Bernstein-Sato theory modulo p^m
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 04:01 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The Bernstein-Sato polynomial for polynomials over Z/p^m has only rational roots whose negative values match the mod-p reduction.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For any polynomial f with coefficients in Z/p^m the associated Bernstein-Sato polynomial b_f(s) has only rational roots. The negative roots of b_f(s) are identical to the negative roots of the Bernstein-Sato polynomial of the reduction of f modulo p. Roots carrying sufficiently high p-torsion strength are obtained by reducing Bernstein-Sato roots that exist in characteristic zero.
What carries the argument
The Bernstein-Sato polynomial over Z/p^m, constructed so that it satisfies a functional equation reducing compatibly to the mod-p case and carries a p-torsion strength invariant on its roots.
If this is right
- Negative roots of the Z/p^m Bernstein-Sato polynomial agree exactly with those of its mod-p reduction.
- Roots may be positive, in contrast to the characteristic-zero theory.
- Roots of high p-torsion strength arise by reduction from characteristic-zero roots.
- The construction preserves rationality of all roots while extending the theory to positive characteristic with torsion.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The strength filtration on roots may allow some characteristic-zero roots to be recovered from finite-characteristic data by lifting through successive p-powers.
- The same construction could be used to compare singularity invariants of hypersurfaces across mixed-characteristic settings.
Load-bearing premise
A Bernstein-Sato polynomial can be defined for polynomials with Z/p^m coefficients in a manner compatible with the existing theory when m equals 1.
What would settle it
An explicit polynomial f over Z/p^2 together with a direct computation of its Bernstein-Sato polynomial showing either an irrational root or a negative root different from the one obtained after reduction modulo p.
read the original abstract
For fixed prime integer $p > 0$ we develop a notion of Bernstein-Sato polynomial for polynomials with $\mathbb{Z} / p^m$-coefficients, compatible with existing theory in the case $m = 1$. We show that the ``roots" of such polynomials are rational and we show that the negative roots agree with those of the mod-$p$ reduction. We give examples to show that, surprisingly, roots may be positive in this context. Moreover, our construction allows us to define a notion of ``strength" for roots by measuring $p$-torsion, and we show that ``strong" roots give rise to roots in characteristic zero through mod-$p$ reduction.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript develops a Bernstein-Sato polynomial for polynomials with coefficients in Z/p^m Z that is compatible with the existing theory when m=1. It proves that the roots are rational, that the negative roots agree with those of the mod-p reduction, provides examples showing that roots may be positive, introduces a notion of 'strength' for roots measured by p-torsion, and shows that strong roots lift to roots in characteristic zero via mod-p reduction.
Significance. If the construction and proofs hold, the work extends Bernstein-Sato theory to a p-adic setting, introduces a novel strength invariant that bridges positive and zero characteristics, and supplies the first examples of positive roots. These features could influence the study of singularities and D-modules over rings of mixed characteristic. The compatibility with the m=1 case and the rationality result are particularly useful.
minor comments (2)
- The abstract states the main theorems but the manuscript would benefit from a brief outline of the key steps in the definition of the Bernstein-Sato polynomial over Z/p^m Z (e.g., how the functional equation is adapted) already in the introduction.
- Notation for the new 'strength' invariant should be introduced with a dedicated symbol and a short comparison table to the classical roots when m=1.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive summary of the manuscript, recognition of its significance in extending Bernstein-Sato theory to mixed characteristic, and recommendation of minor revision. No major comments were raised in the report.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper defines a Bernstein-Sato polynomial over Z/p^m coefficients in a manner stated to be compatible with the m=1 case, then proves rationality of roots, agreement of negative roots with the mod-p case, existence of positive roots, and a p-torsion strength notion that lifts to characteristic zero. No equations, reductions, or self-citations are visible that would make any claimed result equivalent to its inputs by construction. The derivation chain consists of independent definitions followed by proofs, with no fitted parameters renamed as predictions or uniqueness theorems imported from prior self-work in a load-bearing way. This is the expected outcome for a self-contained theoretical construction in algebraic geometry.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption A Bernstein-Sato polynomial exists and satisfies standard functional equations when coefficients are reduced modulo p (m=1 case).
invented entities (1)
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strength of a root
no independent evidence
discussion (0)
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