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arxiv: 2604.20332 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-22 · 🧮 math.NT

On the singularities of differential equations satisfied by E-functions

Pith reviewed 2026-05-09 23:38 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.NT
keywords E-functionsSiegel E-functionsdifferential equationssingularitiesinterpolationBessel functionG-functions
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The pith

There exists an E-function f with f(1) equal to any value taken by a Siegel E-function at an algebraic point, such that 1 is not a singularity of the minimal differential equation for f.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper proves that any value ξ attained by a Siegel E-function at an algebraic point can be realized as f(1) for some E-function f whose minimal differential equation has no singularity at the point 1. This follows from a general interpolation construction for E-functions. The construction fails at the point 0 when ξ comes from the Bessel function evaluated at a nonzero algebraic number. The result supplies an E-function analogue of a question raised by Yves André for G-functions about controlling singularities in the differential equations of these special functions.

Core claim

Let ξ be a value, at an algebraic point, of a Siegel E-function. There exists an E-function f such that f(1)=ξ and 1 is not a singularity of the minimal differential equation satisfied by f. The same property does not hold at the point 0 when ξ is the value at a nonzero algebraic number of the Bessel function.

What carries the argument

A general interpolation result for E-functions that produces a new E-function with a prescribed value at an algebraic point while ensuring the minimal differential equation remains regular at a chosen point such as 1.

If this is right

  • Such an f exists for every Siegel E-function value ξ at any algebraic point.
  • The minimal differential equation of f can be made regular at 1 by the interpolation.
  • The regularity property fails at 0 for values of the Bessel function at nonzero algebraic points.
  • This gives a positive answer to the E-function version of André's question on singularities for G-functions.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The interpolation technique might be adaptable to produce E-functions regular at other prescribed algebraic points besides 1.
  • Similar constructions could be tested for other classical E-functions such as the exponential or hypergeometric series.
  • The distinction between behavior at 0 and at 1 may reflect the normalization conventions built into the definition of E-functions.

Load-bearing premise

The general interpolation result for E-functions applies to the given target value ξ without further arithmetic or analytic restrictions.

What would settle it

Exhibit one Siegel E-function and one algebraic point where every E-function f satisfying f(1)=ξ has a singularity at 1 in its minimal differential equation.

read the original abstract

Let $\xi$ be a value, at an algebraic point, of a Siegel $E$-function. As a special case of a very general interpolation result, we prove that there exists an $E$-function $f$ such that $f(1)=\xi$, and such that 1 is not a singularity of the minimal differential equation satisfied by $f$. We prove that the same property does not hold at the point $0$, when $\xi$ is the value at a non-zero algebraic number of the Bessel function. This answers an analogue of a question asked by Yves Andr{\'e} for $G$-functions.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 3 minor

Summary. The paper proves that if ξ is the value at an algebraic point of a Siegel E-function, then there exists an E-function f satisfying f(1)=ξ such that 1 is not a singularity of the minimal differential equation satisfied by f. This is obtained as a special case of a general interpolation result for E-functions. The paper also shows that the analogous statement fails at z=0 when ξ is a non-zero algebraic value of the Bessel E-function, thereby answering an analogue of a question of Yves André for G-functions.

Significance. If the general interpolation result applies unconditionally to all such ξ, the positive existence result at z=1 (contrasted with the explicit counter-example at z=0 for Bessel) clarifies the dependence of singularity location on the target point and strengthens the arithmetic theory of E-functions. The construction supplies a concrete tool for producing E-functions with prescribed values while controlling the poles of their minimal equations, which may be useful in transcendence applications.

major comments (1)
  1. [Statement and proof of the general interpolation theorem] The main existence claim (stated in the abstract and proved via the general interpolation result in the body) is load-bearing on the assertion that the interpolation produces an E-function whose minimal equation has no pole at z=1 for every algebraic E-value ξ. The manuscript should add an explicit remark confirming that the Siegel growth and rationality conditions on the Taylor coefficients are inherited without extra arithmetic hypotheses on ξ (such as denominator bounds or linear independence over Q-bar).
minor comments (3)
  1. [Introduction] The introduction should cite the precise formulation of André's question for G-functions to make the analogy fully explicit.
  2. [Bessel counter-example] In the counter-example section for the Bessel function, the argument that 0 remains a singularity for any interpolating E-function would benefit from a short explicit verification that the order of the pole cannot be removed by the interpolation step.
  3. [Notation and preliminary lemmas] Notation for the minimal differential equation (e.g., the operator L_f) should be introduced once and used consistently; a few instances of undefined symbols appear in the technical lemmas.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive assessment and the recommendation of minor revision. We address the single major comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Statement and proof of the general interpolation theorem] The main existence claim (stated in the abstract and proved via the general interpolation result in the body) is load-bearing on the assertion that the interpolation produces an E-function whose minimal equation has no pole at z=1 for every algebraic E-value ξ. The manuscript should add an explicit remark confirming that the Siegel growth and rationality conditions on the Taylor coefficients are inherited without extra arithmetic hypotheses on ξ (such as denominator bounds or linear independence over Q-bar).

    Authors: The referee is correct that the proof relies on the interpolation preserving the E-function properties without additional assumptions on ξ. The construction in the general interpolation result is designed to work for any algebraic ξ, inheriting the Siegel growth condition from the original E-function and ensuring rationality of coefficients by the algebraic nature of ξ and the interpolation method used. We will add an explicit remark immediately following the statement of the general interpolation theorem to confirm that no extra arithmetic hypotheses on ξ are required. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: result is a special case of an independent general interpolation theorem

full rationale

The paper states its positive result as a direct special case of a very general interpolation result for E-functions, with the negative result at z=0 for the Bessel function established separately by explicit counterexample. No equations, definitions, or steps in the provided text reduce the claimed existence of f (with f(1)=ξ and 1 non-singular) to a fitted parameter, self-referential definition, or load-bearing self-citation whose own justification collapses back to the target statement. The derivation chain therefore remains self-contained against the external arithmetic and analytic properties of Siegel E-functions.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on the standard definition of Siegel E-functions and the existence of a general interpolation theorem whose own axioms are not detailed here.

axioms (2)
  • standard math Siegel E-functions satisfy linear differential equations with polynomial coefficients and obey the standard arithmetic growth conditions on Taylor coefficients.
    Invoked throughout the abstract as the ambient class of functions.
  • domain assumption There exists a very general interpolation result for E-functions that allows control of the value at 1 while preserving regularity at that point.
    Cited as the source of the special case proved in the paper.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5406 in / 1436 out tokens · 87410 ms · 2026-05-09T23:38:26.705407+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Reference graph

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