Annals of Mathematics and Physics
Singular Problems Department, Keldysh Institute of Applied Mathematics of RAS Moscow, Russia
Cite this as
Bruno A. Analytic Solving of Equations of Polynomial Type in Variables and Derivatives: A Unified Calculus Based on Power Geometry. Ann Math Phys. 2025;8(6):218-220. Available from: 10.17352/amp.000167
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© 2025 Bruno A. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.Equations that are polynomial in variables and their derivatives appear throughout algebraic geometry, dynamical systems, and the theory of differential equations. This article presents a unified analytic calculus for obtaining asymptotic expansions and simplified representations of solutions to such equations. The approach relies on the systematic use of power geometry, including truncated equations, power transformations, logarithmic transformations, and normalizing coordinate changes. The calculus applies uniformly to algebraic equations, ordinary differential equations, autonomous systems, and partial differential equations. This expanded version provides a structured methodological framework, clarifies the stepwise procedure, and illustrates its relevance through conceptual applications. The methods presented here support the systematic construction of asymptotic solutions and enable the analytical treatment of nonlinear problems that often resist classical techniques.
Polynomial-type equations involving variables and their derivatives arise in a wide range of mathematical and physical models. Examples include algebraic varieties near singularities, nonlinear ordinary differential equations (ODEs), autonomous dynamical systems, and certain classes of partial differential equations (PDEs). Analytical methods for solving such equations often rely on special representations, asymptotic expansions, or geometric interpretations of differential orders [1].
To address these challenges, an analytic calculus has been developed that enables the systematic construction of asymptotic solutions. This calculus is based on the concepts of power geometry, truncated equations, and carefully selected coordinate transformations. The central idea is to reduce a complex polynomial-type equation to a hierarchy of simplified equations whose solutions approximate the behavior of the original system.
The purpose of this article is to present a structured and unified methodology for solving equations of polynomial type analytically. In particular, we aim to:
Traditional tools such as Newton’s polyhedron or standard asymptotic methods are often limited when confronted with nonstandard orders of derivatives or nonlinear perturbations [2,3]. Power geometry expands these classical techniques by allowing more general relationships between orders of variables and derivatives, thereby enabling new asymptotic forms [4], including:
The analytic calculus used in this work was developed in earlier studies on nonlinear analysis, truncated equations, parametric expansions, and power geometry [5-14].
This paper is organized into four main sections:
The analytic calculus consists of five sequential steps applicable to any polynomial-type equation. These steps are summarized below.
Step 1: Selection of truncated equations
A truncated equation consists of the dominant monomials from the original equation.
To determine them, one constructs a supersupport—a geometric representation that includes each monomial’s exponent vector and coefficient magnitude.
For algebraic equations, these points form an Adamar polyhedron, whose faces determine admissible truncated equations [10]. For differential equations, the geometric structure additionally incorporates derivative orders.
Step 2: Power and logarithmic transformations
Each truncated equation is simplified using [11,12]:
To convert the equation into a form with a simple leading-order solution.
This transformation may be repeated several times until a solvable representation is reached.
Step 3: Construction of a leading-order solution
The simplified truncated equation yields a primary asymptotic form. This may include:
Step 4: Perturbation and normalizing transformation
The leading-order solution is substituted into the full equation. If the resulting perturbation contains a linear part, a normalizing transformation is applied to construct the full asymptotic expansion.
If no linear part exists, a new truncated equation is extracted and the process iterates.
Step 5: Higher-level power geometry
Classical power geometry assumes
ord (y′) = ord(y)-1.
This is the zero level.
Higher-level power geometry removes this restriction and allows arbitrary differences between the orders of successive derivatives. As a result, one may obtain expansions whose coefficients are:
This generalization produces entirely new families of solutions inaccessible to classical methods [7,8,13,14].
Algebraic equations
For an algebraic equation
f(X) =∑aQXQ = 0
Each monomial defines a point in the supersupport space.
Truncated equations derived from the faces of the Adamar polyhedron allow the study of singularities that Newton’s polyhedron cannot resolve [6].
This enables the derivation of:
For a single ODE or an autonomous system, the calculus provides:
Although less developed in current literature, the same approach can be extended conceptually to PDEs [9,15]:
This represents a promising direction for future research.
That distinguish it from traditional asymptotic and symmetry-based methods [1-4]:
Limitations include:
Recent software developments, however, greatly support automation of these procedures.
This article presents a structured and expanded exposition of an analytic calculus for solving polynomial-type equations involving variables and derivatives. Through power geometry, truncated equations, and coordinate transformations, the methodology unifies and extends classical asymptotic techniques. The framework is broadly applicable across algebraic, differential, and dynamical systems and provides powerful tools for investigating nonlinear phenomena.
Future work includes formalizing supersupport structures for PDEs, automating transformation sequences, and integrating these methods with symbolic computation systems.
Author contributions: The author conceptualized the study, developed the methodology, performed the analysis, and wrote the manuscript.
The author acknowledges previous foundational research in power geometry and nonlinear analysis, as well as the broader mathematical community for contributions to the theory of asymptotic expansions.

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