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Waring problem

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A problem in number theory formulated in 1770 by E. Waring in the following form: Any natural number is a sum of 4 squares, of 9 cubes and of 19 fourth-powers. In other words, for all there exists a k=k(n), depending only on n, such that every natural number is the sum of k n-th powers of non-negative integers. D. Hilbert in 1909 was the first to give a general solution of Waring's problem with a very rough estimate of the value of k as a function of n; this is why the problem is sometimes known as the Hilbert–Waring problem. Let J_{k,n}(N) be the number of solutions of the equation

x_1^n+\cdots+x_k^n=N

in non-negative integers. Hilbert's theorem then states that there exists a K=k(n) for which J_{K,n}(N)\geq1 for any N\geq1. G.H. Hardy and J.E. Littlewood, who applied the circle method to the Waring problem, demonstrated in 1928 that for k\geq(n-2)2^{n-1}+5 the value of J_{k,n}(N) is given by an asymptotic formula of the type

J_{k,n}(N)=AN^{k/n-1}+O(N^{k/n-1-\gamma}),

where A=A(N)\geq c_0>0, while c_0 and \gamma>0 are constants. Consequently, if N\geq N_0(n), equation (1) has a solution. This result gave rise to three problems: Determine the order of the three quantities G(n), g(n), k_0(n) which are the smallest integers for which: a) equation (1) is solvable for k\geq G(n) and N\geq N_0(n); b) equation (1) is solvable for k\geq g(n) and N\geq 1; or c) the asymptotic formula (2) applies to J_{k,n}(N) if k\geq k_0(n).

a) It is known that G(n)\geq n+1. It was proved in 1934 by I.M. Vinogradov, using his own method, that

G(n)\leq 3n(\ln n+9).

Moreover, many results are available concerning G(n) for small values of n: G(4)=16 (H. Davenport, 1939); G(3)=7 (Yu.V. Linnik, 1942).

b) It was shown in 1936 by L. Dickson and S. Pillai, who also used the Vinogradov method, that

G(n)=2^n+\left[\left(\frac{3}{2}\right)^n\right]-2

for all n>6 for which

\left(\frac{3}{2}\right)^n-\left[\left(\frac{3}{2}\right)^n\right]\leq 1-\left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^n\left\{\left[\left(\frac{3}{2}\right)^n\right]+2\right\}.

The last condition was demonstrated in 1957 by K. Mahler for all sufficiently large n.

c) The best result of all must be credited to Vinogradov, who showed that k_0(n)\leq 4n^2\ln n.


An elementary proof of Waring's problem was given in 1942 by Yu.V. Linnik. There exist many different generalizations of Waring's problem (the variables run through a certain subset of the set of natural numbers; the number N is represented by polynomials f_1(x_1),\ldots,f_k(x_k) rather than by monomials x_1^n,\ldots,x_k^n; equation (1) is replaced by a congruence, etc.).

The special importance of Waring's problem consists in the fact that in trying to solve it, powerful methods in analytic number theory had to be created.

References

[De] B.N. Delone, "The Peterburg school of number theory", Moscow-Leningrad (1947) (In Russian)
[Hu] L.-K. Hua, "Abschätzungen von Exponentialsummen und ihre Anwendung in der Zahlentheorie", Enzyklopaedie der Mathematischen Wissenschaften mit Einschluss ihrer Anwendungen, 1 : 2 (1959) (Heft 13, Teil 1)
[Kh] A.Ya. Khinchin, "Three pearls of number theory", Graylock (1952) (Translated from Russian)
[Vi] I.M. Vinogradov, "Selected works", Springer (1985) (Translated from Russian)
[Vi2] I.M. Vinogradov, "The method of trigonometric sums in the theory of numbers", Interscience (1954) (Translated from Russian)


Comments

It is known that g(2)=4 (J.L. Lagrange, 1770), g(3)=9 (A. Wieferich, A. Kempner, 1912), g(4)=19 (R. Balusabramanian, J. Deshouillers, F. Dress, 1986), g(5)=37 (Chen-Jingrun, 1964). See also Circle method and [HaWr][Sh].

References

[HaWr] G.H. Hardy, E.M. Wright, "An introduction to the theory of numbers", Oxford Univ. Press (1979) pp. Chapt. 6
[Sh] D. Shanks, "Solved and unsolved problems in number theory", Chelsea, reprint (1978)
[Va] R.C. Vaughan, "The Hardy–Littlewood method", Cambridge Univ. Press (1981)
How to Cite This Entry:
Waring problem. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Waring_problem&oldid=24876
This article was adapted from an original article by A.A. Karatsuba (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article