scientific article; zbMATH DE number 814554
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4855233
zbMath0837.11012MaRDI QIDQ4855233
Publication date: 6 December 1995
Full work available at URL: http://www.numdam.org/item?id=CM_1995__97_1-2_295_0
Title: zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
linear forms in elliptic logarithmsperfect squareLLL-reductionintegral points of an elliptic curvesum of consecutive cubes
Cubic and quartic Diophantine equations (11D25) Linear forms in logarithms; Baker's method (11J86) Representation problems (11D85)
Related Items (7)
PERFECT POWERS THAT ARE SUMS OF CONSECUTIVE CUBES ⋮ Integral points in arithmetic progression on \(y^2= x(x^2-n^2)\) ⋮ On powers that are sums of consecutive like powers ⋮ A singular \(K3\) surface related to sums of consecutive cubes ⋮ Computing all integer solutions of a genus 1 equation ⋮ General solutions of sums of consecutive cubed integers equal to squared integers ⋮ Perfect powers in sum of three fifth powers
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- On the practical solution of the Thue equation
- On the application of Skolem's p-adic method to the solution of Thue equations
- On the equation \(Y^ 2=(X+p)(X^ 2+p^ 2)\)
- On the Equation Y 2 = X(X 2 + p)
- The Difference Between the Weil Height and the Canonical Height on Elliptic Curves
- A diophantine equation
- Large Integral Points on Elliptic Curves
- Variation of the Canonical Height of a Point Depending on a Parameter
- Computing Heights on Elliptic Curves
- Solving elliptic diophantine equations by estimating linear forms in elliptic logarithms
- Computing integral points on elliptic curves
- On Elliptic Diophantine Equations That Defy Thue's Method: The Case of the Ochoa Curve
- Minorations de formes linéaires de logarithmes elliptiques
- Notes on elliptic curves. I.
This page was built for publication: