Diophantine equation

In mathematics, a Diophantine equation is a polynomial equation that only allows the variables to be integers. Diophantine problems have fewer equations than unknown variables and involve finding integers that work correctly for all equations.

The word Diophantine refers to the Greek mathematician of the third century A.D., Diophantus of Alexandria, who made a study of such equations and was one of the first mathematicians to introduce symbolism into algebra. The mathematical study of Diophantine problems Diophantus initiated is now called Diophantine analysis.

A linear Diophantine equation is an equation between two sums of monomials of degree zero or one.

Contents

Examples of Diophantine equations

Diophantine analysis

Traditional questions

The questions asked in Diophantine analysis include:

Hilbert's tenth problem

These traditional problems often lay unsolved for centuries, and mathematicians gradually came to understand their depth (in some cases), rather than treat them as puzzles. In 1900, in recognition of their depth, Hilbert proposed the solvability of all Diophantine problems as the tenth of his celebrated problems. In 1970, a novel result in mathematical logic known as Matiyasevich's theorem settled the problem negatively: in general Diophantine problems are unsolvable.

The point of view of Diophantine geometry, which is the application of algebraic geometry techniques in this field, has continued to grow as a result; since treating arbitrary equations is a dead end, attention turns to equations also having a geometric meaning.

Modern research

One of the few general approaches is through the Hasse principle. Infinite descent is the traditional method, and has been pushed a long way.

The depth of the study of general Diophantine equations is shown by the characterisation of Diophantine sets as recursively enumerable.

The field of Diophantine approximation deals with the cases of Diophantine inequalities: variables are still supposed to be integral, but some coefficients may be irrational numbers, and the equality sign is replaced by upper and lower bounds.

External links

See also: Diophantine equation, Alexandria, Algebra, Algebraic geometry, Bézout's identity, Diophantine approximation, Diophantine set, Diophantus, Equation, Fermat's last theorem