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Martin Sleziak
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Intuition for the last step in Serre's proof of the three-squares theorem

Serre's A Course in Arithmetic gives essentially the following proof of the three-squares theorem, which says that an integer $a$ is the sum of three squares if and only if it is not of the form $4^m (8n + 7)$ : first one shows that the condition is necessary, which is straightforward. To show it is sufficient, a lemma of Davenport and Cassels, using Hasse-Minkowski, shows that $a$ is the sum of three rational squares. Then something magical happens:

Let $C$ denote the circle $x^2 + y^2 + z^2 = a$. We are given a rational point $p$ on this circle. Round the coordinates of $p$ to the closest integer point $q$, then draw the line through $p$ and $q$, which intersects $C$ at a rational point $p'$. Round the coordinates of $p'$ to the closest integer point $q'$, and repeat this process. A straightforward calculation shows that the least common multiple of the denominators of the points $p'$, $p''$, ... are strictly decreasing, so this process terminates at an integer point on $C$.

Bjorn Poonen, after presenting this proof in class, remarked that he had no intuition for why this should work. Does anyone have a reply?

Edit: Let me suggest a possible reformulation of the question as follows. Complete the analogy: Hensel's lemma is to Newton's method as this technique is to _____________________.

Qiaochu Yuan
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