This is copied from math.SE after a kind comment's suggestion as I am sure people here are very well knowledged in this method :)
I am currently reading Vaughan's "The Hardy-Littlewood Method", and in particular the chapter on the major arcs for Waring's Problem (2.4) - a (essentially) copy (all proofs are the same with more details) can be found here. However, I am a bit lost of the "general idea" among the many lemmas and technical calculations. It seems that it's just a lot of unrelated lemmas that happen to work together and happen to give a nice bound at the end.
Therefore, I am wondering if someone can provide a high level overview of the idea behind estimating the major arc contribution? For example, the idea behind bounding the minor arcs would be
- Crudely bounding $\int |f(\alpha)|^s d\alpha \ll \left(\sup_{\alpha\in\mathfrak{m}} |f(\alpha)|\right)^{s-2^k} \int_0^1 |f(\alpha)|^{2^k} d\alpha$
- Using Weyl's Inequality to bound $|f(\alpha)|$ over the minor arcs and hence the first term
- Using Hua's Lemma to reduce the constant in the exponent for the second term (over the trivial bound $\int_{\mathfrak{m}} |f(\alpha)|^{2^k} d\alpha \ll \int_0^1 \left|\sum_{m=1}^{N} e(\alpha m^k)\right|^{2^k} \ll N^{2^k}$).
Thank you and hope this helps others!
P.S. Vaughan's text seems to be quite dense, and I essentially have to think about every mathematical (and non-mathematical) statement he makes for a while. Is that normal?