- Lagrange's four-square theorem
Lagrange's four-square theorem, also known as Bachet's conjecture, was proven in 1770 by
Joseph Louis Lagrange . An earlier proof byFermat was never published.The theorem appears in the "
Arithmetica " ofDiophantus , translated into Latin by Bachet in 1621. It states that every positiveinteger can be expressed as the sum of four squares of integers. For example,:3 = 12 + 12 + 12 + 02 :31 = 52 + 22 + 12 + 12:310 = 172 + 42 + 22 + 12.
More formally, for every positive integer n there exist integers "x"1, "x"2, "x"3, "x"4 such that
:"n" = "x"12 + "x"22 + "x"32 + "x"42.
Adrien-Marie Legendre improved on the theorem in 1798 by stating that a positive integer can be expressed as the sum of three squaresif and only if it is not of the form 4"k"(8"m" + 7). His proof was incomplete, leaving a gap which was later filled byCarl Friedrich Gauss .Lagrange's four-square theorem is a special case of the
Fermat polygonal number theorem andWaring's problem . Another possible generalisation is the following problem: Givennatural number s "a", "b", "c" and "d", can we solve(*) "n" = "ax"12 + "bx"22 + "cx"32 + "dx"42
for all positive integers "n" in integers "x"1, "x"2, "x"3, "x"4? The case "a"="b"="c"="d"=1 is answered in the positive by Lagrange's four-square theorem. The general solution was given by
Ramanujan . He proved that if we assume, without loss of generality, that "a" ≤ "b" ≤ "c" ≤ "d" then there are exactly 54 possible choices for "a", "b", "c" and "d" such that (*) is solvable in integers "x"1, "x"2, "x"3, "x"4 for all "n". (Ramanujan listed a 55th possibility "a"=1, "b"=2, "c"=5, "d"=5, but in this case (*) is not solvable if "n"=15. [http://www.math.snu.ac.kr/~mhkim/t-00indiana.pdf] )See also
*
Euler's four-square identity
*Fermat's theorem on sums of two squares
*15 theorem
*Jacobi's four-square theorem References
*cite book | author = Ireland and Rosen | title = A Classical Introduction to Modern Number Theory | publisher = Springer-Verlag | year = 1990 | id=ISBN 0-387-97329-X
External links
* [http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/ProofOfLagrangesFourSquareTheorem.html Proof at PlanetMath.org]
* [http://www.alpertron.com.ar/4SQUARES.HTM Another proof]
* [http://www.alpertron.com.ar/FSQUARES.HTM an applet decomposing numbers as sums of four squares]
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