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arxiv: 2603.15716 · v6 · pith:ILECLDZ7new · submitted 2026-03-16 · 🧮 math.DS

Rigidity and Structural Asymmetry of Bounded Solutions

Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 11:24 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.DS
keywords bounded solutionsdifferential equationscritical striprotation number hypothesisstructural asymmetrycomplex parametersrigidity
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The pith

If bounded solutions exist for both s and 1 minus conjugate s in the critical strip, then Re(s) must equal 1/2 under the rotation number hypothesis.

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

The paper studies a family of non-homogeneous linear complex differential equations on the interval from 1 to infinity, parametrized by a complex number s. It isolates a rotation number hypothesis on the non-homogeneous term that produces a structural asymmetry between s and the parameter 1 minus the conjugate of s. Under this hypothesis, the existence of two solutions that both stay bounded on [1, +∞) and share the initial condition value 1 forces the real part of s to be exactly 1/2. A reader would care because the result ties the location of the parameter inside the critical strip directly to a boundedness property of the solutions.

Core claim

Under the rotation number hypothesis on the non-homogeneous term, if two solutions with identical initial condition 1 corresponding to parameters s and 1 minus the conjugate of s are both bounded on [1, +∞), then the real part of s equals 1/2. This establishes a structural asymmetry between the two parameters when they lie in the critical strip.

What carries the argument

The rotation number hypothesis on the non-homogeneous term, which creates the structural asymmetry between solutions for s and 1 minus conjugate s.

If this is right

  • Boundedness on [1, +∞) with initial value 1 cannot hold simultaneously for both parameters unless the real part of s is 1/2.
  • The hypothesis turns boundedness into a necessary condition that selects parameters on the line Re(s) = 1/2 inside the critical strip.
  • The asymmetry means that boundedness for one parameter does not automatically transfer to its conjugate partner off the critical line.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • The same hypothesis could be checked on concrete choices of the non-homogeneous term to produce explicit examples where the conclusion applies.
  • Similar boundedness arguments might be tried on other intervals or with different initial conditions to test how far the rigidity extends.
  • The result supplies a criterion that could be combined with existence theorems for solutions of linear complex differential equations.

Load-bearing premise

The rotation number hypothesis on the non-homogeneous term is needed to create the asymmetry between s and 1 minus the conjugate of s.

What would settle it

An explicit non-homogeneous term that meets the rotation number hypothesis together with a pair of bounded solutions for some s with real part not equal to 1/2 would show the claim false.

read the original abstract

In this manuscript, we introduce a family of parametrized non-homogeneous linear complex differential equations on $[1,\infty)$, depending on a complex parameter. We identify a "Rotation number hypothesis" on the non-homogeneous term, which establishes a structural asymmetry: if two solutions with the same initial condition equal to $1$, corresponding respectively to the parameters $s$ and $1-\overline{s}$ lying in the critical strip, are both bounded on $[1,+\infty)$, then $\Re(s) = \tfrac{1}{2}$.

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

2 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript introduces a family of parametrized non-homogeneous linear complex differential equations on the half-line [1, ∞) depending on a complex parameter s. It identifies a 'Rotation number hypothesis' on the non-homogeneous term and claims that, under this hypothesis, if the two solutions with identical initial condition 1 corresponding to parameters s and 1−s̄ (both in the critical strip) are bounded on [1, +∞), then Re(s) = 1/2.

Significance. If the Rotation number hypothesis can be shown to be independently motivated and satisfied by the concrete right-hand side, the result would establish a rigidity property and structural asymmetry for bounded solutions of this family of ODEs, linking boundedness directly to the critical line Re(s) = 1/2.

major comments (2)
  1. [Introduction and statement of the Rotation number hypothesis] The Rotation number hypothesis is the load-bearing assumption for the central implication, yet the manuscript supplies neither its explicit mathematical definition (e.g., as a limit of argument change or winding number along the solution trajectory) nor a verification that the given non-homogeneous term satisfies it. Without these, it is impossible to confirm that the hypothesis is not effectively tuned to encode the desired conclusion.
  2. [Section 1 (setup of the family of equations)] The explicit form of the parametrized ODE itself is not displayed in the abstract or early sections; the central claim cannot be checked without the precise differential equation, the initial-condition setup, and the precise meaning of 'bounded on [1, +∞)'.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] The critical strip should be defined explicitly (e.g., 0 < Re(s) < 1) at first use for readers outside analytic number theory.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their thorough review and valuable feedback on our manuscript. We address each of the major comments in detail below, indicating the changes we plan to make to improve clarity and completeness.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Introduction and statement of the Rotation number hypothesis] The Rotation number hypothesis is the load-bearing assumption for the central implication, yet the manuscript supplies neither its explicit mathematical definition (e.g., as a limit of argument change or winding number along the solution trajectory) nor a verification that the given non-homogeneous term satisfies it. Without these, it is impossible to confirm that the hypothesis is not effectively tuned to encode the desired conclusion.

    Authors: We appreciate the referee pointing this out. The Rotation number hypothesis is introduced and used in the manuscript as a condition on the non-homogeneous term that ensures the structural asymmetry. However, we acknowledge that a more explicit formulation, such as in terms of the limit of the argument variation or the winding number of the solution path in the complex plane, would enhance precision. We will revise the manuscript to include a formal definition of the hypothesis in the introduction or early in Section 1. Concerning verification for the specific non-homogeneous term, the result is conditional on this hypothesis; the manuscript does not assert that it holds for all terms but rather identifies it as the key assumption leading to the rigidity. We will add a remark discussing its independent motivation and potential verification in concrete cases, such as when the term arises from a particular dynamical system. This addresses the concern that it might be tuned to the conclusion. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Section 1 (setup of the family of equations)] The explicit form of the parametrized ODE itself is not displayed in the abstract or early sections; the central claim cannot be checked without the precise differential equation, the initial-condition setup, and the precise meaning of 'bounded on [1, +∞)'.

    Authors: We agree with the referee that the setup should be more prominent. Although the family of equations is described in Section 1, we will include the explicit differential equation, the initial condition of 1 at t=1, and the definition of boundedness (supremum norm bounded as t goes to infinity) directly in the introduction. This will allow readers to immediately grasp the precise statement of the main result. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; result is conditional on an explicitly introduced hypothesis

full rationale

The manuscript states that it identifies a Rotation number hypothesis on the non-homogeneous term and then derives the structural asymmetry (boundedness of both solutions with IC=1 for s and 1-s-bar implies Re(s)=1/2) under that hypothesis. No equations or steps are shown that define the hypothesis in terms of the target conclusion, fit parameters to the conclusion, or reduce the implication to a self-citation chain. The derivation therefore remains self-contained once the hypothesis is granted as an assumption; the paper does not claim the hypothesis is proved within the work or that it follows from the boundedness statement itself.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on the rotation number hypothesis, which is introduced in the paper and is not a standard background fact from prior literature.

axioms (1)
  • ad hoc to paper Rotation number hypothesis on the non-homogeneous term
    This hypothesis is identified by the authors to establish the structural asymmetry between parameters s and 1-conjugate(s).

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5603 in / 1275 out tokens · 43563 ms · 2026-05-22T11:24:29.090362+00:00 · methodology

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