Cumulants in rectangular finite free probability and beta-deformed singular values
Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 20:56 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The (n,d)-rectangular cumulants linearize the rectangular convolution and converge to q-rectangular free cumulants as d tends to infinity with 1+n/d to q.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The (n,d)-rectangular cumulants are defined so that they linearize the (n,d)-rectangular convolution from finite free probability; they converge to the q-rectangular free cumulants when d tends to infinity and 1 plus n over d tends to q in [1, infinity).
What carries the argument
The (n,d)-rectangular cumulants, which satisfy explicit moment-cumulant formulas obtained by algebraic manipulation and linearize the rectangular convolution.
If this is right
- The cumulants turn convolution of polynomials into addition of cumulant sequences.
- Moment-cumulant formulas yield explicit ways to pass between moments and cumulants for rectangular finite free probability.
- In the large-d limit the formulas recover the corresponding relations in free probability.
- The differential operator exp of minus s squared over n times x to the minus n D sub x x to the n plus 1 D sub x asymptotically produces rectangular free convolution with a rectangular Gaussian of variance q s squared over q minus 1.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same algebraic approach may extend to other deformations of free probability beyond the rectangular case.
- Quantum analogues of the moment-cumulant formulas suggest direct links to noncommutative structures arising in quantum information or operator algebras.
- The root-distribution application could be tested numerically on explicit polynomial families to check the rate of convergence to the free-probability limit.
Load-bearing premise
The linearization and the convergence to q-rectangular free cumulants both rest on the specific scaling regime d to infinity with 1 plus n over d to q and on the prior definition of related cumulants.
What would settle it
A concrete pair of degree-d polynomials whose rectangular convolution has (n,d)-rectangular cumulants that are not the sum of the individual cumulants would disprove the linearization property.
Figures
read the original abstract
Motivated by the $(q,\gamma)$-cumulants, introduced by Xu [arXiv:2303.13812] to study $\beta$-deformed singular values of random matrices, we define the $(n,d)$-rectangular cumulants for polynomials of degree $d$ and prove several moment-cumulant formulas by elementary algebraic manipulations; the proof naturally leads to quantum analogues of the formulas. We further show that the $(n,d)$-rectangular cumulants linearize the $(n,d)$-rectangular convolution from Finite Free Probability and that they converge to the $q$-rectangular free cumulants from Free Probability in the regime where $d\to\infty$, $1+n/d\to q\in[1,\infty)$. As an application, we employ our formulas to study limits of symmetric empirical root distributions of sequences of polynomials with nonnegative roots. One of our results is akin to a theorem of Kabluchko [arXiv:2203.05533] and shows that applying the operator $\exp(-\frac{s^2}{n}x^{-n}D_xx^{n+1}D_x)$, where $s>0$, asymptotically amounts to taking the rectangular free convolution with the rectangular Gaussian distribution of variance $qs^2/(q-1)$.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper defines (n,d)-rectangular cumulants for polynomials of degree d via moment-cumulant formulas obtained by elementary algebraic manipulations. It proves that these cumulants linearize the (n,d)-rectangular convolution from Finite Free Probability and establishes their convergence to the q-rectangular free cumulants from Free Probability in the regime d→∞ with 1+n/d→q∈[1,∞). As an application, the formulas are used to analyze limits of symmetric empirical root distributions of sequences of polynomials with nonnegative roots, including an asymptotic result showing that the operator exp(−s²/n x^{-n} D_x x^{n+1} D_x) corresponds to rectangular free convolution with a rectangular Gaussian of variance qs²/(q−1).
Significance. If the linearization and convergence hold, the work supplies explicit algebraic tools that connect finite free probability to the rectangular free probability framework of Xu, enabling concrete computations for β-deformed singular values and asymptotic root distributions. The elementary derivations of the moment-cumulant formulas and the linearization property are clear strengths; the application result analogous to Kabluchko's theorem adds a falsifiable prediction in the polynomial setting.
major comments (1)
- [convergence statement (abstract and main convergence section)] The convergence claim (abstract and the section establishing the limit) identifies the scaled (n,d)-rectangular cumulants with Xu's (q,γ)-cumulants. The manuscript must explicitly verify that the limit reproduces Xu's generating function or recurrence relation exactly; reliance on shared motivation alone leaves the identification step unverified and load-bearing for the central convergence statement.
minor comments (1)
- [introduction] Clarify in the introduction how the (n,d)-rectangular cumulants are distinguished notationally from both classical and free cumulants to aid readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive feedback on the convergence claim. We address the major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [convergence statement (abstract and main convergence section)] The convergence claim (abstract and the section establishing the limit) identifies the scaled (n,d)-rectangular cumulants with Xu's (q,γ)-cumulants. The manuscript must explicitly verify that the limit reproduces Xu's generating function or recurrence relation exactly; reliance on shared motivation alone leaves the identification step unverified and load-bearing for the central convergence statement.
Authors: We agree that the identification requires explicit verification beyond shared motivation. In the revised manuscript we will add a direct computation in the convergence section: starting from the explicit moment-cumulant formula for the (n,d)-rectangular cumulants, we take the scaled limit d→∞ with 1+n/d→q and show that the resulting generating function satisfies Xu's recurrence relation exactly (or equivalently matches the generating function in arXiv:2303.13812). This will be presented as a self-contained lemma, removing any ambiguity in the identification. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivations are algebraically independent
full rationale
The paper defines (n,d)-rectangular cumulants via explicit moment-cumulant formulas obtained by elementary algebraic manipulations (abstract), proves linearization of the rectangular convolution directly from those formulas, and states the convergence to Xu's q-rectangular cumulants as a separate scaling limit (d→∞, 1+n/d→q) without reducing the limit identity to a fitted parameter or prior definition by construction. The citation to Xu [arXiv:2303.13812] supplies external motivation but is not load-bearing for the finite-case proofs or the limit claim itself. No self-citation chains, self-definitional loops, or renaming of known results appear in the derivation steps. The central claims remain independent of the inputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Standard algebraic properties of polynomials, derivatives, and the rectangular convolution operation in finite free probability
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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