Based on the theory of analytic algebraic finite representations, this paper systematically constructs an analytic algebraic classification system for difference equations, fully generalizing the period number theorem, the double spectrum theorem, and the unified rank correspondence law established in the case of differential equations to the field of difference equations. The core contributions include: (1) Defining difference-algebraic definability of difference equations in the representation framework (Ci, Oj ), and proving that all difference equations induced by algebraic curves (such as q-difference equations, discrete Painlev´e equations, soliton equations on lattices) are definable in the framework (C0, O2); (2) Introducing a spectrum of characteristic invariants for difference equations: monodromy rank (geometric rank), difference Galois group dimension (algebraic rank), isomonodromic deformation space dimension (moduli rank), rational solution rank (arithmetic rank), and order of vanishing of L-functions (analytic rank), and proving that they satisfy a unified rank correspondence law; (3) Generalizing the period number theorem to: the period lattice rank of solutions of discrete integrable systems on an algebraic curve of genus g is 2g, and equals the monodromy rank; (4) Establishing a double spectrum theorem for difference equations, precisely correlating the problem complexity of the equation (order, singularity structure, spectral curve genus) with the geometric complexity of the solution functions (period number, moduli rank); (5) Proving a form of the analytic algebraic spectral theorem for eigenvalue problems of difference operators, elucidating the spectral symmetry of q-exponential and theta-type transcendental functions; (6) Proving the analytic-algebraic self-consistency theorem, demonstrating that for curves, abelian varieties, and mixed Tate motives, all periods lie in the difference-algebraic closure Qe2; (7) Proving the Langlands correspondence theorem, constructing ℓ-adic Galois representations from automorphic representations within the difference-algebraic framework; (8) Proving the p-adic self-consistency theorem, establishing the p-adic analogue of the theory; (9) Proving the Feynman period theorem, connecting Feynman integrals to L-functions; (10) Exploring applications of the theory in arithmetic difference equations, discrete integrable systems, and mathematical physics, and indicating deep connections with the Langlands program and q-special function theory. This paper provides a unified geometric and representation-theoretic framework for the classification and arithmetic theory of difference equations.
shifa liu (Wed,) studied this question.