Abstract

We consider a matrix refactorization problem, i.e., a “Lax representation,” for the Yang–Baxter map that originated as the map of polarizations from the “pure” 2-soliton solution of a matrix KP equation. Using the Lax matrix and its inverse, a related refactorization problem determines another map, which is not a solution of the Yang–Baxter equation, but satisfies a mixed version of the Yang–Baxter equation together with the Yang–Baxter map. Such maps have been called “entwining Yang–Baxter maps” in recent work. In fact, the map of polarizations obtained from a pure 2-soliton solution of a matrix KP equation, and already for the matrix KdV reduction, is not in general a Yang–Baxter map, but it is described by one of the two maps or their inverses. We clarify why the weaker version of the Yang–Baxter equation holds, by exploring the pure 3-soliton solution in the “tropical limit,” where the 3-soliton interaction decomposes into 2-soliton interactions. Here, this is elaborated for pure soliton solutions, generated via a binary Darboux transformation, of matrix generalizations of the two-dimensional Toda lattice equation, where we meet the same entwining Yang–Baxter maps as in the KP case, indicating a kind of universality.

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