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| -rw-r--r-- | bezout.tex | 4 | 
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
| @@ -336,7 +336,7 @@ values of $\kappa$ and $\epsilon$. Taking this saddle gives    \log\overline{\mathcal N}(\kappa,\epsilon)    =N\log(p-1).  \end{equation} -This is precisely the Bézout bound, the maximum number of solutions that $N$ +This is, to this order,  precisely the Bézout bound, the maximum number of solutions that $N$  equations of degree $p-1$ may have \cite{Bezout_1779_Theorie}. More insight is  gained by looking at the count as a function of $a$, defined by $\overline{\mathcal  N}(\kappa,\epsilon,a)=e^{Nf(a)}$.  In the large-$N$ limit, this is the @@ -364,7 +364,7 @@ Notice that the limit of this expression as $a\to\infty$ corresponds with  several values of $\kappa$ in Fig.~\ref{fig:complexity}. For any $|\kappa|<1$,  the complexity goes to negative infinity as $a\to1$, i.e., as the spins are  restricted to the reals.  This is natural, given that the $y$ contribution to -the volume shrinks to zero as that of an $N$-dimensional sphere with volume +the volume shrinks to zero as that of an $N$-dimensional sphere $\sum_i y_i^2=N(a-1)$ with volume  $\sim(a-1)^N$.  However, when the result is analytically continued to  $\kappa=1$ (which corresponds to real $J$) something novel occurs: the  complexity has a finite value at $a=1$. Since the $a$-dependence gives a | 
