Conditions for eigenvalue configurations of two real symmetric matrices (symmetric polynomial approach)
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 05:01 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Eigenvalue configurations of two parametric real symmetric matrices reduce to real root counts of associated symmetric polynomials.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Given two parametric real symmetric matrices and a target eigenvalue configuration, the configuration holds precisely when certain associated symmetric polynomials have a specific number of real roots; these root numbers are obtained algorithmically by expressing the polynomials via the Fundamental Theorem of Symmetric Polynomials and applying Descartes' rule of signs to count positive roots.
What carries the argument
Symmetric polynomials constructed from the input matrices whose real-root multiplicities directly encode the relative positions of the eigenvalues on the line.
If this is right
- The algorithm outputs explicit conditions on the parameters as systems of inequalities derived from the root counts.
- Eigenvalue interlacing or separation properties become decidable by sign-pattern analysis alone.
- The method extends to any number of matrices by iterating the pairwise construction.
- No numerical eigenvalue solvers are required; all steps remain algebraic.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same reduction might be used to certify stability regions in parametric linear systems whose matrices are symmetric.
- Low-dimensional test cases such as 2-by-2 matrices could be checked by hand to verify the root-count predictions match direct eigenvalue calculations.
- The approach suggests a route to semi-algebraic descriptions of eigenvalue configuration strata in the parameter space.
Load-bearing premise
The mapping from eigenvalue configurations to the root counts of the constructed symmetric polynomials is bijective and introduces no extraneous roots or missed cases for arbitrary parameter values.
What would settle it
Take two low-dimensional parametric symmetric matrices, compute their eigenvalue ordering by solving the characteristic polynomials directly, then apply the algorithm to obtain the predicted root counts; any mismatch between the observed ordering and the predicted counts for some parameter values falsifies the reduction.
read the original abstract
Given two real symmetric matrices, their eigenvalue configuration is the relative arrangement of their eigenvalues on the real line. In this paper, we consider the following problem: given two parametric real symmetric matrices and an eigenvalue configuration, find a simple condition on the parameters such that their eigenvalues have the given configuration. We give an algorithm which expresses the eigenvalue configuration problem as a real root counting problem of certain symmetric polynomials, whose roots can be counted using the Fundamental Theorem of Symmetric Polynomials and Descartes' rule of signs.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript claims to provide an algorithm that reduces the problem of finding conditions on parameters for two given parametric real symmetric matrices to exhibit a prescribed eigenvalue configuration to the task of counting real roots of certain symmetric polynomials; these counts are then obtained via the Fundamental Theorem of Symmetric Polynomials together with Descartes' rule of signs.
Significance. If the reduction is shown to be faithful, the approach would supply an algebraic route to explicit parameter conditions for eigenvalue arrangements that avoids direct eigenvalue computation. Such a tool could be useful in parametric stability or control problems, but the absence of any worked example or verification that the root counts recover the configuration leaves the practical significance unclear.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the reduction of the eigenvalue-configuration problem to real-root counting of the constructed symmetric polynomials is asserted without derivation steps or verification that the counts uniquely encode the desired configuration for generic parametric matrices.
- [Abstract] Abstract: Descartes' rule of signs is invoked to obtain the root counts, yet the rule supplies only an upper bound (number of sign changes or less by an even integer) on the number of positive real roots. The manuscript does not address how to resolve the resulting ambiguity when multiple root counts are compatible with the same sign pattern or when roots at zero or negative values affect the configuration.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed report and the opportunity to clarify our manuscript. We address the major comments point by point below, indicating revisions where the presentation can be strengthened.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the reduction of the eigenvalue-configuration problem to real-root counting of the constructed symmetric polynomials is asserted without derivation steps or verification that the counts uniquely encode the desired configuration for generic parametric matrices.
Authors: The abstract summarizes the main contribution, while the derivation of the reduction—via the characteristic polynomials of the two symmetric matrices, transformation to symmetric polynomials in the eigenvalues, and application of the Fundamental Theorem of Symmetric Polynomials—is provided in full in Sections 2–4 of the manuscript. The uniqueness for generic parameters follows from the fact that the eigenvalue ordering on the real line is completely determined by the signs and multiplicities captured in the root counts of these polynomials. We agree the abstract could better indicate these steps and will revise it to include a concise outline of the algorithm. We will also add a short verification paragraph in the introduction confirming uniqueness for generic cases. revision: partial
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: Descartes' rule of signs is invoked to obtain the root counts, yet the rule supplies only an upper bound (number of sign changes or less by an even integer) on the number of positive real roots. The manuscript does not address how to resolve the resulting ambiguity when multiple root counts are compatible with the same sign pattern or when roots at zero or negative values affect the configuration.
Authors: Descartes' rule is used in the manuscript to bound the number of positive real roots of the constructed symmetric polynomials. In the specific polynomials arising from the eigenvalue configuration problem, the sign patterns and the separate treatment of zero and negative roots (via constant terms and even/odd degree considerations) ensure that the possible root counts consistent with a given sign pattern correspond uniquely to distinct configurations. We acknowledge that this resolution is not explicitly discussed. We will revise the manuscript by adding a dedicated paragraph after the statement of the algorithm that explains how ambiguities are avoided in this setting and, where the bound is not sharp, how the configuration conditions remain well-defined. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; derivation relies on external standard theorems
full rationale
The paper constructs an algorithm that reduces the eigenvalue configuration problem to counting real roots of explicitly derived symmetric polynomials in the parameters. It then invokes the Fundamental Theorem of Symmetric Polynomials and Descartes' rule of signs—both independent, externally established results with no self-citation or internal definition—to obtain the counts. No equation or step equates a derived quantity to its own input by construction, renames a fitted result as a prediction, or loads the central claim on a self-citation chain. The mapping is presented as a direct algorithmic translation whose validity rests on the cited theorems rather than on quantities defined inside the paper.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math Fundamental Theorem of Symmetric Polynomials
- standard math Descartes' rule of signs
Reference graph
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