Abstract
This paper is concerned with a curious gap in a string of exactly solvable models, a gap that is suggestively related to a completely integrable nonlinear PDE in d=2 known as Liouville's equation. This PDE emerges in a limit N→∞ from the equilibrium statistical mechanics of classical point particles with gravitational interactions (SMGI) in dimension d=2 which, accordingly, is an exactly solvable continuum model in this limit. Interestingly, in d=1 and all d>2, the SMGI can be, and partly has been, exactly evaluated for all N≤∞. This entitles one to suspect that the SMGI for d=2 is likewise exactly solvable for N>∞, but currently this is an unproven hypothesis. If this conjecture can be answered in the affirmative, spin-offs in various areas associated with Liouville's equation, such as vortex gases, superfluidity, random matrices, and string theory can be expected.
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