When is n^2 a sum of k squares?
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Publication:3103373
DOI10.4169/002557010X494850zbMATH Open1246.11093OpenAlexW2074018781MaRDI QIDQ3103373FDOQ3103373
Authors: Todd G. Will
Publication date: 7 December 2011
Published in: Mathematics Magazine (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.4169/002557010x494850
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- On perfect squares of the sums of power of the first \(n\) integers
- On the sum of two squares and two powers of k
- Sums of four or fewer squares
- When is \(a^{n}+1\) the sum of two squares?
- A note on sums of two squares and sum-of-divisors functions
- Extensions of a Sums-of-Squares Problem
- 169 and sums of positive squares
- Uniqueness for sums of nonvanishing squares
- How Often is n! a Sum of Three Squares?
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- A sum of squares not divisible by a prime
- Representation of a positive integer by a sum of large four squares
- Representing integers as the sum of two squares in the ring \(\mathbb Z_n\)
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