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abc conjecture

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

abc conjecture
FieldNumber theory
Conjectured by
Conjectured in1985
Equivalent toModified Szpiro conjecture
Consequences
Mathematician Joseph Oesterlé
Mathematician David Masser

The abc conjecture (also known as the Oesterlé–Masser conjecture) is a conjecture in number theory that arose out of a discussion of Joseph Oesterlé and David Masser in 1985.[1][2] It is stated in terms of three positive integers and (hence the name) that are relatively prime and satisfy . The conjecture essentially states that the product of the distinct prime factors of is usually not much smaller than . A number of famous conjectures and theorems in number theory would follow immediately from the abc conjecture or its versions. Mathematician Dorian Goldfeld described the abc conjecture as "The most important unsolved problem in Diophantine analysis".[3]

The abc conjecture originated as the outcome of attempts by Oesterlé and Masser to understand the Szpiro conjecture about elliptic curves,[4] which involves more geometric structures in its statement than the abc conjecture. The abc conjecture was shown to be equivalent to the modified Szpiro's conjecture.[1]

Various attempts to prove the abc conjecture have been made, but none have gained broad acceptance. Shinichi Mochizuki claimed to have a proof in 2012, but the conjecture is still regarded as unproven by the mainstream mathematical community.[5][6][7]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • abc Conjecture - Numberphile
  • Controversial ABC Conjecture Proof Published?!?
  • abc Conjecture and New Mathematics - Prof. Fumiharu Kato, Oct 7, 2017 (with English subtitles)
  • Undergraduate math talk: The abc conjecture
  • The abc conjecture | Conjecture and the overview of the proof by Shinichi Mochizuki

Transcription

A proof has been announced of a unsolved, so far, conjecture called the abc Conjecture. If this proof is right, then it's going to be news on the scale of Fermat's last theorem was in the '90s, which was this big unsolved problem. And was this huge event. So it's really exciting. We don't know if this proof is right yet, so a Japanese mathematician called Mochizuki has released these papers, and altogether, it's 500 pages long. He's been working on this for a very long time. He's come up with his own theory of maths-- a whole new body of maths-- and he's called it interuniversal geometry. I know nothing about that. Very few people do. Even the experts don't know much about this at the moment. So it's going to take a very long time to make sure if the proof is right, because they're going to have to learn this whole new theory of mathematics. So the abc Conjecture involves the most simple formula you can think of. It's this-- a plus b equals c. It doesn't get much easier than that. And that's where it gets its name from. The rules are, these are whole numbers, and they don't share any factors. So that means if I can divide a by 2, then I'm not allowed to divide b by 2. Or if I could divide a by 3, then b is not allowed to be divisible by three. They're not allowed to share any factors like that. All right, let's try an example that works. 1,024 plus 81 equals 1,105. Right, now let's just check they don't share any factors. In fact, I've picked these on purpose. This one is 2 to the power of 10, and this one is 3 to the power of 4. So they don't share any factors there. Oh, and this one, I'll do the same, is 5 times 13 times 17. Now, this is what I want you to notice. On the left hand side, you've got lots of prime numbers. We've got all 10 of them over here, and another four. Loads of them over here. On the right hand side, you only have three, and this is what you tend to see most of the time. This is what's normal. If you get lots of primes on the left, you only get a few on the right hand side. So this is what the conjecture is about. I want to show you one where it doesn't work. 3 plus 125. That's equal to 128. Let's just check they don't share any factors then-- well, that's 3, this is 5 cubed, and this, 128, is 2 the power of 7. Now, this one is not like the first one I showed you. You've only got a few primes on the left, but we've got loads more on a right. So you've got more on the right than you do on the left. That's unusual. That's weird. So rather than not working, like I said earlier, it's the unusual example. These don't happen so often. So the technical way to say this is this. Times those primes together. So I'm going to do that. So 2 times 3 times 5 times 13 times 17, and that equals to 13,260. It's a big number, and it's bigger than the right hand side, which was this. That's what normally happens. OK, so if you do this, you get a bigger number. I'm going to show you this one that I said was unusual. If we do the same thing-- 3 times 5 times 2, that's equal to 30, and that's smaller than 128. So that's the difference. So this is unusual. This is much smaller than the right hand side. This number, when you multiply the primes together, is called the radical of ABC. It's called the radical because it is [INAUDIBLE]. The abc Conjecture is the radical-- which I told you how to work out, that's this-- the radical of abc is bigger than the right hand side. I said that was c. That's what you get normally. In fact, the conjecture is more than that. It talks about the powers of that, too. But there are exceptions, and these are the exceptions. When k equals 1-- that's the power is 1-- there are infinitely many exceptions just like the one I've just shown you there. Infinitely many, even though I said these were the rare ones, the unusual ones, there are infinitely many of them. But if you take a power bigger than 1, even if it's only a little bit bigger, even if it's like a power of 1.00001-- tiny, tiny little bit bigger-- if it's bigger than 1, then you get finitely many exceptions. And this is a little bit surprising, because, yes, if it's just a little bit bigger than 1, you get finitely many exceptions. You could count them off. You could write them down. You could say, here are all the exceptions for this power. And that's unusual. That's unexpected. Now, this is the conjecture. It's very abstract. It's very pure. This was made in the '80s, this conjecture. But if this can be proven, what it's going to do is it's going to prove a whole bunch of other stuff at a stroke. And that's why it's big news. Originally, they thought that Fermat's last theorem, which I talked about being solved in the '90s, they thought this was the way to solve it. Because there is a way that, if you can solve this, you can solve a version of Fermat's last theorem. It didn't turn out that way, because Fermat's last theorem was solved first. I heard of it, I think, before it went around the nerdy blogs, and I thought, well, we could talk about it on Numberphile. But then, it's still not been checked, so maybe we shouldn't talk about it on Numberphile. But then when all the blocks started going mad about it, I thought someone might ask us. I mean, that's how you probe extra dimensions. That's how you probe the very small.

Formulations

Before stating the conjecture, the notion of the radical of an integer must be introduced: for a positive integer , the radical of , denoted , is the product of the distinct prime factors of . For example,

If a, b, and c are coprime[notes 1] positive integers such that a + b = c, it turns out that "usually" . The abc conjecture deals with the exceptions. Specifically, it states that:

For every positive real number ε, there exist only finitely many triples (a, b, c) of coprime positive integers, with a + b = c, such that[8]

An equivalent formulation is:

For every positive real number ε, there exists a constant Kε such that for all triples (a, b, c) of coprime positive integers, with a + b = c:[8]

Equivalently (using the little o notation):

For all triples (a, b, c) of coprime positive integers with a + b = c, rad(abc) is at least c1-o(1).

A fourth equivalent formulation of the conjecture involves the quality q(a, b, c) of the triple (a, b, c), which is defined as

For example:

q(4, 127, 131) = log(131) / log(rad(4·127·131)) = log(131) / log(2·127·131) = 0.46820...
q(3, 125, 128) = log(128) / log(rad(3·125·128)) = log(128) / log(30) = 1.426565...

A typical triple (a, b, c) of coprime positive integers with a + b = c will have c < rad(abc), i.e. q(a, b, c) < 1. Triples with q > 1 such as in the second example are rather special, they consist of numbers divisible by high powers of small prime numbers. The fourth formulation is:

For every positive real number ε, there exist only finitely many triples (a, b, c) of coprime positive integers with a + b = c such that q(a, b, c) > 1 + ε.

Whereas it is known that there are infinitely many triples (a, b, c) of coprime positive integers with a + b = c such that q(a, b, c) > 1, the conjecture predicts that only finitely many of those have q > 1.01 or q > 1.001 or even q > 1.0001, etc. In particular, if the conjecture is true, then there must exist a triple (a, b, c) that achieves the maximal possible quality q(a, b, c).

Examples of triples with small radical

The condition that ε > 0 is necessary as there exist infinitely many triples a, b, c with c > rad(abc). For example, let

The integer b is divisible by 9:

Using this fact, the following calculation is made:

By replacing the exponent 6n with other exponents forcing b to have larger square factors, the ratio between the radical and c can be made arbitrarily small. Specifically, let p > 2 be a prime and consider

Now it may be plausibly claimed that b is divisible by p2:

The last step uses the fact that p2 divides 2p(p−1) − 1. This follows from Fermat's little theorem, which shows that, for p > 2, 2p−1 = pk + 1 for some integer k. Raising both sides to the power of p then shows that 2p(p−1) = p2(...) + 1.

And now with a similar calculation as above, the following results:

A list of the highest-quality triples (triples with a particularly small radical relative to c) is given below; the highest quality, 1.6299, was found by Eric Reyssat (Lando & Zvonkin 2004, p. 137) for

a = 2,
b = 310·109 = 6436341,
c = 235 = 6436343,
rad(abc) = 15042.

Some consequences

The abc conjecture has a large number of consequences. These include both known results (some of which have been proven separately only since the conjecture has been stated) and conjectures for which it gives a conditional proof. The consequences include:

Theoretical results

The abc conjecture implies that c can be bounded above by a near-linear function of the radical of abc. Bounds are known that are exponential. Specifically, the following bounds have been proven:

(Stewart & Tijdeman 1986),
(Stewart & Yu 1991), and
(Stewart & Yu 2001).

In these bounds, K1 and K3 are constants that do not depend on a, b, or c, and K2 is a constant that depends on ε (in an effectively computable way) but not on a, b, or c. The bounds apply to any triple for which c > 2.

There are also theoretical results that provide a lower bound on the best possible form of the abc conjecture. In particular, Stewart & Tijdeman (1986) showed that there are infinitely many triples (a, b, c) of coprime integers with a + b = c and

for all k < 4. The constant k was improved to k = 6.068 by van Frankenhuysen (2000).

Computational results

In 2006, the Mathematics Department of Leiden University in the Netherlands, together with the Dutch Kennislink science institute, launched the ABC@Home project, a grid computing system, which aims to discover additional triples a, b, c with rad(abc) < c. Although no finite set of examples or counterexamples can resolve the abc conjecture, it is hoped that patterns in the triples discovered by this project will lead to insights about the conjecture and about number theory more generally.

Distribution of triples with q > 1[23]
q
c
q > 1 q > 1.05 q > 1.1 q > 1.2 q > 1.3 q > 1.4
c < 102 6 4 4 2 0 0
c < 103 31 17 14 8 3 1
c < 104 120 74 50 22 8 3
c < 105 418 240 152 51 13 6
c < 106 1,268 667 379 102 29 11
c < 107 3,499 1,669 856 210 60 17
c < 108 8,987 3,869 1,801 384 98 25
c < 109 22,316 8,742 3,693 706 144 34
c < 1010 51,677 18,233 7,035 1,159 218 51
c < 1011 116,978 37,612 13,266 1,947 327 64
c < 1012 252,856 73,714 23,773 3,028 455 74
c < 1013 528,275 139,762 41,438 4,519 599 84
c < 1014 1,075,319 258,168 70,047 6,665 769 98
c < 1015 2,131,671 463,446 115,041 9,497 998 112
c < 1016 4,119,410 812,499 184,727 13,118 1,232 126
c < 1017 7,801,334 1,396,909 290,965 17,890 1,530 143
c < 1018 14,482,065 2,352,105 449,194 24,013 1,843 160

As of May 2014, ABC@Home had found 23.8 million triples.[24]

Highest-quality triples[25]
Rank q a b c Discovered by
1 1.6299 2 310·109 235 Eric Reyssat
2 1.6260 112 32·56·73 221·23 Benne de Weger
3 1.6235 19·1307 7·292·318 28·322·54 Jerzy Browkin, Juliusz Brzezinski
4 1.5808 283 511·132 28·38·173 Jerzy Browkin, Juliusz Brzezinski, Abderrahmane Nitaj
5 1.5679 1 2·37 54·7 Benne de Weger

Note: the quality q(a, b, c) of the triple (a, b, c) is defined above.

Refined forms, generalizations and related statements

The abc conjecture is an integer analogue of the Mason–Stothers theorem for polynomials.

A strengthening, proposed by Baker (1998), states that in the abc conjecture one can replace rad(abc) by

εω rad(abc),

where ω is the total number of distinct primes dividing a, b and c.[26]

Andrew Granville noticed that the minimum of the function over occurs when

This inspired Baker (2004) to propose a sharper form of the abc conjecture, namely:

with κ an absolute constant. After some computational experiments he found that a value of was admissible for κ. This version is called the "explicit abc conjecture".

Baker (1998) also describes related conjectures of Andrew Granville that would give upper bounds on c of the form

where Ω(n) is the total number of prime factors of n, and

where Θ(n) is the number of integers up to n divisible only by primes dividing n.

Robert, Stewart & Tenenbaum (2014) proposed a more precise inequality based on Robert & Tenenbaum (2013). Let k = rad(abc). They conjectured there is a constant C1 such that

holds whereas there is a constant C2 such that

holds infinitely often.

Browkin & Brzeziński (1994) formulated the n conjecture—a version of the abc conjecture involving n > 2 integers.

Claimed proofs

Lucien Szpiro proposed a solution in 2007, but it was found to be incorrect shortly afterwards.[27]

Since August 2012, Shinichi Mochizuki has claimed a proof of Szpiro's conjecture and therefore the abc conjecture.[5] He released a series of four preprints developing a new theory he called inter-universal Teichmüller theory (IUTT), which is then applied to prove the abc conjecture.[28] The papers have not been widely accepted by the mathematical community as providing a proof of abc.[29] This is not only because of their length and the difficulty of understanding them,[30] but also because at least one specific point in the argument has been identified as a gap by some other experts.[31] Although a few mathematicians have vouched for the correctness of the proof[32] and have attempted to communicate their understanding via workshops on IUTT, they have failed to convince the number theory community at large.[33][34]

In March 2018, Peter Scholze and Jakob Stix visited  Kyoto for discussions with Mochizuki.[35][36] While they did not resolve the differences, they brought them into clearer focus. Scholze and Stix wrote a report asserting and explaining an error in the logic of the proof and claiming that the resulting gap was "so severe that ... small modifications will not rescue the proof strategy";[31] Mochizuki claimed that they misunderstood vital aspects of the theory and made invalid simplifications.[37][38][39]

On April 3, 2020, two mathematicians from the Kyoto research institute where Mochizuki works announced that his claimed proof would be published in Publications of the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, the institute's journal. Mochizuki is chief editor of the journal but recused himself from the review of the paper.[6] The announcement was received with skepticism by Kiran Kedlaya and Edward Frenkel, as well as being described by Nature as "unlikely to move many researchers over to Mochizuki's camp".[6] In March 2021, Mochizuki's proof was published in RIMS.[40]

The ambiguity over the status of the proof remains even in 2023, showing no sign of abating with one part of the mathematical community trying to build additional work over the method used and another part denying any value to the proof.[41]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ When a + b = c, any common factor of two of the values is necessarily shared by the third. Thus, coprimality of a, b, c implies pairwise coprimality of a, b, c. So in this case, it does not matter which concept we use.

References

  1. ^ a b c Oesterlé 1988.
  2. ^ Masser 1985.
  3. ^ Goldfeld 1996.
  4. ^ Fesenko, Ivan (September 2015). "Arithmetic deformation theory via arithmetic fundamental groups and nonarchimedean theta-functions, notes on the work of Shinichi Mochizuki". European Journal of Mathematics. 1 (3): 405–440. doi:10.1007/s40879-015-0066-0.
  5. ^ a b Ball, Peter (10 September 2012). "Proof claimed for deep connection between primes". Nature. doi:10.1038/nature.2012.11378. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
  6. ^ a b c Castelvecchi, Davide (9 April 2020). "Mathematical proof that rocked number theory will be published". Nature. 580 (7802): 177. Bibcode:2020Natur.580..177C. doi:10.1038/d41586-020-00998-2. PMID 32246118. S2CID 214786566.
  7. ^ Further comment by P. Scholze at Not Even Wrong math.columbia.edu[self-published source?]
  8. ^ a b c Waldschmidt 2015.
  9. ^ Bombieri (1994), p. [page needed].
  10. ^ Elkies (1991).
  11. ^ Van Frankenhuijsen (2002).
  12. ^ Langevin (1993).
  13. ^ Silverman (1988).
  14. ^ Nitaj (1996).
  15. ^ Granville, Andrew; Tucker, Thomas (2002). "It's As Easy As abc" (PDF). Notices of the AMS. 49 (10): 1224–1231.
  16. ^ Pomerance (2008).
  17. ^ Granville & Stark (2000).
  18. ^ The ABC-conjecture, Frits Beukers, ABC-DAY, Leiden, Utrecht University, 9 September 2005.
  19. ^ Mollin (2009); Mollin (2010, p. 297)
  20. ^ Granville (1998).
  21. ^ Pasten, Hector (2017), "Definability of Frobenius orbits and a result on rational distance sets", Monatshefte für Mathematik, 182 (1): 99–126, doi:10.1007/s00605-016-0973-2, MR 3592123, S2CID 7805117
  22. ^ arXiv:math/0408168 Andrea Surroca, Siegel’s theorem and the abc conjecture, Riv. Mat. Univ. Parma (7) 3, 2004, S. 323–332
  23. ^ "Synthese resultaten", RekenMeeMetABC.nl (in Dutch), archived from the original on December 22, 2008, retrieved October 3, 2012.
  24. ^ "Data collected sofar", ABC@Home, archived from the original on May 15, 2014, retrieved April 30, 2014
  25. ^ "100 unbeaten triples". Reken mee met ABC. 2010-11-07.
  26. ^ Bombieri & Gubler (2006), p. 404.
  27. ^ "Finiteness Theorems for Dynamical Systems", Lucien Szpiro, talk at Conference on L-functions and Automorphic Forms (on the occasion of Dorian Goldfeld's 60th Birthday), Columbia University, May 2007. See Woit, Peter (May 26, 2007), "Proof of the abc Conjecture?", Not Even Wrong.
  28. ^ Mochizuki, Shinichi (4 March 2021). "Inter-universal Teichmüller Theory IV: Log-Volume Computations and Set-Theoretic Foundations". Publications of the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences. 57 (1): 627–723. doi:10.4171/PRIMS/57-1-4. S2CID 3135393.
  29. ^ Calegari, Frank (December 17, 2017). "The ABC conjecture has (still) not been proved". Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  30. ^ Revell, Timothy (September 7, 2017). "Baffling ABC maths proof now has impenetrable 300-page 'summary'". New Scientist.
  31. ^ a b Scholze, Peter; Stix, Jakob. "Why abc is still a conjecture" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 8, 2020. Retrieved September 23, 2018. (updated version of their May report Archived 2020-02-08 at the Wayback Machine)
  32. ^ Fesenko, Ivan (28 September 2016). "Fukugen". Inference. 2 (3). Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  33. ^ Conrad, Brian (December 15, 2015). "Notes on the Oxford IUT workshop by Brian Conrad". Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  34. ^ Castelvecchi, Davide (8 October 2015). "The biggest mystery in mathematics: Shinichi Mochizuki and the impenetrable proof". Nature. 526 (7572): 178–181. Bibcode:2015Natur.526..178C. doi:10.1038/526178a. PMID 26450038.
  35. ^ Klarreich, Erica (September 20, 2018). "Titans of Mathematics Clash Over Epic Proof of ABC Conjecture". Quanta Magazine.
  36. ^ "March 2018 Discussions on IUTeich". Retrieved October 2, 2018. Web-page by Mochizuki describing discussions and linking consequent publications and supplementary material
  37. ^ Mochizuki, Shinichi. "Report on Discussions, Held during the Period March 15 – 20, 2018, Concerning Inter-Universal Teichmüller Theory" (PDF). Retrieved February 1, 2019. the ... discussions ... constitute the first detailed, ... substantive discussions concerning negative positions ... IUTch.
  38. ^ Mochizuki, Shinichi (July 2018). "Comments on the manuscript by Scholze-Stix concerning Inter-Universal Teichmüller Theory" (PDF). S2CID 174791744. Retrieved October 2, 2018.
  39. ^ Mochizuki, Shinichi. "Comments on the manuscript (2018-08 version) by Scholze-Stix concerning Inter-Universal Teichmüller Theory" (PDF). Retrieved October 2, 2018.
  40. ^ Mochizuki, Shinichi. "Mochizuki's proof of ABC conjecture". Retrieved July 13, 2021.
  41. ^ Mochizuki, Shinichi. "Brief Report on the Current Situation Surrounding Inter-universal Teichmüller Theory (IUT)" (PDF). Retrieved September 23, 2023.

Sources

External links

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