Английская Википедия:Diophantine quintuple

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Шаблон:Short description

In number theory, a diophantine Шаблон:Mvar-tuple is a set of Шаблон:Mvar positive integers <math>\{a_1, a_2, a_3, a_4,\ldots, a_m\}</math> such that <math>a_i a_j + 1</math> is a perfect square for any <math> 1\le i < j \le m.</math>[1] A set of Шаблон:Mvar positive rational numbers with the similar property that the product of any two is one less than a rational square is known as a rational diophantine Шаблон:Mvar-tuple.

Diophantine m-tuples

The first diophantine quadruple was found by Fermat: <math>\{1,3, 8, 120\}.</math>[1] It was proved in 1969 by Baker and Davenport [1] that a fifth positive integer cannot be added to this set. However, Euler was able to extend this set by adding the rational number <math>\tfrac{777480}{8288641}.</math>[1]

The question of existence of (integer) diophantine quintuples was one of the oldest outstanding unsolved problems in number theory. In 2004 Andrej Dujella showed that at most a finite number of diophantine quintuples exist.[1] In 2016 it was shown that no such quintuples exist by He, Togbé and Ziegler.[2]

As Euler proved, every Diophantine pair can be extended to a Diophantine quadruple. The same is true for every Diophantine triple. In both of these types of extension, as for Fermat's quadruple, it is possible to add a fifth rational number rather than an integer.[3]

The rational case

Diophantus himself found the rational diophantine quadruple <math>\left\{\tfrac1{16}, \tfrac{33}{16}, \tfrac{17}4, \tfrac{105}{16}\right\}.</math>[1] More recently, Philip Gibbs found sets of six positive rationals with the property.[4] It is not known whether any larger rational diophantine m-tuples exist or even if there is an upper bound, but it is known that no infinite set of rationals with the property exists.[5]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links