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Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture www.carom-maths.co.uk

Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

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www.carom-maths.co.uk. Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture. The ‘square-free part’ of a number is the largest square-free number that divides into it. A square-free number is one that is not divisible by any square except for 1. So 3 5713 = 1365 is square-free. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

www.carom-maths.co.uk

Page 2: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

The ‘square-free part’ of a number is the largest square-free number that divides into it.

A square-free number is one that is not divisible by any square except for 1.

So 35713 = 1365 is square-free.

So 335472132 = 139741875 is not square-free.

This is also called ‘the radical’ of an integer n.

To find rad(n), write down the factorisation of n into primes,and then cross out all the powers.

Page 3: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

Task: can you find rad(n) for n = 25 to 30?

Page 4: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

25 = 52, rad(25)=526 = 213, rad(26)=26

27 = 33, rad(27)=3 28 = 227, rad(28)=14

29 = 29, rad(29)=29 30 = 235, rad(30)=30

Page 5: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

Task: now pick two whole numbers, A and B,

whose highest common factor is 1.

(This is usually written as gcd (A, B) = 1.) Now say A + B = C, and find C. Now find D = Do this several times, for various A and B.

What values of D do you get?

Page 6: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

1. Now try A = 1, B = 8. 2. Now try A = 3, B = 125. 3. Now try A = 1, B = 512.

1. gives D = 0.666… 2. gives D = 0.234... 3. gives D = 0.222...

Page 7: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

It has been proved by the mathematician Masser that D can be arbitrarily small.

That means given any positive number ε, we can find numbers A and B so that D < ε.

ABC Conjecturespreadsheet

See what this means using the

http://www.s253053503.websitehome.co.uk/

carom/carom-files/carom-2-17.xls

Page 8: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

Smallest Ds found so far…

Page 9: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

The ABC conjecture says;

has a minimum value greater than zero

whenever n is greater than 1.

Page 10: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

‘Astonishingly, a proof of the ABC conjecture would provide a way of establishing

Fermat's Last Theorem in less than a page of mathematical reasoning.

Indeed, many famous conjectures and theorems in number theory would follow immediately from the

ABC conjecture, sometimes in just a few lines.’

Ivars Peterson

Page 11: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

‘The ABC conjecture is amazingly simple compared to the deep questions in number theory.

This strange conjecture turns out to be equivalent to all the main problems.

It's at the centre of everything that's been going on. Nowadays, if you're working on a problem in number theory, you often think about whether the problem

follows from the ABC conjecture.’

Andrew J. Granville

Page 12: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

‘The ABC conjecture is the most important unsolved problem in number theory. Seeing so many Diophantine

problems unexpectedly encapsulated into a single equation drives home the feeling that all the sub-disciplines of mathematics are aspects of a single

underlying unity, and that at its heart lie pure language and simple expressibility.’

Dorian Goldfeld

Page 13: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

Some consequences of the ABC Conjecture if true…

Thue–Siegel–Roth theorem on diophantine approximation of algebraic numbersFermat's Last Theorem for all sufficiently large exponents (already proven in general by Andrew Wiles) (Granville 2002)The Mordell conjecture (already proven in general by Gerd Faltings) (Elkies 1991)The Erdős–Woods conjecture except for a finite number of counterexamples (Langevin 1993)The existence of infinitely many non-Wieferich primes (Silverman 1988)The weak form of Marshall Hall's conjecture on the separation between squares and cubes of integers (Nitaj 1996)The Fermat–Catalan conjecture, a generalization of Fermat's last theorem concerning powers that are sums of powers (Pomerance 2008)The L function L(s,(−d/.)) formed with the Legendre symbol, has no Siegel zero (this consequence actually requires a uniform version of the abc conjecture in number fields, not only the abc conjecture as formulated above for rational integers) (Granville 2000)P(x) has only finitely many perfect powers for integral x for P a polynomial with at least three simple zeros.[2]

A generalization of Tijdeman's theorem concerning the number of solutions of ym = xn + k (Tijdeman's theorem answers the case k = 1), and Pillai's conjecture (1931) concerning the number of solutions of Aym = Bxn + k.It is equivalent to the Granville–Langevin conjecture, that if f is a square-free binary form of degree n > 2, then for every real β>2 there is a constant C(f,β) such for all coprime integer x,y, the radical of f(x,y) exceeds C.max{|x|,|y|}n-β.[3][4]

It is equivalent to the modified Szpiro conjecture, which would yield a bound of rad(abc)1.2+ε (Oesterlé 1988).

And others…

Page 14: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

Stop Press!!!In August 2012, Shinichi Mochizuki released a paper with a

serious claim to a proof of the abc conjecture. Mochizuki calls the theory on which this proof is based inter-universal

Teichmüller theory, and it has other applications including a proof of Szpiro's conjecture and Vojta's conjecture.

Oct 2014 – still being verified...

Wikipedia

Page 15: Activity 2-14: The ABC Conjecture

With thanks to:

Ivars Peterson's MathTrek

and Wikipedia

Carom is written by Jonny Griffiths, [email protected]

http://www.maa.org/

mathland/mathtrek_12_8.html