A note on squares in arithmetic progressions. II (Q2568671): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 07:36, 5 March 2024
scientific article
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English | A note on squares in arithmetic progressions. II |
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A note on squares in arithmetic progressions. II (English)
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19 October 2005
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An old conjecture of Rudin asserts that there is an absolute constant \(C\) such that any non--constant \(N\)--term arithmetic progression of integers contains at most \(C\sqrt{N}\) perfect squares. In the paper it is shown that this number of squares is smaller than, or at most equal to, \(c_1N^{3/5}(\log N)^{c_2}\), where \(c_1,c_2\) are two positive absolute and computable constants. This reduces the exponent in the previous best known result by \textit{E. Bombieri, A. Granville} and \textit{J.Pintz} [Duke Math. J. 66, 369--385 (1992; Zbl 0771.11034)]. The proof employs many arguments used in this paper but a substantial novelty is that instead of working with algebraic projective curves of genus \(5\) the proof uses elliptic curves.
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Diophantine equations
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elliptic curves
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arithmetic progressions
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