The Waring-Goldbach problem: one square and five cubes (Q457025): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 20:31, 19 March 2024
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English | The Waring-Goldbach problem: one square and five cubes |
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The Waring-Goldbach problem: one square and five cubes (English)
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26 September 2014
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Suppose that \(p_1, p_2, p_3, p_4, p_5\) are prime numbers and a natural number \(x\) has at most 36 prime factors, counted according to multiplicity. Let \(R(N)\) denote the number of solutions of the following equation \[ N=x^2+p_1^3+p_2^3+p_3^3+p_4^3+p_5^3. \] The author proves that \[ R(N)\geq c\, N^{\frac{19}{18}}/(\log N)^6, \] for an even and sufficiently large integer \(N\) with some absolute constant \(c\).
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Waring-Goldbach problem
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Hardy-Littlewood method
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almost prime number
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sieve method
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number of solutions
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lower bound
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