The Dyson conjecture states that the Laurent polynomial
has constant term
The conjecture was first proved independently by Wilson (1962) and Gunson (1962). Good (1970) later found a short proof, by observing that the Laurent polynomials, and therefore their constant terms, satisfy the recursion relations
The case n = 3 of Dyson's conjecture follows from the Dixon identity.
When all the values ai are equal to β/2, the constant term in Dyson's conjecture is the value of Dyson's integral
Dyson's integral is a special case of Selberg's integral after a change of variable and has value
which gives another proof of Dyson's conjecture in this special case.
q-Dyson conjecture
Andrews (1975) found a q-analog of Dyson's conjecture, stating that the constant term of
is
Here (a;q)n is the q-Pochhammer symbol.
This conjecture reduces to Dyson's conjecture for q = 1, and was proved by Zeilberger & Bressoud (1985), using a combinatorial approach inspired by
previous work of Ira Gessel and Dominique Foata. A shorter proof, using formal Laurent series, was given in 2004 by Ira Gessel and Guoce Xin, and
an even shorter proof, using a quantitative form, due to Karasev and Petrov, and independently to Lason, of Noga Alon's Combinatorial Nullstellensatz,
was given in 2012 by Gyula Karolyi and Zoltan Lorant Nagy.
The latter method was extended, in 2013, by Shalosh B. Ekhad and Doron Zeilberger to derive explicit expressions of any specific coefficient, not just the
constant term; see http://www.math.rutgers.edu/~zeilberg/mamarim/mamarimhtml/qdyson.html, for detailed references.
Macdonald conjectures
Macdonald (1982) extended the conjecture to arbitrary finite or affine root systems, with Dyson's original conjecture corresponding to
the case of the An−1 root system and Andrews's conjecture corresponding to the affine An−1 root system. Macdonald reformulated these conjectures as conjectures about the norms of Macdonald polynomials. Macdonald's conjectures were proved by (Cherednik 1995) using doubly affine Hecke algebras.
Macdonald's form of Dyson's conjecture for root systems of type BC is closely related to Selberg's integral.
References
Andrews, George E. (1975), "Problems and prospects for basic hypergeometric functions", Theory and application of special functions (Proc. Advanced Sem., Math. Res. Center, Univ. Wisconsin, Madison, Wis., 1975), Boston, MA: Academic Press, pp. 191–224, MR0399528
Cherednik, I. (1995), "Double Affine Hecke Algebras and Macdonald's Conjectures", The Annals of Mathematics, 141 (1): 191–216, doi:10.2307/2118632, JSTOR2118632
Macdonald, I. G. (1982), "Some conjectures for root systems", SIAM Journal on Mathematical Analysis, 13 (6): 988–1007, doi:10.1137/0513070, ISSN0036-1410, MR0674768