Intellectually Curious

The Marcus–Spielman–Srivastava Interlacing Polynomials Method

Mike Breault

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0:00 | 4:17

A beginner-friendly look at how Marcus, Spielman, and Srivastava replaced random chaos with a polynomial lens to crack the Kadison–Singer problem. We explore why the probabilistic method dominated for decades, how the expected characteristic polynomial of random rank‑1 matrices has real roots, and how interlacing families let us bound eigenvalues without exhaustive testing. Along the way we connect the ideas to Ramanujan graphs and the broader power of translating hard questions into a different mathematical language.


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