Is the following statement true?
For every integer $n\ge2$ and every integer $k\ge0$ there exists a hypersphere in $\mathbb{R}^n$ (circle, sphere etc) containing exactly $k$ integer lattice points on its surface.
Is the following statement true?
For every integer $n\ge2$ and every integer $k\ge0$ there exists a hypersphere in $\mathbb{R}^n$ (circle, sphere etc) containing exactly $k$ integer lattice points on its surface.
There are several related and very interesting problems and theorems:
W. Sierpiński, "Elementary Theory of Numbers: 2nd English Edition", page 386, the last paragraph:
T. Kulikowski [1] has proved that for any natural number n there exists a sphere (in the three-dimensional space), on the boundary of which there are precisely n points whose coordinates are integers. He generalized this theorem for spheres in spaces of an arbitrary $\ge 3$ dimension.
And similar problems related to interior points:
Yes, this seems to be Kulikowski's theorem, see:
T. Kulikowski Sur l'existence d'une sphère passant par un nombre donné de points aux coordonnées entières. Enseignement Math. (2) 5 1959 89–90.
(the Mathworld link seems to mention the case $n=3$ only, but according to the MathScinet review, the theorem is proved in all dimensions).