Is There a Real Solution for a^n+b^n=c^n as n Approaches Infinity?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the equation an + bn = cn and whether there are real solutions for a, b, and c as n approaches infinity. Participants explore the implications of limits in this context, questioning the validity of the original premise and the meaning of infinity in mathematical expressions.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant attempts to prove that there are no real solutions for a, b, c as n approaches infinity, using limits to argue that the expression approaches 0 rather than 1.
  • Another participant questions the validity of the limit used in the proof, asking for clarification on its relevance.
  • Some participants assert that the question of solutions for n tending to infinity is meaningless, arguing that infinity is not a number and cannot be used in equations.
  • Others counter that while solutions exist for finite values of n, the inquiry into the behavior as n approaches infinity is still valid.
  • There is a discussion about the distinction between expressions and equations, with emphasis on the nature of limits and their interpretations in mathematical contexts.
  • One participant provides an example involving the Fibonacci sequence to illustrate the concept of limits, suggesting that limits can be meaningful in certain mathematical contexts.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express disagreement on the validity of discussing the equation as n approaches infinity. Some believe the question is nonsensical, while others argue that it is a legitimate inquiry into the behavior of the equation under certain conditions. No consensus is reached regarding the interpretation of limits and the implications for the original equation.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the limitations of using infinity in mathematical expressions, noting that it cannot be treated as a finite number. The discussion reveals a lack of clarity regarding the definitions and implications of limits in this context.

Icebreaker
I'm trying to show the following:

Let [tex]a^n+b^n=c^n[/tex] where [tex]a, b, c[/tex] are not equal to zero. There is no real solution for [tex]a, b, c[/tex] as [tex]n\rightarrow\infty[/tex].

Proof:

Assume the contrary. If there is a real solution for [tex]a, b, c[/tex] as [tex]n\rightarrow\infty[/tex], then

[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n+b^n}{c^n}=1[/tex]

must also be true.

We can use properties of limits and algebra to obtain, from the previous equation

[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}+lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}=1[/tex]

It can be shown that if [tex]a^n+b^n=c^n[/tex] (where [tex]a, b, c[/tex] are not equal to zero) is true, then [tex]c>a[/tex] and [tex]c>b[/tex]

Therefore

[tex]0<\frac{a}{c}<1[/tex] and [tex]0<\frac{b}{c}<1[/tex]

Using properties of limits, we can state that

[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n} = lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{b^n}{c^n} = 0[/tex]

and therefore

[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}+lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}=lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n+b^n}{c^n}=0[/tex]

Which is not 1, and we have thus shown that the contrary to the first statement cannot be true.

p.s. I hate tex
 
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Icebreaker,
[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}+lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}=1[/tex]

for starters where did you get this?

Before we get too caught up in that, I have to ask, What does a limit have to do with it?
 
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[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{a^n+b^n}{c^n}<br /> =lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{a^n}{c^n}+\frac{b^n}{c^n}<br /> =lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}+lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}<br /> =1[/tex]

If you have a way to prove it without limits, be my guest.
 
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First of all, I don't like the problem "statement" at all, it makes little mathematical sense. Did you get that out of a textbook, or did you make it up ?

The ("Fermat-like") equation [tex]a^n + b^n = c^n[/tex] has infinitely many real solution sets (a,b,c) for every positive integral value of n. Asking what solutions exist when n is infinite, or even "n tends to infinity" is meaningless. This is not evaluating the limit of an expression, this is gobbledegook.
 
Why is asking what solutions exist when n increases without bound meaningless?
 
Think about what you're asking.

Do real solution sets (a,b,c) exist for n = 1000 ? YES

Do real solution sets (a,b,c) exist for n = 100,000 ? YES

Do real solution sets (a,b,c) exist for n = 10^(10^(10^10) ? YES

Is n "tending" to infinity in the above ? I suppose so.

Do real solutions exist all the way regardless of the finite value of n, no matter how large ? Obviously.

Does it make sense to ask the question for an infinite value of n ? NO.

***

Do you see now ?
 
Explain what mathematical principal I'm violating here? Because from what I see above I have every right asking the question I did.
 
Icebreaker said:
Explain what mathematical principal I'm violating here? Because from what I see above I have every right asking the question I did.

As has been discussed a very large number (but still finite) number of times in this forum, infinity is NOT a number. You cannot set up an equation using infinity and expect it to have a solution.

If, OTOH, you're asking whether that equation has solutions for very large finite values of n, then the answer is always YES, so the premise you want to prove is wrong.

When you are evaluating the limits of expressions as something "tends" to infinity, all you are doing is investigating the behaviour or a mathematical expression as one of the terms is made arbitrarily large. Note that even if the limit exists, the expression can NEVER actually equal the limit. It can only approach it.

Just as you cannot speak of the expression ever having the ACTUAL value of the limit, you cannot set up an equation using those rules.
 
Curious3141 said:
As has been discussed a very large number (but still finite) number of times in this forum, infinity is NOT a number. You cannot set up an equation using infinity and expect it to have a solution.

Oh? [tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{1}{n}=0[/tex]

Curious3141 said:
If, OTOH, you're asking whether that equation has solutions for very large finite values of n, then the answer is always YES, so the premise you want to prove is wrong.

Of course there's a solution for every finite n. So?

Curious3141 said:
When you are evaluating the limits of expressions as something "tends" to infinity, all you are doing is investigating the behaviour or a mathematical expression as one of the terms is made arbitrarily large.

So I'm investigating the value of the expression as a variable is increasing without bounds. And?

Curious3141 said:
Just as you cannot speak of the expression ever having the ACTUAL value of the limit, you cannot set up an equation using those rules.

I never said n EQUALS infinity.
 
  • #10
Curious3141 said:
Think about what you're asking.

Do real solution sets (a,b,c) exist for n = 1000 ? YES

Do real solution sets (a,b,c) exist for n = 100,000 ? YES

Do real solution sets (a,b,c) exist for n = 10^(10^(10^10) ? YES

Congratulations, you've proven that there are at least 3 solutions for the equation.

Curious3141 said:
Is n "tending" to infinity in the above ? I suppose so.

Why do you think I set up the limit? Because I don't simply "suppose so".

Curious3141 said:
Do real solutions exist all the way regardless of the finite value of n, no matter how large? Obviously.

I never said they didn't.

Curious3141 said:
Does it make sense to ask the question for an infinite value of n ? NO.

And here is where your logic breaks down.
 
  • #11
By your logic, suppose we have [tex]y=\frac{1}{x}[/tex]. We find that there is a non-zero [tex]y[/tex] for any arbitrarily large [tex]x[/tex], and therefore makes no sense to ask whether there's a limit for [tex]y=\frac{1}{x}[/tex] as [tex]x\rightarrow\infty[/tex].
 
  • #12
Icebreaker said:
I never said n EQUALS infinity.

Icebreaker said:
Curious3141 said:
Does it make sense to ask the question for an infinite value of n ? NO.
And here is where your logic breaks down.

I'm confused... Do you want n to equal infinity or not? :confused:

--J
 
  • #13
No, I don't. Read the post above yours.
 
  • #14
Could you state your meaning using a more rigorous definition of limits?
 
  • #15
To Illustrate: a case where you could use the limit is the case of the Fibonacci numbers: 1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34,55,89,144...where the series in continued by the formula: F(N-1)+F(N)=F(N+1), or we add two successive numbers to get the next one.

Now it happens to be that this series is closely connected with the Golden Mean:
[tex]\frac{-1+\sqrt(5)}{2}[/tex] =.618034...

We look at: 34/55 =.618182..;55/89 =.617978...;89/144 =.618056...

Thus we might wonder if the limit as n goes to infinity of F(n)/F(n+1) = Golden Mean...which it does!

This limit is so good, that if divided 144 by the Golden Mean we get 232.996, which rounds off to 233 =89+144. (In fact it is good even from the second "1" giving 1/GM = 1.6180 rounds to 2. 2/GM =3.23 rounds to 3, 3/GM=4.85 rounds to 5!
 
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  • #16
Icebreaker said:
Curious3141 said:
Do real solutions exist all the way regardless of the finite value of n, no matter how large? Obviously.

I never said they didn't.

Icebreaker said:
I'm trying to show the following:

Let [tex]a^n+b^n=c^n[/tex] where [tex]a, b, c[/tex] are not equal to zero. There is no real solution for [tex]a, b, c[/tex] as [tex]n\rightarrow\infty[/tex].


:confused:

And I don't understand what the post that supposedly explains whether or not you want n to be infinity. I'm still confused on this issue.

--J
 
  • #17
Icebreaker said:
Oh? [tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{1}{n}=0[/tex]

Oh-what ? [tex]\frac{1}{n}[/tex] is an EXPRESSION, not an EQUATION. And it *never* equals zero no matter what value of n you choose. Only the limit is zero. There is a fundamental distinction here you don't seem to be grasping.


Of course there's a solution for every finite n. So?

So the premise you set about to "prove" is WRONG !



I'm investigating the value of the expression as a variable is increasing without bounds. And?

No, you are NOT. You are investigating an EQUATION as n tends to infinity. Which makes no sense.

You CAN investigate the behavior of the EXPRESSION [tex]{(a^n + b^n)}^{\frac{1}{n}}[/tex] as n tends to infinity. If, for simplicity, we allow only for positive real values of a and b, then

[tex]\lim_{n \rightarrow \infty}{(a^n + b^n)}^{\frac{1}{n}} = max(a,b)[/tex]

Fair enough ?

*If* you say [tex]c = {(a^n + b^n)}^{\frac{1}{n}}[/tex] THEN it's perfectly acceptable to say :

[tex]\lim_{n \rightarrow \infty}c = max(a,b)[/tex]

Here you are still investigating the behavior of the expression called "c" as n tends to infinity. It's completely fine.

OTOH, it is not standard practice (and hence not acceptable) to do the same for an equation trying to find solutions at a limit.
 
  • #18
I tihnk your problem is that you haven't defined "solution" well enough, when you said there wasn't one.
 
  • #19
Curious3141 said:
Oh-what ? [tex]\frac{1}{n}[/tex] is an EXPRESSION, not an EQUATION.

Oh? And

[tex]\frac{a^n+b^n}{c^n}[/tex]

is NOT an expression?

Curious3141 said:
So the premise you set about to "prove" is WRONG !

Interesting how you can rush to that conclusion based on 3 examples where n equalled finite numbers.

Curious3141 said:
No, you are NOT. You are investigating an EQUATION as n tends to infinity. Which makes no sense.[...]

No, I am investigating the EXPRESSION

[tex]\frac{a^n+b^n}{c^n}[/tex]

as n increases without bound. And from what I see, there's little difference between what I am trying to do, and the example which you gave.
 
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  • #20
DeadWolfe said:
I tihnk your problem is that you haven't defined "solution" well enough, when you said there wasn't one.

Perhaps. I will try and find a better definition of "solution".

Justin Lazear said:
:confused:

And I don't understand what the post that supposedly explains whether or not you want n to be infinity. I'm still confused on this issue.

--J

No, you read the wrong post. Read the one directly above your first reply to this thread.
 
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  • #21
Let's take things one at a time...

Icebreaker said:
Oh? And

[tex]\frac{a^n+b^n}{c^n}[/tex]

is NOT an expression?

This IS an expression. If you have rigidly defined [tex]c^n = a^n + b^n[/tex] then the expression is ALWAYS equal to unity. The limit is also unity.

Going back to your first post :

Icebreaker said:
[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n+b^n}{c^n}=1[/tex]

must also be true.[/tex]

Fine so far.

We can use properties of limits and algebra to obtain, from the previous equation

[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}+lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}=1[/tex]

Also fine.

It can be shown that if [tex]a^n+b^n=c^n[/tex] (where [tex]a, b, c[/tex] are not equal to zero) is true, then [tex]c>a[/tex] and [tex]c>b[/tex]

True for all finite n, but NOT at the limit. At the limit, [tex]c = max(a,b)[/tex]. If b is the greater, then [tex]c = b[/tex] at the limit. This is your slip-up.

Therefore

[tex]0<\frac{a}{c}<1[/tex] and [tex]0<\frac{b}{c}<1[/tex]

Again, true for all finite n cases, not correct at the limit.

Using properties of limits, we can state that

[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n} = lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{b^n}{c^n} = 0[/tex]

Incorrect ! If b is the larger quantity, then [tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n} = 0[/tex] while [tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{b^n}{c^n} = 1[/tex]

The rest is all wrong too.

and therefore

[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}+lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n}{c^n}=lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \frac{a^n+b^n}{c^n}=0[/tex]

Which is not 1, and we have thus shown that the contrary to the first statement cannot be true.


Interesting how you can rush to that conclusion based on 3 examples where n equalled finite numbers.

I'm sorry, but you do not understand limits.
 
  • #22
Icebreaker said:
You could have saved a lot of breath: my mistake was not in the way I am evaluating the limits, nor my understanding of limits, but circular logic. I assumed [tex]n\rightarrow\infty[/tex], but used a finite number to evaluate one of the properties I used in the proof, and replugged it back into my original guess.


Saved a lot of breath ? :rolleyes: How about next time I don't bother to correct your misconceptions at all ?

And there IS something deeply wrong with your understanding of limits if you can make a mistake like that.

I'm done with this thread.
 
  • #23
:rolleyes: Get it through your head: limits had nothing to do with it. It was circular logic.
 
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  • #24
Icebreaker said:
:rolleyes: Get it through your head: limits had nothing to do with it. It was circular logic.

GET IT THROUGH YOUR HEAD : Your entire attempt to find "solutions" to an "equation" at the limit was FLAWED. It wasn't a simple case of mistaking the behaviour of a finite property with the limit, IT WAS A COMPLETELY FLAWED ATTEMPT AT A PROOF BY CONTRADICTION !

FUNDAMENTALLY WRONG CONCEPT ! Not "circular logic".
 
  • #25
My entire attempt to find "solutions" to the limits of both sides of the "equation" by contradiction was FLAWED because I mistook the behavior of a finite property with the limit.

Tell me what's wrong with the following, by your definition

[tex]x = x[/tex]

[tex]lim_{x\rightarrow\infty}x = lim_{x\rightarrow\infty}x[/tex]
 
  • #26
Icebreaker's proof is perfectly valid. But all it shows is that there are only a finite number of values of n for which a^n+b^n=c^n for fixed a,b and c >0.
 
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  • #27
I want to echo Chronon because Icebreaker was getting a lot of stick for someone else misunderstanding the question.

Rephrase it as consider the function f_n = x^n +y^n

and let f be the pointwise limit of f_n when this makes sense.
Are there any pairs x,y for which f(x,y)=1?

No, because the pointwise limit is identically zero for 0<x,y<1, 2 for x=y=1, and not defined other wise.
 
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  • #28
matt grime said:
I want to echo Chronon because Icebreaker was getting a lot of stick for someone else misunderstanding the question.

Rephrase it as consider the function f_n = x^n +y^n

and let f be the pointwise limit of f_n when this makes sense.
Are there any pairs x,y for which f(x,y)=1?

No, because the pointwise limit is identically zero for 0<x,y<1, 2 for x=y=1, and not defined other wise.

Matt, look at the original question and the way it was phrased. Does it make sense ?

It was not the limit of an expression. It was an attempt to define real solutions to an *equation* with exponents as the exponents tended to infinity. As far as I'm aware, that is not sound mathematics.

Are you saying I'm wrong ? If so, please explain why.
 
  • #29
Yes, the original question makes sense as in it can certainly be understood even if it isn't the clearest way of writing it out: it defines a function as a pointwise limit. It would ghave been better to explain how it should have been better written since it is obvious what it is asking for.

How can you simultaneously say it isn't a limit and that things tend to infinity?

If you prefer, it is asking for the direct limit of the sets of solutions for each n ordered by inclusion - this makes it even clearer the answer is empty.
 
  • #30
matt grime said:
Yes, the original question makes sense as in it can certainly be understood even if it isn't the clearest way of writing it out: it defines a function as a pointwise limit. It would ghave been better to explain how it should have been better written since it is obvious what it is asking for.

No, it wasn't obvious to me what the question was asking for.

For me the solution to an equation has to satisfy the equation when it is substituted back into it. Agree ?

Now let me explain my problem with the question. If one tries to solve the equation algebraically "at the limit", the solution might just not work on the original equation.

Let's say we decide the values of a and b and want to determine what value of c (if any) exists. The obvious way of doing that is to evaluate [tex]c = {(a^n + b^n)}^{\frac{1}{n}}[/tex]. It is clear that as n tends to infinity, the limit of [tex]c = max(a,b)[/tex]. Fair enough ?

Now let's try putting that back into the original equation in the form [tex]a^n + b^n - c^n = 0[/tex], where n tends to infinity. Here we are evaluating each term sequentially. It is clear that no solution set other than the trivial (0,0,0) will actually work upon substitution.

I believe the original poster was trying to use this sort of logic to show that the equation can have no real solutions "at the limit". But to me, the question makes no sense. If you solve an equation with valid algebra, the solution *has* to work. Putting the solutions back in and verifying that they do not satisfy the equation does not mean that there are no real solutions to the equation per se, it means that the statement itself is flawed.

The equation (barring the limit) is in a valid algebraic form. The solutions that I found were with valid algebra. The problem was in the way that solution behaved when the limit was taken. That limit could not successfully be substituted back into the original equation.

The conclusion I draw from that is that it *makes no sense* to speak of solving an equation at the limit. It's fine to define the behaviour of a function at the limit, as you have done, but not try to solve an equation.

Do you still disagree, Matt ?
 

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