Deautonomising the Lyness mapping
Abstract
We examine the Lyness mapping (an integrable Nth-order discrete system which can be generated from a one-dimensional reduction of the Hirota-Miwa equation) from the point of view of deautonomisation. We show that only the N=2 case can be deautonomised when one works with the standard form of the mapping. However it turns out that deautonomisation is possible for arbitrary N when one considers the derivative form of the Lyness mapping. The deautonomisation of the derivative of the N=2 case leads to a result we have never met before: the secular dependence in the coefficients of the mapping enters through two different exponential terms instead of just a single one. As a consequence, it turns out that a limit of this multiplicative dependence towards an additive one is possible without modifying the dependent variable. Finally, the analysis of the `late' singularity confinement of the N=2 case leads to a novel realisation of the full-deautonomisation principle: the dynamical degree is not given (as is customary) simply by the solution of some linear or multiplicative equation, but is present in the growth of the non-linear (and non-integrable) late-confinement conditions.
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