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Prime numbers, diophantine equations, diophantine approximations, analytic or algebraic number theory, arithmetic geometry, Galois theory, transcendental number theory, continued fractions
4
votes
Accepted
Suprema of lower density of sums and products of sets with lower density 0
Anthony Quas has already answered the first part.
The second supremum is $1$ as well -- just let $A$ be the set of
positive integers all of whose prime divisors are $2$ or
$\equiv 1 (\!\!\mod 4)$, and …
0
votes
Cyclotomic polynomials with 7$^{th}$ coefficient greater than 1 in absolute value
Actually for all $11 \leq k \leq 100$ which satisfy the conditions in the question
(i.e. $\gcd(k,105) = 1$ and $\mu(k) \neq 0$), the coefficient of $x^7$ in
$\Phi_{105k}(x)$ equals $0$. Hence so far t …
8
votes
1
answer
339
views
Set of integers having finite intersection with the image of any polynomial of degree $\geq 2$
Is there a set $A$ of positive integers such that
$\sum_{n \in A} \frac{1}{n} = \infty$, and
there is no polynomial $f \in \mathbb{Z}[x]$ of degree at least $2$
which takes infinitely many values in …
6
votes
Accepted
Remainders $\quad 1\quad 2\quad $ only
The values $n(p)$ for primes $13 \leq p < 100$, found by computation: $n(13) = n(17) = 716$,
$n(19) = 62987$,
$n(23) = 367082$, $n(29) = 728366$, $n(31) = 64822396$, $n(37) = 1306238012$,
$n(41) = 111 …
2
votes
3-term arithmetic progressions of terms as frequent as primes
Meanwhile, this question has been answered in the positive. -- See
Thomas F. Bloom, Olof Sisask: Breaking the logarithmic barrier in Roth's theorem on arithmetic progressions.
16
votes
1
answer
907
views
An equality involving roots of unity which holds most of the times, but not always
Let $m$ and $n$ be distinct odd positive integers. The equality
$$
\prod_{k=0}^{mn-1} \left( e^{\frac{2\pi i k}{m}}
+ e^{\frac{2\pi i k}{n}} \right)
\ = \ 2^{\gcd(m,n)}
$ …
5
votes
0
answers
144
views
Triples of integers a, b and c with a + b = c and specified prime divisors
Given an integer $n$, let $P(n)$ denote the set of odd prime divisors of $n$.
Let $\Delta$ be the simplicial complex over the set of sets of odd prime numbers
which consists of the simplices $S$ such …
15
votes
Accepted
Lower density of {primes} times themselves
There is no such $m_0$, due to the Erdős–Kac theorem.
10
votes
Accepted
Can $b^4+1$ be a pseudoprime to base 2 (except for Fermat numbers)?
Carl Pomerance conjectured in
On the Distribution of Pseudoprimes, Math. Comput. 37, 587-593 (1981)
that for large $x$, the number of pseudoprimes $\leq x$ is
$$
\frac{x}{e^{(1+o(1))\log{x}\frac{\ …
1
vote
Accepted
Set of triple-primes satisfying a certain equation
Yes, there is precisely one such triple of distinct primes
with $\alpha \leq 500$, namely $(3, 11, 31)$.
It would be a surprising coincidence if there are further
such triples for larger $\alpha$.
8
votes
Accepted
The exponential Diophantine equation $a^n-b^m=x^3+y^3$ for arbitrary large $n,m$
We have the following polynomial identity:
$$
3^{12k+6} - b^{24\ell} \ = \ (3^{3k+2} b^{2\ell} - b^{8\ell})^3
+ (3^{4k+2} - 3^{k+1} b^{6\ell})^3.
$$
Therefore Question 1 …
9
votes
2
answers
527
views
Sign of permutation induced by modular exponentiation
Given a prime number $p$ and a primitive root $a$ modulo $p$, let
$\sigma_{a,p}$ denote the permutation of the set $\{1, \dots, p-1\}$ which
maps $b$ to $a^b$ modulo $p$.
Question: Let $p$ be fixed. …
18
votes
1
answer
649
views
How hard is it to find a prime number with given primitive roots?
Assume that we randomly choose a 100-digit prime number $p$,
record which of the first 1000 prime numbers are primitive roots
modulo $p$, and then forget about $p$. —
How easy or how difficult is it t …
12
votes
Accepted
Orders of Finite Simple Groups
For abelian simple groups your question is merely a disguised form of
"enumerate the Mersenne primes".
The smallest examples for nonabelian simple groups are as follows:
$|{\rm PSL}(2,7)| + 1 = 13^2 …
13
votes
Accepted
A question on Collatz's conjecture:proportion of "low flying" orbits
If the sequence $(T(N))_{N \in \mathbb{N}}$ converges and the limit is
not equal to $0$, this would imply either positive predecessor density for $1$, cf. e.g.
Günther J. Wirsching, On the problem of …