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The number of polynomial solutions of polynomial Riccati equations

Consider real or complex polynomial Riccati differential equations $a(x) \dot y=b_0(x)+b_1(x)y+b_2(x)y^2$ with all the involved functions being polynomials of degree at most $η$. We prove that the maximum number of polynomial solutions is $η+1$ (resp. 2) when $η\ge 1$ (resp. $η=0$) and that these bounds are sharp. For real trigonometric polynomial Riccati differential equations with all the functions being trigonometric polynomials of degree at most $η\ge 1$ we prove a similar result. In this case, the maximum number of trigonometric polynomial solutions is $2η$ (resp. $3$) when $η\ge 2$ (resp. $η=1$) and, again, these bounds are sharp. Although the proof of both results has the same starting point, the classical result that asserts that the cross ratio of four different solutions of a Riccati differential equation is constant, the trigonometric case is much more involved. The main reason is that the ring of trigonometric polynomials is not a unique factorization domain.

preprint2016arXivOpen access

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