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The primes contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions
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    The primes contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions (English)
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    14 July 2009
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    This paper needs little introduction: in 2004, the authors proved [\url{arxiv:math/0404188}] that the primes contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions, a startling result considering that the previous state of the art had been an infinitude of four term arithmetic progressions in which three elements were prime and the fourth a product of at most two primes. As frequently happens when an old problem falls, the solution also precipitated a vast new theory of linear forms in the primes which looks like it will lead to a resolution of the Hardy-Littlewood conjecture for essentially all systems except those describing structures such as twin primes or the Goldbach conjecture. This will be a major achievement, and although the theory has moved on somewhat from this opening of the door, it is still very much worth reading. The main idea of the paper is a transference principle allowing the authors to transfer results from vanilla structures to pseudo-random versions. They then use some estimates of Goldston and Yıldırım to show that in a suitable sense subsets of the primes behave pseudo-randomly, which allows them to transfer Szemerédi's theorem to subsets of the primes. A good introduction to this sphere of ideas may be found in the earlier paper of B. Green [Ann. Math. (2) 161, No. 3, 1609--1636 (2005; Zbl 1160.11307)] where this result is proved for three term progressions.
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