|  Number Theory | 
In General > s.a. mathematics.
  * Idea: The study
    of the operations + and ×, usually on integers.
  * History: Contributors
    were Euclid, Diophantus; Fermat, Euler, Lagrange, Legendre, Fourier,
    Gauss, Cauchy, Abel, Jacobi, Dirichlet, Liouville; Kummer, Galois,
    Hermite, Eisenstein, Kronecker, Riemann, Dedekind, Bachmann, Gordan,
    H Weber, G Cantor, Hurwitz, Minkowski.
  * Fermat's first theorem: If
    p is a prime, and a any integer, p divides either
    a or ap−1
    − 1; Proved by Fermat.
  * Fermat's second theorem:
    The numbers 2n+1 are prime;
    It is wrong for n ≥ 6.
  * Open problems:
    For example, the Goldbach and Langlands conjectures;
    > see conjectures.
  * Nice fact: The sequence
    [(51/2+1)/2]m
    approaches an integer as m → ∞.
  * Nice fact: Given any
    10 numbers between 1 and 100, there are always two pairs whose sums are
    equal; Likewise for 20 numbers between 1 and 5000. (Claimed not to be
    too difficult to prove.)
  * Conjecture: Take any integer,
    n1; If it is even, divide by 2,
    n2 = n1/2, and if
    it is odd, n2 = 3n1+1;
    Iterate; Then it is thought that eventually the iteration becomes periodic:
    ..., 4, 2, 1, 4, 2, 1, ...
  @ Simple introductions: Bunch 00;
    Duverney 10 [elementary intro through Diophantine equations];
    Forman & Rash 15;
    Kowalski 21 [probabilistic].
  @ General references: Hardy & Wright 60;
    in Honsberger 76;
    Weil 79,
    84;
    Hasse 80;
    Hua 82;
    Narkiewicz 84;
    Baker 85;
    Ireland & Rosen 90;
    Rose 94;
    Goldman 97 [historical];
    Nathanson 99 [elementary methods];
    Guy 04 [unsolved problems];
    Andreescu et al 06 [problems];
    Coppel 09 [II];
    Everest & Ward 10 [II/III];
    Li et al 13 [and applications];
    Jarvis 14 [algebraic].
  @ And quantum mechanics: Benioff PRA(01)qp/00,
    qp/00-proc,
    Algo(02)qp/01,
    a0704 [quantum representations of numbers];
    Tran AP(04)
      [partitions and many-particle density of states].
Prime Numbers
  * History: 350 BC, Euclid's "Fundamental
    Theorem of Arithmetic," about the unique prime decomposition of every integer; In the 3rd
    century BC, Eratosthenes conceived his "sieve" method for identifying prime numbers;
    GIMPS, The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search, a collaborative effort to find large primes
    using many computers; 2015, The Electronic Frontier Foundation has awards fo people who find very large primes.
  * Applications: Cryptography; The life-cycle periods of cicadas.
  * Prime number theorem: The number of
    primes π(x) smaller or equal to x grows asymptotically like
π(x) ~ li x:= ∫2x dt/log t ~ x/log x .
  * Mersenne primes: The ones of the form
    2n−1, like 23−1 = 7;
    2018, the largest known prime number is \(2^{77,232,917}-1\), with 23,249,425 digits.
  * Double Wieferich primes:
    2000, The only known ones are p = 2, q = 1093;
    p = 3, q = 1006003 ; p = 5,
    q = 1645333507; p = 83, q = 4871;
    p = 911, q = 318917; p = 2903, q = 18787.
  * Semiprime numbers:
    Natural numbers that are products of two prime numbers.
  @ General references: Ribenboim 91;
    Olivastro ThSc(90)may;
    Bombieri ThSc(92)sep;
    Peterman mp/00 [renormalization-group approach];
    Gepner m.NT/05 [distribution];
    Granville BAMS(05) [determining whether a number is prime];
    Muñoz & Pérez CMP(08);
    Green & Tao AM(08) [primes contain aribtrarily long arithmetic progressions];
    Crandall & Pomerance 10 [computational];
    news ns(13)mar [and quantum computers];
    Mazur & Stein 16 [and the Riemann hypothesis];
    news sn(18)jan [the largest known prime].
  @ Special topics:
    Kupershmidt a0806-wd [Nicolas conjecture / inequality].
  @ Differences: Kumar et al cm/03 [distribution];
    Ares & Castro PhyA(06)cm/03;
    Szpiro PhyA(04),
    PhyA(07) [gaps].
  @ As spectrum of quantum H:
    Mussardo cm/97;
    Rosu MPLA(03);
    Timberlake & Tucker a0708/PhyA [and quantum chaos];
    Sekatskii a0709;
    Menezes & Svaiter a1211 [no-go result].
  @ Other physics:
    Liboff & Wong IJTP(98) [quasi-chaos in sequence];
    Gadiyar & Padma ht/98 [prime pairs and quantum field theory];
    Kelly & Pilling ht/01 [twin and triplet primes];
    Bonanno & Mega CSF(04) [dynamical approach];
    Latorre & Sierra QIC-a1302 [and pure quantum states],
    a1403 [entanglement in the primes].
  > Online resources:
    The Prime Pages website.
Other Special Numbers > s.a. types of numbers.
  * Triangular numbers: A number
    is triangular if it is half the sum of two consecutive integers; Every
    positive integer is the sum of 3 triangular numbers (Gauss).
  * Perfect numbers: Numbers which are equal
    to the sum of their factors; The first five are 6, 28, 496, 8128, and 33,550,336; For each
    Mersenne prime 2n−1, there is a perfect number
    2n−1 (2n−1),
    like 22 (23−1) = 28,
    or 21257786 (21257787−1).
  * Figurate numbers: Numbers
    that can be represented by regular geometrical arrangements of equally spaced
    points; They include triangular numbers, square numbers, pentagonal numbers,
    and other polygonal numbers.
  @ References: Davis ht/04 [odd perfect numbers];
    Deza & Deza 12 [figurate numbers];
    news SA(20)oct [the number 42 :-)].
  > Online resources:
    see Wikipedia page on square-free integers;
    MathWorld page
    and Wikipedia page on figurate numbers.
Special Topics > s.a. Euler's Totient Function;
  knot theory [arithmetic topology]; partitions.
  * Elliptic curves and modular
    forms: STW (Shimura-Taniyama-Weil) conjecture, proved in 1999
    [@ news NAMS(99)dec],
    after A Wiles proved a special case in his proof of Fermat's last theorem;
    It is part of the Langlands program.
  * Quadratic reciprocity theorem:
    A result on the form of the prime divisors p of numbers of the form
    n2 − q, conjectured
    by Euler and first proved by Gauß.
  @ Factoring numbers: Clauser & Dowling PRA(96)-a0810 [using Young's N-slit interferometer];
    Altschuler & Williams a1402 [simulated annealing approach];
    Dridi & Alghassi sRep(17)-a1604 [using quantum annealing and computational algebraic geometry];
    Cadavid et al a2104
      [using diffusion as a computational engine].
  @ Other topics: Olivastro ThSc(90)may [Fermat],
    ThSc(90)nov [magic squares];
    Crandall SA(97)feb [manipulating large numbers and computers].
Geometric Number Theory
  * History: Not just a branch of
    number theory; It is now independent, with many applications and connections.
  * Typical problems: All related
    to properties of lattices in En
    and bases, the dense ball packing problem, the Minkowski-Hlawka theorem, etc,
    and can range to reduction of polynomials or coding.
  * Measure on the space of lattices:
    It satisfies μ(total) = 1.
  * Topology on the space of lattices:
    A sequence Ln converges to
    L if the bases converge, vector by vector.
  * Classification: Bravais types;
    Types of dual tilings.
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  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 26 apr 2021