Bombieri norm

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In mathematics, the Bombieri norm, named after Enrico Bombieri, is a norm on homogeneous polynomials with coefficient in \mathbb R or \mathbb C (there is also a version for univariate polynomials). This norm has many remarkable properties, the most important being listed in this article.

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[edit] Bombieri scalar product for homogeneous polynomials with N variables

This norm comes from a scalar product which can be defined as follows: \forall \alpha,\beta \in \mathbb{N}^N we have \langle X^\alpha | X^\beta \rangle = 0 if \alpha \neq \beta

\forall \alpha \in \mathbb{N}^N we define ||X^\alpha||^2 = \frac{|\alpha|!}{\alpha!}.

In the above definition and in the rest of this article we use the following notation:

if \alpha = (\alpha_1,\dots,\alpha_N) \in \mathbb{N}^N, we write |\alpha| = \Sigma_{i=1}^N \alpha_i and \alpha! = \Pi_{i=1}^N (\alpha_i!) and X^\alpha = \Pi_{i=1}^N X_i^{\alpha_i}.

[edit] Bombieri inequality

The most remarkable property of this norm is the Bombieri inequality:

let P,Q be two homogeneous polynomials respectively of degree d^\circ(P) and d^\circ(Q) with N variables, then, the following inequality holds:

\frac{d^\circ(P)!d^\circ(Q)!}{(d^\circ(P)+d^\circ(Q))!}||P||^2 \, ||Q||^2 \leq 
 ||P\cdot Q||^2 \leq ||P||^2 \, ||Q||^2.

In fact Bombieri inequality is the left hand side of the above statement, the right and side means that Bombieri norm is a norm of algebra (giving only the left hand side is meaningless, because in this case, we can achieve the same result with any norm by multiplying the norm by a well chosen factor).

This result means that the product of two polynomials can not be arbitrarily small and this is fundamental.

[edit] Invariance by isometry

Another important property is that the Bombieri norm is invariant by composition with an isometry:

let P,Q be two homogeneous polynomials of degree d with N variables and let h be an isometry of \mathbb R^N (or \mathbb C^N). Then, the we have \langle P\circ h|Q\circ h\rangle = \langle P|Q\rangle. When P = Q this implies ||P\circ h||=||P||.

This result follows from a nice integral formulation of the scalar product:

\langle P|Q\rangle = {d+N-1 \choose N-1} \int_{S^N} P(Z)Q(Z)\,d\sigma(Z)

where SN is the unit sphere of \mathbb C^N with its canonical mesure dσ(Z).

[edit] Other inequalities

Let P be a homogeneous polynomial of degree d with N variables and let Z \in \mathbb C^N. We have:

  • |P(Z)| \leq ||P|| \, ||Z||_E^d
  • ||\nabla P(Z)||_E \leq d ||P|| \, ||Z||_E^d

where | | . | | E denotes the euclidian norm.

[edit] References