefficients of a formal power series. This series is called the generating function of the sequence. Unlike an ordinary ser ...
s, in the sense of
combinatorics
Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and an end in obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many a ...
and
enumerative geometry
In mathematics, enumerative geometry is the branch of algebraic geometry concerned with counting numbers of solutions to geometric questions, mainly by means of intersection theory.
History
The problem of Apollonius is one of the earliest ex ...
, especially in relation to
moduli spaces
In mathematics, in particular algebraic geometry, a moduli space is a geometric space (usually a scheme or an algebraic stack) whose points represent algebro-geometric objects of some fixed kind, or isomorphism classes of such objects. Such spa ...
of Riemann surfaces, and enumeration of
branched covering In mathematics, a branched covering is a map that is almost a covering map, except on a small set.
In topology
In topology, a map is a ''branched covering'' if it is a covering map everywhere except for a nowhere dense set known as the branch se ...
s, or so-called
Hurwitz numbers.
[ ]
There are two notions of
-functions, both introduced by the
Sato school. The first is ''
isospectral
In mathematics, two linear operators are called isospectral or cospectral if they have the same spectrum. Roughly speaking, they are supposed to have the same sets of eigenvalues, when those are counted with multiplicity.
The theory of isospec ...
-functions'' of the ''
Sato–
Segal
Segal, and its variants including Sagal, Segel, Sigal or Siegel, is a family name which is primarily Ashkenazi Jewish.
The name is said to be derived from Hebrew ''segan leviyyah'' (assistant to the Levites) although a minority of sources claim ...
–Wilson type''
for integrable hierarchies, such as the KP hierarchy, which are parametrized by linear operators satisfying
isospectral
In mathematics, two linear operators are called isospectral or cospectral if they have the same spectrum. Roughly speaking, they are supposed to have the same sets of eigenvalues, when those are counted with multiplicity.
The theory of isospec ...
deformation equations of
Lax
Los Angeles International Airport , commonly referred to as LAX (with each letter pronounced individually), is the primary international airport serving Los Angeles, California and its surrounding metropolitan area. LAX is located in the We ...
type. The second is ''
isomonodromic -functions''.
Depending on the specific application, a
-function may either be: 1) an analytic function of a finite or infinite number of independent, commuting flow variables, or deformation parameters; 2) a discrete function of a finite or infinite number of denumerable variables; 3) a formal power series expansion in a finite or infinite number of expansion variables, which need have no convergence domain, but serves as generating function for certain enumerative invariants appearing as the coefficients of the series; 4) a finite or infinite (Fredholm) determinant whose entries are either specific polynomial or quasi-polynomial functions, or parametric integrals, and their derivatives; 5) the
Pfaffian
In mathematics, the determinant of a skew-symmetric matrix can always be written as the square of a polynomial in the matrix entries, a polynomial with integer coefficients that only depend on the size of the matrix. The value of this polynomial ...
of a skew symmetric matrix (either finite or infinite dimensional) with entries similarly of polynomial or quasi-polynomial type. Examples of all these types are given below.
In the
''Hamilton–Jacobi'' approach to
''Liouville integrable Hamiltonian systems'', ''
Hamilton's principal function
Buck Meadows (formerly Hamilton's and Hamilton's Station) is a census-designated place in Mariposa County, California, United States. It is located east-northeast of Smith Peak, at an elevation of . The population was 21 at the 2020 census.
Bu ...
'', evaluated on the level surfaces of a complete set of
Poisson commuting invariants, plays a role similar to the
-function, serving both as a generating function for the canonical transformation to linearizing canonical coordinates and, when evaluated on simultaneous level sets of a complete set of Poisson commuting invariants, as a complete solution 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 mechan ...
.
Tau functions: isospectral and isomonodromic
A
-function of
isospectral
In mathematics, two linear operators are called isospectral or cospectral if they have the same spectrum. Roughly speaking, they are supposed to have the same sets of eigenvalues, when those are counted with multiplicity.
The theory of isospec ...
type is defined as a solution of the Hirota bilinear equations (see below), from which the linear operator undergoing isospectral evolution can be uniquely reconstructed. Geometrically, in the
Sato and
Segal
Segal, and its variants including Sagal, Segel, Sigal or Siegel, is a family name which is primarily Ashkenazi Jewish.
The name is said to be derived from Hebrew ''segan leviyyah'' (assistant to the Levites) although a minority of sources claim ...
-Wilson
sense, it is the value of the determinant of a
Fredholm integral operator In mathematics, the Fredholm integral equation is an integral equation whose solution gives rise to Fredholm theory, the study of Fredholm kernels and Fredholm operators. The integral equation was studied by Ivar Fredholm. A useful method to sol ...
, interpreted as the orthogonal projection of an element of a suitably defined (infinite dimensional)
Grassmann manifold onto the ''origin'', as that element evolves under the linear exponential action of a maximal abelian subgroup of the general linear group. It typically arises as a
partition function, in the sense of
statistical mechanics, many-body
quantum mechanics
Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, q ...
or
quantum field theory
In theoretical physics, quantum field theory (QFT) is a theoretical framework that combines classical field theory, special relativity, and quantum mechanics. QFT is used in particle physics to construct physical models of subatomic particles a ...
, as the underlying measure undergoes a linear exponential deformation.
''
Isomonodromic -functions'' for linear systems of
Fuchsian type are defined below in . For the more general case of linear ordinary differential equations with rational coefficients, including irregular singularities, they are developed in reference.
Hirota bilinear residue relation for KP tau functions
A KP (
Kadomtsev–Petviashvili)
-function
is a function of an infinite collection
of variables (called ''KP flow variables'') that satisfies the bilinear formal residue equation
identically in the
variables, where
is the
coefficient in the formal Laurent expansion resulting from expanding all factors as Laurent series in
, and
As explained below in the section , every such
-function determines a set of solutions to the equations of the KP hierarchy.
Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation
If
is a KP
-function satisfying
the Hirota residue equation () and we identify the first three flow variables as
:
it follows that the function
:
satisfies the
(spatial)
(time) dimensional nonlinear partial differential equation
known as the
''Kadomtsev-Petviashvili'' (KP) ''equation''. This equation plays a prominent role in plasma physics and in shallow water ocean waves.
Taking further logarithmic derivatives of
gives an infinite sequence of functions that satisfy further systems of nonlinear autonomous PDE's, each involving partial derivatives of finite order with respect to a finite number of the KP flow parameters
. These are collectively known as the ''KP hierarchy''.
Formal Baker–Akhiezer function and the KP hierarchy
If we define the (formal) Baker-Akhiezer function
by Sato's formula
:
and expand it as a formal series in the powers of the variable
:
this satisfies an infinite sequence of compatible evolution equations
where
is a linear ordinary differential operator of degree
in the variable
, with coefficients that are functions of the flow variables
, defined as follows
:
where
is the formal pseudo-differential operator
:
with
,
:
is the ''wave operator'' and
denotes the projection to the part of
containing
purely non-negative powers of
; i.e. the differential operator part of
.
The pseudodifferential operator
satisfies the infinite system of
isospectral deformation equations
and the
compatibility conditions for both the system () and
() are
This is a compatible infinite system of nonlinear partial differential equations, known as the ''KP (Kadomtsev-Petviashvili) hierarchy'', for the functions
, with respect to the set
of independent variables, each of which contains only a finite number of
's, and derivatives only with respect to the three independent variables
. The first nontrivial case of these
is the
Kadomtsev-Petviashvili equation ().
Thus, every KP
-function provides a solution, at least in the formal sense, of this infinite system of nonlinear partial differential equations.
Isomonodromic systems. Isomonodromic tau functions
Fuchsian isomonodromic systems. Schlesinger equations
Consider the
overdetermined system
In mathematics, a system of equations is considered overdetermined if there are more equations than unknowns. An overdetermined system is almost always inconsistent (it has no solution) when constructed with random coefficients. However, an o ...
of first order matrix partial differential equations
where
are a set of
traceless matrices,
a set of
complex parameters,
a complex variable, and
is an invertible
matrix valued function of
and
.
These are the necessary and sufficient conditions for the based
monodromy
In mathematics, monodromy is the study of how objects from mathematical analysis, algebraic topology, algebraic geometry and differential geometry behave as they "run round" a singularity. As the name implies, the fundamental meaning of '' ...
representation of the fundamental group
of the Riemann sphere punctured at
the points
corresponding to the rational covariant derivative operator
:
to be independent of the parameters
; i.e. that changes in these parameters induce an
isomonodromic deformation. The
compatibility conditions for this system are the
Schlesinger equations
Isomonodromic -function
Defining
functions
the
Schlesinger equations () imply that the differential form
:
on the space of parameters is closed:
:
and hence, locally exact. Therefore, at least locally, there exists a function
of the parameters, defined within a multiplicative constant, such that
:
The function
is called the ''isomonodromic
-function''
associated to the fundamental solution
of the system (), ().
Hamiltonian structure of the Schlesinger equations
Defining the Lie
Poisson brackets
In mathematics and classical mechanics, the Poisson bracket is an important binary operation in Hamiltonian mechanics, playing a central role in Hamilton's equations of motion, which govern the time evolution of a Hamiltonian dynamical system. T ...
on the space of
-tuples
of
matrices:
:
:
and viewing the
functions
defined in () as Hamiltonian functions on this Poisson space, the Schlesinger equations ()
may be expressed in Hamiltonian form as
:
for any differentiable function
.
Reduction of , case to
The simplest nontrivial case of the Schlesinger equations is when
and
. By applying a
Möbius transformation
In geometry and complex analysis, a Möbius transformation of the complex plane is a rational function of the form
f(z) = \frac
of one complex variable ''z''; here the coefficients ''a'', ''b'', ''c'', ''d'' are complex numbers satisfying ''ad' ...
to the variable
,
two of the finite poles may be chosen to be at
and
, and the third viewed as the independent variable.
Setting the sum
of the matrices appearing in
(), which is an invariant of the Schlesinger equations, equal to a constant, and quotienting by its stabilizer under
conjugation, we obtain a system equivalent to the most generic case
of the six
Painlevé transcendent equations, for which many detailed classes of
explicit solutions are known.
Non-Fuchsian isomonodromic systems
For non-Fuchsian systems, with higher order poles, the ''generalized'' monodromy data include ''
Stokes matrices and connection matrices'', and there are further
isomonodromic deformation parameters associated with the local asymptotics, but the ''isomonodromic
-functions'' may be defined in a similar way, using differentials on the extended parameter space.
There is similarly a Poisson bracket structure on the space of rational matrix values functions of the spectral parameter
and corresponding spectral invariant Hamiltonians that generate the isomonodromic deformation dynamics.
Taking all possible confluences of the poles appearing in () for the
and
case, including the one at
, and making the corresponding reductions, we obtain all other instances
of the
Painlevé transcendents In mathematics, Painlevé transcendents are solutions to certain nonlinear second-order ordinary differential equations in the complex plane with the Painlevé property (the only movable singularities are poles), but which are not generally solvabl ...
, for which
numerous
special solutions are also known.
Fermionic VEV (vacuum expectation value) representations
The
fermionic Fock space , is a semi-infinite exterior product space
:
defined on a (separable) Hilbert space
with basis elements
and dual basis elements
for
.
The free fermionic creation and annihilation operators
act as endomorphisms on
via exterior and interior multiplication by the basis elements
:
and satisfy the canonical anti-commutation relations
:
These generate the standard fermionic representation of the Clifford algebra
on the direct sum
, corresponding to the scalar product
:
with the Fock space
as irreducible module.
Denote the vacuum state, in the zero fermionic charge sector
, as
:
,
which corresponds to the ''
Dirac sea
The Dirac sea is a theoretical model of the vacuum as an infinite sea of particles with negative energy. It was first postulated by the British physicist Paul Dirac in 1930 to explain the anomalous negative-energy quantum states predicted by the ...
'' of states along the real integer lattice in which all negative integer locations are occupied and all non-negative ones are empty.
This is annihilated by the following operators
:
The dual fermionic Fock space vacuum state, denoted
, is annihilated by the adjoint operators, acting to the left
:
Normal ordering
In quantum field theory a product of quantum fields, or equivalently their creation and annihilation operators, is usually said to be normal ordered (also called Wick order) when all creation operators are to the left of all annihilation operato ...
of a product of
linear operators (i.e., finite or infinite linear combinations of creation and annihilation operators) is defined so that its vacuum expectation value (VEV) vanishes
:
In particular, for a product
of a pair
of linear operators, one has
:
The ''fermionic charge'' operator
is defined as
:
The subspace
is the eigenspace of
consisting of all eigenvectors with eigenvalue
:
.
The standard orthonormal basis
for the zero fermionic charge sector
is labelled by integer
partitions
,
where
is a weakly decreasing sequence of
positive integers, which can equivalently be represented by a
Young diagram In mathematics, a Young tableau (; plural: tableaux) is a combinatorial object useful in representation theory and Schubert calculus. It provides a convenient way to describe the group representations of the symmetric and general linear groups ...
, as depicted here for the partition
.
:
An alternative notation for a partition
consists of the
Frobenius indices
, where
denotes the ''arm length''; i.e. the number
of boxes in the Young diagram to the right of the
'th diagonal box,
denotes the ''leg length'', i.e. the number of boxes in the Young diagram below the
'th diagonal box, for
, where
is the ''Frobenius rank'', which is the number of elements along the principal diagonal.
The basis element
is then given by acting on the vacuum with a product
of
pairs of creation and annihilation operators, labelled by the Frobenius indices
:
The integers
indicate, relative to the Dirac sea, the occupied non-negative sites on the integer lattice while
indicate the unoccupied negative integer sites.
The corresponding diagram, consisting of infinitely many occupied and unoccupied sites on the integer lattice that are a finite perturbation of the Dirac sea are referred to as a ''Maya diagram''.
The case of the null (emptyset) partition
gives the vacuum state, and the dual basis
is defined by
:
Any KP
-function can be expressed as a sum
where
are the KP flow variables,
is the
Schur function
corresponding to the partition
, viewed as a function of the normalized power sum variables
:
in terms of an auxiliary (finite or infinite) sequence of variables
and the constant coefficients
may be viewed as the
Plücker coordinates
In geometry, Plücker coordinates, introduced by Julius Plücker in the 19th century, are a way to assign six homogeneous coordinates to each line in projective 3-space, P3. Because they satisfy a quadratic constraint, they establish a one-to-o ...
of an
element
of the infinite dimensional Grassmannian consisting of the orbit, under the action of
the general linear group
, of the subspace
of the Hilbert space
.
This corresponds, under the ''Bose-Fermi correspondence'', to a
decomposable element
:
of the Fock space
which, up to projectivization is the image of the Grassmannian element
under the
Plücker map
:
where
(w_1, w_2, \dots ) is a basis for the subspace
w\subset \mathcal and
\cdots/math> denotes projectivization of
an element of \mathcal.
The Plücker coordinates \ satisfy an infinite set of bilinear
relations, the Plücker relations, defining the image of the Plücker embedding In mathematics, the Plücker map embeds the Grassmannian \mathbf(k,V), whose elements are ''k''- dimensional subspaces of an ''n''-dimensional vector space ''V'', in a projective space, thereby realizing it as an algebraic variety.
More precis ...
into the projectivization \mathbf(\mathcal) of the fermionic Fock space,
which are equivalent to the Hirota bilinear residue relation ().
If w = g(\mathcal_+) for a group element g \in \mathrm(\mathcal)
with fermionic representation \hat, then the \tau-function \tau_w(\mathbf) can be expressed as the fermionic vacuum state expectation value (VEV):
:\tau_w(\mathbf) = \langle 0 , \hat_+(\mathbf) \hat , 0 \rangle,
where
:\Gamma_+ =\
\subset \mathrm(\mathcal)
is the abelian subgroup of \mathrm(\mathcal) that generates the KP flows, and
: J_i := \sum_ \psi_j \psi^\dagger_, \quad i=1,2 \dots
are the ""current"" components.
Examples of solutions to the equations of the KP hierarchy
Schur functions
As seen in equation (), every KP \tau -function can be represented (at least formally) as a linear combination of Schur functions, in which the coefficients \pi_\lambda(w) satisfy the bilinear set of Plucker relations corresponding to an element w of an infinite (or finite) Grassmann manifold. In fact, the simplest class of (polynomial) tau functions consists of the Schur functions s_\lambda(\mathbf) themselves, which correspond to the special element of the Grassmann manifold whose image under the Plücker map is , \lambda>.
Multisoliton solutions
If we choose 3N complex constants
\_
with \alpha_k, \beta_k's all distinct, \gamma_k \ne 0, and define the functions
:
y_k() := e^ +\gamma_k e^ \quad k=1,\dots, N,
we arrive at the Wronskian determinant formula
:
\tau^_():=
\begin
y_1()& y_2() &\cdots& y_N()\\
y_1'()& y_2'() &\cdots& y_N'()\\
\vdots & \vdots &\ddots &\vdots\\
y_1^()& y_2^() &\cdots& y_N^()\\
\end,
which gives the general N-soliton \tau-function.[ ]
Theta function solutions associated to algebraic curves
Let X be a compact Riemann surface of genus g and fix a canonical homology basis a_1, \dots, a_g, b_1, \dots, b_g
of H_1(X,\mathbf) with intersection numbers
:
a_i \circ a_j = b_i \circ b_j =0, \quad a_i\circ b_j =\delta_,\quad 1\leq i,j \leq g.
Let \_ be a basis for the space H^1(X) of holomorphic differentials satisfying the standard normalization conditions
:
\oint_ \omega_j =\delta_, \quad \oint_\omega_j = B_,
where B is the '' Riemann matrix'' of periods.
The matrix B belongs to the ''Siegel upper half space''
:
\mathbf_g=\left\.
The Riemann \theta function on \mathbf^g corresponding to the period matrix In mathematics, in the field of algebraic geometry, the period mapping relates families of Kähler manifolds to families of Hodge structures.
Ehresmann's theorem
Let be a holomorphic submersive morphism. For a point ''b'' of ''B'', we denot ...
B is defined to be
: \theta(Z , B) := \sum_ e^.
Choose a point p_\infty \in X, a local parameter \zeta in a neighbourhood of p_ with \zeta(p_\infty)=0 and
a positive divisor
In mathematics, a divisor of an integer n, also called a factor of n, is an integer m that may be multiplied by some integer to produce n. In this case, one also says that n is a multiple of m. An integer n is divisible or evenly divisible by ...
of degree g
:
\mathcal:= \sum_^g p_i,\quad p_i \in X.
For any positive integer k\in \mathbf^+ let \Omega_k be the unique meromorphic differential of the second kind characterized by the following conditions:
* The only singularity of \Omega_k is a pole of order k+1 at p=p_\infty with vanishing residue.
* The expansion of \Omega_k around p=p_ is
*:\Omega_k = d(\zeta^ ) + \sum_^\infty Q_ \zeta^j d\zeta.
* \Omega_k is normalized to have vanishing a-cycles:
*: \oint_\Omega_j =0.
Denote by \mathbf_k \in \mathbf^g the vector of b-cycles of \Omega_k:
:(\mathbf_k)_j := \oint_ \Omega_k.
Denote the image of under the Abel
Abel ''Hábel''; ar, هابيل, Hābīl is a Biblical figure in the Book of Genesis within Abrahamic religions. He was the younger brother of Cain, and the younger son of Adam and Eve, the first couple in Biblical history. He was a shepherd ...
map
\mathcal: \mathcal^g(X) \to \mathbf^g
: \mathbf := \mathcal(\mathcal) \in \mathbf^g, \quad \mathbf_j
= \mathcal_j (\mathcal) := \sum_^g \int_^\omega_j
with arbitrary base point p_0.
Then the following is a KP \tau-function:
: \tau_(\mathbf):= e^
\theta\left(\mathbf +\sum_^\infty t_k \mathbf_k \Big, B\right) .
Matrix model partition functions as KP \tau-functions
Let d\mu_0(M) be the Lebesgue measure on the N^2 dimensional space ^ of N\times N complex Hermitian matrices.
Let \rho(M) be a conjugation invariant integrable density function
:
\rho(U M U^) = \rho(M), \quad U\in U(N).
Define a deformation family of measures
:
d\mu_(\mathbf) := e^ \rho(M) d\mu_0 (M)
for small \mathbf= (t_1, t_2, \cdots) and let
:
\tau_():= \int_d\mu_().
be the partition function for this random matrix model.
Then \tau_(\mathbf) satisfies the bilinear Hirota residue equation (), and hence is a \tau -function of the KP hierarchy.
\tau-functions of hypergeometric type. Generating function for Hurwitz numbers
Let \_ be a (doubly) infinite sequence of complex numbers.
For any integer partition \lambda = (\lambda_1, \dots, \lambda_) define the ''content product'' coefficient
:r_ := \prod_ r_,
where the product is over all pairs (i,j) of positive integers that correspond to boxes of the Young diagram of the partition \lambda , viewed as positions of matrix elements of the corresponding
\ell(\lambda) \times \lambda_1 matrix.
Then, for every pair of infinite sequences \mathbf = (t_1, t_2, \dots ) and \mathbf = (s_1, s_2, \dots ) of complex vaiables, viewed as (normalized) power sums \mathbf = mathbf \ \mathbf = mathbf/math>
of the infinite sequence of auxiliary variables \mathbf = (x_1, x_2, \dots ) and \mathbf = (y_1, y_2, \dots ), defined by: t_j := \tfrac\sum_^\infty x_a^j, \quad s_j := \tfrac \sum_^\infty y_a^j,
the function
is a ''double'' KP \tau -function, both in the \mathbf and the \mathbf variables, known as a \tau -function of ''hypergeometric type''.
In particular, choosing
:r_j = r^_j := e^
for some small parameter \beta, denoting the corresponding content product coefficient as r_\lambda^\beta
and setting \mathbf = (1, 0, \dots)=: \mathbf_0, the resulting \tau -function can be equivalently expanded as
where \ are the ''simple Hurwitz numbers'', which are
\frac times the number of ways in which an element
k_\lambda \in \mathcal_ of the symmetric group \mathcal_ in n=, \lambda, elements, with cycle lengths equal to the parts of the partition \lambda, can be factorized as a product of d 2-cycles
: k_\lambda = (a_1 b_1)\dots (a_d b_d),
and
: p_(\mathbf) = \prod_^ p_(\mathbf), \ \text\ p_i(\mathbf) := \sum_^\infty x^i_a = i t_i
is the power sum symmetric function. Equation () thus shows that the (formal) KP hypergeometric \tau -function () corresponding to the content product coefficients
r_\lambda^\beta is a generating function, in the combinatorial sense, for simple Hurwitz numbers.
References
Bibliography
*
*
*
*
*{{Citation
, last=Kodama
, first= Y.
, title=KP Solitons and the Grassmannians: Combinatorics and Geometry of Two-Dimensional Wave Patterns
, year=2017
, series = Springer Briefs in Mathematical Physics
, volume = Springer Nature
, bibcode= 2017ksgc.book.....K
Dynamical systems
Mathematical physics
Integrable systems
Solitons
Special functions
Generating functions
Partition functions
Random matrices
Combinatorics