This paper establishes a complete theory of real-order (fractional) variations and their inverse problems, based on the fundamental insight that the α-th variation descends to the first variation through successive applications of the variation operation. We prove the Fractional Great Descent Theorem: every α-th order variation is the first variation of some functional, providing the foundation for the entire continuous hierarchy. The Fractional Fundamental Equivalence Theorem demonstrates that the α-th order inverse variational problem is equivalent to the classical problem for all α > 0 in a precise model-theoretic sense, establishing that no new equations arise from real-order variations. However, we introduce a new invariant—the continuous descent length ℓ↓(P) ∈ R≥0—that stratifies variational equations into a strict continuous hierarchy, with explicit constructions showing the hierarchy is infinite and extends into the transfinite. Geometrically, descent representations correspond to fractional Hilbert schemes Cα of points on the spectral curve C, forming a natural descent tower C1 =C, C2, . . . , Cα, . . . . The Fractional Period Number Theorem gives the rank of the α-th level period lattice as ρα = 2g (where g is the genus of C), proving that the period rank is invariant throughout the tower. The Fractional Hierarchical Unified Rank Correspondence establishes that at each level, the geometric rank, algebraic rank, and twice the arithmetic and analytic ranks satisfy ρα = dα = 2rarithα = 2ranalα under the analytic-algebraic self-consistency condition, with explicit recurrence relations across levels. We formulate the Fractional Birch–Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture, predicting that the rank of the higher Chow group CHα+1(C, 1)hom is related to the order of vanishing of L(H2α+1(C), s) at s = α + 1, connecting variational theory to motivic cohomology and Beilinson’s conjectures. The Painlev´e equations are classified by their descent length, with PV I having maximal length 3, but via a continuous family P(α)V I we obtain ℓ↓(P(α)V I ) = α ∈ 0, 3, revealing its universal nature as the “master equation” of the descent hierarchy. Furthermore, we develop a complete duality theory—Fractional Dual Variational Calculus—showing that the descent (covariant) direction is dual to an ascent (contravariant) direction, with dual lengths satisfying ℓ†(P) = ℓ↓(P) +n−1, where n is the number of marked points on the spectral curve. This duality extends to geometry (fractional Hilbert schemes vs. fractional intermediate Jacobians), arithmetic (period lattices vs. dual period lattices), and analysis (Vainber potentials vs. multi-Vainberg potentials). The theory is unified in an axiomatic framework and extended to interdisciplinary applications including physics, computer science, biology, economics, information theory, and engineering, revealing a universal duality principle underlying all natural systems. This framework creates a new research direction—descent geometry—uniting the calculus of variations, algebraic geometry, combinatorics, number theory, integrable systems, motivic theory, and interdisciplinary studies.
shifa liu (Wed,) studied this question.