- Quadratic Gauss sum
:"For the general type of Gauss sums see"
Gaussian period ,Gauss sum In mathematics, quadratic Gauss sums are certain sums over
exponential function s with quadratic argument. They are named afterCarl Friedrich Gauss , who studied them extensively.Definition
Let "a","b","c" be
natural numbers . The generalized Gauss' sum "G"("a","b","c") is defined by:
where "e"("x") is the exponential function exp(2πi"x"). The classical Gauss sum is the sum .
Properties of Gauss sums
*The Gauss sum "G"("a","b","c") depends only on the
residue class of "a","b" modulo "c".*Gauss sums are multiplicative, i.e. given natural numbers "a", "b", "c" and "d" with gcd("c","d") =1 one has
:"G"("a","b","cd")="G"("ac","b","d")"G"("ad","b","c").
This is a direct consequence of the
Chinese remainder theorem .*One has "G"("a","b","c")="0" if gcd("a","c")>1 except if gcd("a","c") divides "b" in which case one has:
Thus in the evaluation of quadratic Gauss sums one may always assume gcd("a","c")="1".
*Let "a","b" and "c" be integers with and "ac+b" even. One has the following analogue of
quadratic reciprocity for (even more general) Gauß sums:*Define for every odd integer "m".
All Gauss sums with "b=0" and gcd("a","c")="1" are explicitely given by
:
Here is the
Jacobi symbol . This is the famous formula ofCarl Friedrich Gauß .* For "b">"0" the Gauss sums can easily be computed by
completing the square in most cases. This fails however in some cases (for example "c" even and "b" odd) which can be computed relatively easy by other means. For example if "c" is odd and gcd("a","c")="1" one has:
where is some number with . As another example, if "4" divides "c" and "b" is odd and as always gcd("a","c")="1" then G("a","b","c")="0". This can, for example, be proven as follows: Because of the multiplicative property of Gauss sums we only have to show that if "n">"1" and "a,b" are odd with gcd("a","c")=1. If "b" is odd then is even for all . By
Hensel's lemma , for every "q", the equation has at most two solutions in . Because of a counting argument runs through all even residue classes modulo "c" exactly two times. Thegeometric sum formula then shows that .*If "c" is odd and squarefree and gcd("a","c")="1" then
:
If "c" is not squarefree then the right side vanishes while the left side does not. Often the right sum is also called a quadratic Gauss sum.
*Another useful formula is
:"G"("n","pk")="pG"("n","p""k"-2)
if "k"≥2 and "p" is an odd prime number or if "k"≥4 and "p"=2.
ee also
*
Kummer sum 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
*cite book | author = Bruce C. Berndt, Ronald J. Evans and Kenneth S. Williams | title = Gauss and Jacobi Sums | publisher = Wiley and Sons, Inc. | year = 1998 | id=ISBN 0-471-12807-4
*cite book | author = Henryk Iwaniek, Emmanuel Kowalski | title = Analytic number theory | publisher = American Mathematical Society | year = 2004 | id=ISBN 0-8218-3633-1
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