Diophantine equations with products of consecutive terms in Lucas sequences (Q2569017)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Diophantine equations with products of consecutive terms in Lucas sequences
scientific article

    Statements

    Diophantine equations with products of consecutive terms in Lucas sequences (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    17 October 2005
    0 references
    Let \(r\), \(s\) be nonzero integers with \(r^2+4s\neq 0\), let \(\alpha\) and \(\beta\) (with \(| \alpha| \geq | \beta| \)) be the two roots of the equation \(x^2-rx-s=0\). Then the Lucas sequences of the first and second kind are denoted by \(u_n=(\alpha^n-\beta^n)/(\alpha-\beta)\) and \(v_n=\alpha^n+\beta^n\), respectively. If \(r+4s\neq 0\) and \(\gamma\) and \(\delta\) denote the roots of \(x^2-\sqrt rx-s=0\), then the corresponding Lehmer sequence is defined by \(w_n=(\gamma^n-\delta^n)/(\gamma-\delta)\) for odd \(n\) and by \((\gamma^n-\delta^n)/(\gamma^2-\delta^2)\) for even \(n\). In what follows, \(n\), \(d\), \(k\), \(m\), and \(y\) will always denote positive integers with \(m\geq 2\), \(y>1\), \(\gcd(n,d)=1\) and \(b\) will denote a nonzero integer. The paper under review studies the Diophantine equation \(u_n u_{n+d} \cdots u_{n+(k-1)d}=by^m\) (called \((D)\) in the sequel) in the unknowns \((n,d,k,b,y,m)\). Under the additional assumption that the largest prime factor of \(b\) is at most \(k\) (or at most \(2k\), if \(d>1\)), the authors prove that for every solution of \((D)\), the number \(k\) is bounded by an effectively computable number depending only on the sequence \(u_n\). Under the additional assumption that the largest prime factor of \(b\) is bounded by some positive constant \(P\), it is proved that \(\max\{n,d,k,| b| ,y,m\}\) is bounded by some effectively computable constant depending only on \(r\), \(s\), and \(P\). The two above results are also valid if the sequence \(u_n\) is replaced by the sequences \(v_n\) or \(w_n\). For the specific case that the \(u_n\) are the Fibonacci numbers, it is shown that \((D)\) has no solution with \(b=1\), \(n>1\), and \(k\geq 2\). Similarly, for an integer \(x>1\) and \(u_n=(x^n-1)/(x-1)\), there are no solutions of \((D)\) with \(b=1\), \(n>1\), \(k\geq 2\), and odd \(d\).
    0 references
    Lucas sequences
    0 references
    primitive divisors
    0 references
    arithmetic progressions
    0 references

    Identifiers