Let p′,q′∈Rn. Write p′∼q′ if p′−q′ is a multiple of
(1,…,1). Two different points p and q in Rn/∼ uniquely
determine a tropical line L(p,q), passing through them, and stable under
small perturbations. This line is a balanced unrooted semi--labeled tree on n
leaves. It is also a metric graph.
If some representatives p′ and q′ of p and q are the first and second
columns of some real normal idempotent order n matrix A, we prove that the
tree L(p,q) is described by a matrix F, easily obtained from A. We also
prove that L(p,q) is caterpillar. We prove that every vertex in L(p,q)
belongs to the tropical linear segment joining p and q. A vertex, denoted
pq, closest (w.r.t tropical distance) to p exists in L(p,q). Same for
q. The distances between pairs of adjacent vertices in L(p,q) and the
distances \dd(p,pq), \dd(qp,q) and \dd(p,q) are certain entries of the
matrix ∣F∣. In addition, if p and q are generic, then the tree L(p,q)
is trivalent. The entries of F are differences (i.e., sum of principal
diagonal minus sum of secondary diagonal) of order 2 minors of the first two
columns of A.Comment: New corrected version. 31 pages and 9 figures. The main result is
theorem 13. This is a generalization of theorem 7 to arbitrary n. Theorem 7
was obtained with A. Jim\'enez; see Arxiv 1205.416