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Charles
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The sci.math discussions linked to above suggest that Andrew Granville suggested the problem in 1992 and that it was discussed as early as 1985.

I have in my notes:

T-Z predates Beal; see Frits Beukers, "The Diophantine equation $Ax^p+By^q=Cz^r$", Duke Math. J. 91:1 (1998), pp. 61-88.

This kind of informal documentation may be the best available, unfortunately.

Edit to expand on a comment:

On sci.math, Gerry Myerson wrote on Aug 22 2000:

Since Andrew Granville's contribution to the Western Number Theory problem list has come up in this discussion, I want to put it on record here. The December 1992 Western Number Theory meeting was held in Corvallis. The problem list was edited by Richard Guy and is dated 9 June 93. The relevant part of Problem 92:12 reads as follows.


92:12 (Andrew Granville) Find examples of

x^p + y^q = z^r with 1/p + 1/q + 1/r < 1 other than 2^3 +1^7 = 3^2 and 7^3 + 13^2 = 2^9. [Blair Kelly III gave 2^5 + 7^2 = 3^4 and Reese Scott 17^3 + 2^7 = 71^2.]


In Guy's write-up of the 1993 problems, dated 3 March 94, there is a comment about 92:12, wherein Granville agrees with the suggestion that it was intended that x, y and z be relatively prime, and gives 3^5 + 11^4 = 122^2 as another example. Peter Montgomery gave 5 larger examples found by Beukers & Zagier.

The sci.math discussions linked to above suggest that Andrew Granville suggested the problem in 1992 and that it was discussed as early as 1985.

I have in my notes:

T-Z predates Beal; see Frits Beukers, "The Diophantine equation $Ax^p+By^q=Cz^r$", Duke Math. J. 91:1 (1998), pp. 61-88.

This kind of informal documentation may be the best available, unfortunately.

The sci.math discussions linked to above suggest that Andrew Granville suggested the problem in 1992 and that it was discussed as early as 1985.

I have in my notes:

T-Z predates Beal; see Frits Beukers, "The Diophantine equation $Ax^p+By^q=Cz^r$", Duke Math. J. 91:1 (1998), pp. 61-88.

This kind of informal documentation may be the best available, unfortunately.

Edit to expand on a comment:

On sci.math, Gerry Myerson wrote on Aug 22 2000:

Since Andrew Granville's contribution to the Western Number Theory problem list has come up in this discussion, I want to put it on record here. The December 1992 Western Number Theory meeting was held in Corvallis. The problem list was edited by Richard Guy and is dated 9 June 93. The relevant part of Problem 92:12 reads as follows.


92:12 (Andrew Granville) Find examples of

x^p + y^q = z^r with 1/p + 1/q + 1/r < 1 other than 2^3 +1^7 = 3^2 and 7^3 + 13^2 = 2^9. [Blair Kelly III gave 2^5 + 7^2 = 3^4 and Reese Scott 17^3 + 2^7 = 71^2.]


In Guy's write-up of the 1993 problems, dated 3 March 94, there is a comment about 92:12, wherein Granville agrees with the suggestion that it was intended that x, y and z be relatively prime, and gives 3^5 + 11^4 = 122^2 as another example. Peter Montgomery gave 5 larger examples found by Beukers & Zagier.

Source Link
Charles
  • 9.1k
  • 1
  • 38
  • 76

The sci.math discussions linked to above suggest that Andrew Granville suggested the problem in 1992 and that it was discussed as early as 1985.

I have in my notes:

T-Z predates Beal; see Frits Beukers, "The Diophantine equation $Ax^p+By^q=Cz^r$", Duke Math. J. 91:1 (1998), pp. 61-88.

This kind of informal documentation may be the best available, unfortunately.