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Sign problem in a Calogero-Moser system: proof of integrability?

Everyone of us had sometimes this awful feeling that some sign is lost in a calculation and that this sign is perturbing some fundamental understanding of what is going on. I feel the same has happened for me today and I can't figure this sign problem out, so I count on you.

A Calogero-Moser system is defined as a Hamiltonian system with a Hamiltonian $$H=\sum p_i^2 + \sum_{i \neq k} \frac{1}{x_i-x_j}^2$$ It is widely known that this system is completely integrable.

I am trying to understand this widely known fact.

One of the proofs relies on the relation of the system with a linear flow in the space of matrices, the relationship is nicely explained in this MathOverflow entry: Is the 'massive' Calogero-Moser system still integrable?

The question that I already asked as a comment there is the following: the standard proof of the integrability rewrites $H$ as a restriction of some other function on the space of matrices which is actually $\mathrm{Tr }Y^2$ for a matrix $Y$ defined by $$ Y_{ii}=p_i, \; Y_{ik}=(x_i-x_k)^{-1}, \; i\neq k $$. A simple calculation will give us not $H$ but

$$H^-=\sum p_i^2 - \sum_{i \neq k} \frac{1}{x_i-x_j}^2$$

This is exactly the expression Etingof obtains in his Lectures on Calogero-Moser systems, http://www-math.mit.edu/~etingof/zlecnew.pdf. Etingof starts from the dynamics on matrix space and defines CM system as its symplectic reduction. So no problems for him.

But for a system of the particles on the real line, I feel lost. How one can prove integrability? And also, $H^-$ is giving the trajectories that would collapse.

Olga
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