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An even harder problem than $t>2$ and $n=m$ is the Prouhet–Tarry–Escott problem. Now I leave it to you and google to find lots of examples ;-)

Wikipedia has a page on this, for example, but it has dashes in the link and I can't figure out how to link to it. Someone more mark-up savvy feel free to edit this.

Prouhet–Tarry–Escott_problem at Wikipedia.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prouhet-Tarry-Escott_problem

An even harder problem than $t>2$ and $n=m$ is the Prouhet–Tarry–Escott problem. Now I leave it to you and google to find lots of examples ;-)

Wikipedia has a page on this, for example, but it has dashes in the link and I can't figure out how to link to it. Someone more mark-up savvy feel free to edit this.

Prouhet–Tarry–Escott_problem at Wikipedia.

An even harder problem than $t>2$ and $n=m$ is the Prouhet–Tarry–Escott problem. Now I leave it to you and google to find lots of examples ;-)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prouhet-Tarry-Escott_problem

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Kevin Buzzard
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An even harder problem than $t>2$ and $n=m$ is the Prouhet–Tarry–Escott problem. Now I leave it to you and google to find lots of examples ;-)

Wikipedia has a page on this, for example, but it has dashes in the link and I can't figure out how to link to it. Someone more mark-up savvy feel free to edit this.

Prouhet–Tarry–Escott_problem at Wikipedia.