On the size of the fundamental solution of the Pell equation (Q305146): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 01:10, 20 March 2024

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On the size of the fundamental solution of the Pell equation
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    On the size of the fundamental solution of the Pell equation (English)
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    29 August 2016
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    Given a Pell equation \[ t^2-Du^2=1 \] it is well-known that all solutions \(\eta_D=t+u\sqrt{D}\) to this Pell equation can be written in the form \(\eta_D=\pm \varepsilon_D^n\), where \(\epsilon_D\) is the so-called fundamental solution. One of the most interesting question concerning Pell equations is how large these fundamental solutions can get. However, in this paper the problem is investigated how many positive non-square integers \(D\) exist such that \(\varepsilon_D\) stays small. More precisely let \[ S(x,\alpha):=\left\{ (\eta_D,D): 2\leq D\leq x,\;D \text{ is non-square, } \varepsilon_D\leq \eta_D \leq D^{1/2+\alpha}\right\} \] and \[ S^f(x,\alpha):=\left\{ (\varepsilon_D,D): 2\leq D\leq x,\;D \text{ is non-square, } \varepsilon_D\leq D^{1/2+\alpha}\right\}. \] \textit{C. Hooley} [J. Reine Angew. Math. 353, 98--131 (1984; Zbl 0539.10019)] obtained for \(0<\alpha< 1/2\) that \[ S(x,\alpha)\sim S^f(x,\alpha)\sim \frac{4\alpha^2}{\pi^2}x^{1/2}\log^2 x. \] The main result in the paper are lower bounds uniformly in \(\tfrac 12\leq \alpha \leq 1\) for \(S(x,\alpha)\) and \(S^f(x,\alpha)\) and therefore extending Hooley's results. As the author points out finding integers \(D\) such that \(\eta_D\) is small is linked with the study of the congruence \(t^2-1\equiv 0\bmod u^2\). Explicit solutions can be described by the factorization of \(u=u_1u_2\) with \(\gcd(u_1,u_2)=1\). Using Fourier analysis the author is led to study a tridimensional exponential sum. Assuming a conjecture on short exponential sums even stronger results are obtained by the author.
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    Pell equations
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    exponential sums
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