Minimal curves in U(n) and Gl(n)+ with respect to the spectral and the trace norms
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 00:55 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Minimal curves between unitaries are unique exactly when their relative spectrum is contained in a symmetric pair on the unit circle.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In U(n) with the spectral-norm Finsler metric there is a unique minimal-length curve between U and V if and only if the spectrum of U*V is contained in {e^{i θ}, e^{-i θ}} for some θ; a full description of all minimal curves is given in the general case. For Gl(n)+ with the trace-norm metric the minimal curves are characterized by first describing the minimal curves between Hermitian matrices, which in turn produces minimal paths in U(n) under the trace norm. The set of intermediate points between two unitaries is geodesically convex whenever the spectral distance is less than 1, and the corresponding set in Gl(n)+ is always geodesically convex for any unitarily invariant norm.
What carries the argument
The spectrum of U*V, which determines whether the minimal curve in the bi-invariant spectral-norm Finsler metric on U(n) is unique.
If this is right
- When the spectrum of U*V satisfies the two-point condition the shortest curve is the only one.
- Minimal curves in Gl(n)+ are obtained from the explicit description of minimal curves joining Hermitian matrices.
- The intermediate-point set is geodesically convex whenever ||U-V||_sp < 1 for the spectral norm and for every unitarily invariant norm in Gl(n)+.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same spectral criterion may classify uniqueness of minimal curves for other bi-invariant Finsler metrics on compact Lie groups.
- The explicit list of minimal curves supplies a practical way to compute distances in U(n) for any pair satisfying the condition.
- Geodesic convexity of the intermediate set implies that small perturbations of the endpoints keep the minimal curves inside a convex region.
Load-bearing premise
The length of a curve is obtained by integrating the chosen norm of its velocity after translating back to the Lie algebra via the bi-invariance of the metric.
What would settle it
Choose concrete unitary matrices U and V such that U*V has at least three distinct eigenvalues that do not fit inside any set {e^{i θ}, e^{-i θ}}, then compute whether more than one distinct curve between them attains the same infimal length.
read the original abstract
Consider the Lie group of n x n complex unitary matrices U(n) endowed with the bi-invariant Finsler metric given by the spectral norm, ||X||_U = ||U*X||_{sp} = ||X||_{sp} for any X tangent to a unitary operator U. Given two points in U(n), in general there exists infinitely many curves of minimal length. The aim of this paper is to provide a complete description of such curves. As a consequence of this description, we conclude that there is a unique curve of minimal length between U and V if and only if the spectrum of U*V is contained in a set of the form \{e^{i \theta}, e^{-i \theta}\} for some \theta \in [0, \infty). Similar studies are done for the Grassmann manifolds. Now consider the cone of n x n positive invertible matrices Gl(n)+ endowed with the bi-invariant Finsler metric given by the trace norm, ||X||_{1, A} = ||A^{-1/2}XA^{-1/2}||_1 for any X tangent to A \in Gl(n)+. In this context, given two points A,B \in Gl(n)+ there exists infinitely many curves of minimal length. In order to provide a complete description of such curves, we provide a characterization of the minimal curves joining two Hermitian matrices X, Y \in H(n). As a consequence of the last description, we provide a way to construct minimal paths in the group of unitary matrices U(n) endowed with the bi-invariant Finsler metric ||X||_{1, U} = ||U*X||_{1} = ||X||_{1} for any X tangent to U \in U(n). We also study the set of intermediate points in all the previous contexts. Between two given unitary matrices U and V we prove that this set is geodesically convex provided ||U - V||_{sp} < 1. In Gl(n)+ this set is geodesically convex for every unitarily invariant norm.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript claims to give a complete description of length-minimizing curves for the bi-invariant Finsler metric induced by the spectral norm on U(n), from which it derives that a unique minimal curve between U and V exists if and only if spec(U*V) is contained in a set of the form {e^{iθ}, e^{-iθ}} for some θ ≥ 0. Analogous results are stated for the trace-norm metric on GL(n)+, including a characterization of minimal curves between Hermitian matrices X, Y ∈ H(n) that is then used to construct minimal paths in U(n), together with geodesic-convexity statements for the set of intermediate points (under the condition ||U−V||_sp < 1 on U(n) and for every unitarily invariant norm on GL(n)+). Similar studies are announced for Grassmann manifolds.
Significance. If the characterizations hold, the work supplies explicit if-and-only-if uniqueness criteria and convexity results for bi-invariant Finsler metrics on classical matrix groups; such statements are useful for geodesic analysis and could inform numerical methods on unitary and positive-definite manifolds. The reduction from GL(n)+ to Hermitian matrices and the spectrum-based uniqueness condition are concrete contributions when rigorously established.
minor comments (3)
- The abstract asserts complete characterizations and an if-and-only-if uniqueness statement; the main text should make the key reduction steps and supporting lemmas for the spectrum condition explicit (e.g., the precise section deriving the iff statement from the curve description).
- The statement that the set of intermediate points is geodesically convex for ||U−V||_sp < 1 on U(n) is load-bearing for applications; a brief indication of the argument (or reference to the relevant proposition) would improve readability.
- Notation for the norms (||·||_sp, ||·||_1, ||·||_{1,A}) is introduced in the abstract but should be recalled with a short reminder at the beginning of each main section.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful summary of our manuscript, the positive significance assessment, and the recommendation of minor revision. No specific major comments appear in the provided report, so we have nothing to address point-by-point at this stage. We remain available to incorporate any minor suggestions from the editor or referee.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper derives a complete characterization of length-minimizing curves for the bi-invariant spectral-norm Finsler metric on U(n) and the trace-norm metric on Gl(n)+, then obtains the spectrum condition for uniqueness as a direct consequence. No step reduces by definition to its own inputs, no parameter is fitted to a subset and renamed as a prediction, and no load-bearing premise rests on a self-citation chain. The reductions to Hermitian matrices and geodesic-convexity statements are independent of the target uniqueness result and rely on standard Lie-group and Finsler-geometry techniques that remain externally verifiable. The derivation is therefore self-contained.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption The spectral norm defines a bi-invariant Finsler metric on the Lie group U(n).
- domain assumption The trace norm defines a bi-invariant Finsler metric on the cone Gl(n)+.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
there is a unique curve of minimal length between U and V if and only if the spectrum of U*V is contained in a set of the form {e^{i θ}, e^{-i θ}}
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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