Can the number of solutions $xy(x-y-1)=n$ for $x,y,n \in\mathbb Z$ be unbounded as $n$ varies?
$x,y$ are integral points on an Elliptic Curve and are easy to find using enumeration of divisors of $n$ (assuming $n$ can be factored).
If yes, will large number of solutions give moderate rank EC?
If one drops $-1$ i.e. $xy(x-y)=n$ the number of solutions can be unbounded via multiples of rational point(s) and then multiplying by a cube. (Explanation): Another unbounded case for varying $a , n$ is $xy(x-y-a)=n$. If $(x,y)$ is on the curve then $(d x,d y)$ is on $xy(x-y-a d)=n d^3$. Find many rational points and multiply by a suitable $d$. Not using the group law seems quite tricky for me. The constant $-1$ was included on purpose in the initial post.
I would be interested in this computational experiment: find $n$ that gives a lot of solutions, say $100$ (I can't do it), check which points are linearly independent and this is a lower bound on the rank.
What I find intriguing is that all integral points in this model come from factorization/divisors only.
Current record is $n=391287046550400$ with $26$ solutions with positive $x,y.$ Due to Aaron Meyerowitz
Current record is $n=8659883232000$ with $28$ solutions with positive $x,y.$ Found by Tapio Rajala.
Current record is $n=2597882099904000$ with $36$ solutions with positive $x,y.$ Found by Tapio Rajala.
EDIT: $ab(a+b+9)=195643523275200$ has $48$ positive integer points. – Aaron Meyerowitz (note this is a different curve and $7 \le \text{rank} \le 13$)
A variation: $(x^2-x-17)^2 - y^2 = n$ appears to be eligible for the same question. The quartic model is a difference of two squares and checking if the first square is of the form $x^2-x-17$ is easy.
Is it possible some relation in the primes or primes or divisors of certain form to produce records: Someone is trying in $\mathbb{Z}[t]$ Can the number of solutions $xy(x−y−1)=n$ for $x,y,n\in\mathbb Z[t]$ be unbounded as $n$ varies? ? Read an article I didn't quite understand about maximizing the Selmer rank by chosing the primes carefully.
EDIT: The curve was chosen at random just to give a clear computational challenge.
EDIT: On second thought, can a symbolic approach work? Set $n=d_1 d_2 \cdots d_k$ where $d_i$ are variables. Pick, well, ?some 100? $(d_i, y_i)$ for $(x,y)$ (or a product of $d_i$ for $x$). The result is a nonlinear system (last time I tried this I failed to make it work in practice).
EDIT: Related search seems "thue mahler" equation'
Related: unboundedness of number of integral points on elliptic curves?
Crossposted on MATH.SE: https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/14932/can-the-number-of-solutions-xyx-y-1-n-for-x-y-n-in-z-be-unbounded-as-n