What are some other ways to solve the equation x^3+y^3+z^3+t^3=1999?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the equation x^3+y^3+z^3+t^3=1999, exploring various methods to find integer solutions. Participants share their approaches, generalizations, and thoughts on the complexity of the problem, which falls within the realm of number theory and Diophantine equations.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant proposes a construction method for infinitely many integer solutions using a specific form of quadruples.
  • Another participant expresses skepticism about finding substantially different solutions, suggesting the initial method may be comprehensive.
  • Some participants discuss potential connections to group theory, although they admit limited knowledge in that area.
  • A generalization is suggested for integers of the form (2x^3)-1, modifying the original quadruple to produce more solutions.
  • Participants explore the implications of classifying all integer solutions, noting the complexity of the problem due to having four variables.
  • There is speculation about the difficulty of determining all integer solutions to the equation, with references to similar challenging problems in number theory.
  • One participant mentions a specific solution involving the integer 1, prompting curiosity about the methods used to find such solutions.
  • Another participant shares that they found a solution using a computer to check possibilities, indicating a reliance on computational methods.
  • Technical discussions include binomial expansions and algebraic manipulations related to the equation.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a mix of agreement and skepticism regarding the completeness of the proposed solutions. While some believe the initial construction method may be sufficient, others raise questions about the potential for additional solutions and the overall complexity of the problem. The discussion remains unresolved with multiple competing views on the nature of the solutions.

Contextual Notes

The problem involves multiple variables and is situated within the broader context of Diophantine equations, which are known to be complex. There are references to unresolved questions in number theory that relate to the equation, indicating potential limitations in current understanding.

Mathguy15
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I was studying (yet another) number theory problem, described here:

Prove that the equation x^3+y^3+z^3+t^3=1999 has infinitely many solutions (x,y,z,t) in integers.

I found a way of constructing these solutions, which I will describe right now: Consider the quadruple of real numbers of the form (10+n,10-n,-(60n^2)^1/3,-1), where n is an integer. The sum of the cubes of these real numbers, for arbitrary n, is always 1999. Let n be of the form s^3*60, where s is any integer. Then the quadruple described above becomes an integer quadruple. Since there are infinitely many such n, there are infinitely many integer solutions to the equation.

I found this fascinating! Can you all find an alternate way of solving the problem? I'd be interested.

Thanks
mathguy15(whos now 16)
 
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Hi Mathguy, nice work. I tried for more than reasonable time without getting there. I strongly believe you have *the* solution, and nothing substantially different will come up.
 
Thanks. I wonder if something related to group theory can be applied. Sadly, I don't know enough group theory to make it work :(. But that's ok.
 
Oh, and I have found a generalization to all integers of the form (2x^3)-1. In the quadruple of real numbers, replace 10 by x and and -(60n^2)^1/3 by -(6xn^2)^1/3, and then n is just of the form (s^3)*6x for some integer s. This produces a way of representing any number of the form (2x^3)-1 as the sum of four integer cubes.

EDIT:and there is a method for representing cubes as the sum of four cubes and integers that are twice some cube as the sum of three cubes.
 
Binomial expansion.

(10+x)^3=1000+3*10^2*x+3*10*x^2+x^3
(10-x)^3=1000-3*10^2*x+3*10*x^2-x^3

(10+x)^3-(10-x)^3=2000+60*x^2

(10+x)^3-(10-x)^3-(60x^2)^1/3^3-1=1999
 
You can probably generalize further, and replace the 1 in 2x3-1 with any cube.
 
Norwegian said:
You can probably generalize further, and replace the 1 in 2x3-1 with any cube.

Yeah! For any cube(r^3) and any integer(n), the quadruple of real numbers of the form {n,-n,0,r} satisfies the equation x^3+y^3+z^3+t^3=r^3.

EDIT:Sorry, I thought you meant replace the 2x^3-1 by any cube. In order to generalize to the case you mentioned above, in the quadruple of real numbers {10+n,10-n,-(60n^2)^1/3,-1}, just replace the -1 by any integer, and you get infinitely many representations of the number 2x^3-f^3 as the sum of four cubes.
 
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The further problem here is to find (and to prove that you found) all the solutions.

You found infinitely many solutions, which is pretty good. Now try to find them all (if there are any).
 
micromass said:
The further problem here is to find (and to prove that you found) all the solutions.

You found infinitely many solutions, which is pretty good. Now try to find them all (if there are any).

So the next step is to classify every type of solution that could arise?
 
  • #10
Mathguy15 said:
So the next step is to classify every type of solution that could arise?

That would indeed be an interesting problem.
 
  • #11
micromass said:
That would indeed be an interesting problem.

Sorry, I'm new at this. Could you give this newbie some inkling of what that problem could entail?
 
  • #12
Mathguy15 said:
Sorry, I'm new at this. Could you give this newbie some inkling of what that problem could entail?

The problem is likely very difficult. It is a problem in Diophantine equations, which can turn out to be quite complicated. Furthermore, your problem has 4 variables, which doesn't help.

Even the easier problems of elliptic curves are very difficult.
 
  • #13
micromass said:
The problem is likely very difficult. It is a problem in Diophantine equations, which can turn out to be quite complicated. Furthermore, your problem has 4 variables, which doesn't help.

Even the easier problems of elliptic curves are very difficult.

Hey! Those were used in the proof of Fermat's last theorem. I don't really know anything about elliptic curves, but I want to be a mathematician, and I like number theory, so I might be involved with those in about 6-7 years.
 
  • #14
Mathguy15 said:
Hey! Those were used in the proof of Fermat's last theorem. I don't really know anything about elliptic curves, but I want to be a mathematician, and I like number theory, so I might be involved with those in about 6-7 years.

It's a beautiful theory. Check out the website http://mathcircle.berkeley.edu/BMC4/Handouts/elliptic/node1.html to see what kind of methods are involved. With a knowledge of geometry, you should be able to understand it.
 
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  • #15
I'm going to go ahead and guess that the problem of determining all integer solutions to
x^3+y^3+z^3+t^3=1999is open.

I have two reasons to suspect this: 1) These kinds of problems are generally really, really, really difficult to solve (cf. FLT, Erdos-Strauss, ...). 2) Let's suppose we were able to classify all integer solutions. We would then, in particular, be able to classify integer solutions in which t=1, or equivalently, we'd be able to solve
x^3+y^3+z^3=1998=3^3\cdot 74in the integers. If we could solve that, then we'd know a thing or two about the rational solutions to
X^3 + Y^3 + Z^3 = 74. I believe nobody knows if this last equation has any integer solutions. Indeed, in Cohen, Number Theory: Analytic and Modern Tools (Springer, 2007), one finds the following piece of info:
As of 2007 the only integers n such that 0 \leq n \leq 100 and n \not\equiv \pm4 \, (\text{mod } 9) that are not known to be a sum of three cubes are n=33, 42, 52, and 74.
This leads to me suspect that people don't know much about the rational solutions of this equation either (but I could be wrong).
 
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  • #16
morphism said:
I'm going to go ahead and guess that the problem of determining all integer solutions to
x^3+y^3+z^3+t^3=1999is open.

I have two reasons to suspect this: 1) These kinds of problems are generally really, really, really difficult to solve (cf. FLT, Erdos-Strauss, ...). 2) Let's suppose we were able to classify all integer solutions. We would then, in particular, be able to classify integer solutions in which t=-1, or equivalently, we'd be able to solve
x^3+y^3+z^3=1998=3^3\cdot 74in the integers. If we could solve that, then we'd know a thing or two about the rational solutions to
X^3 + Y^3 + Z^3 = 74. I believe nobody knows if this last equation has any integer solutions. Indeed, in Cohen, Number Theory: Analytic and Modern Tools (Springer, 2007), one finds the following piece of info:

This leads to me suspect that people don't know much about the rational solutions of this equation either (but I could be wrong).

I don't follow. If one classifies the solutions with t=-1, wouldn't that mean one could solve x^3+y^3+z^3=2000 in integers rather than 1998?
 
  • #17
Yes, sorry - that was a typo. I meant t=1.
 
  • #18
morphism said:
Yes, sorry - that was a typo. I meant t=1.

It would be interesting if one could prove that 1 is never one of the integers in the solution.

EDIT:Oh, and thank you micromass for that link. I will definitely look into it.
 
  • #19
Mathguy15 said:
It would be interesting if one could prove that 1 is never one of the integers in the solution.

It will be since

1999=1^3+321409^3+894590^3+(-908211)^3
 
  • #20
micromass said:
It will be since

1999=1^3+321409^3+894590^3+(-908211)^3

Wow, how did you get that? Did you use some kind of computer or did you find it using some theory or theorem?
 
  • #21
Mathguy15 said:
Wow, how did you get that?

Just letting a computer check the possibilities. Nothing fancy.
I didn't even program it, I found this on a list online :-p
 
  • #22
Hi Mathguy15,

Multiply out the terms, but first cube your 3rd term since you're going to cube it later anyway...

n^3 + 30*n^2 + 300n + 1000
-n^3 + 30*n^2 - 300n + 1000
(-60*n^2)
- 1



30*n^2 + 30*n^2 - 60*n^2 = 0
1000 + 1000 - 1 = 1999

You could do the same thing for (n+8)^3 = 1n^3 + 24*n^2 + 192n + 512, and (n-8)^3, but you'd have to replace (-60*n^2) with (-48*n^2) and 1999 with 1023. And so on...

Note that you're not really dealing with cubes since they cancel out when you multiply out and collect the terms.
 
  • #23
Mathguy15 said:
I was studying (yet another) number theory problem, described here:

Prove that the equation x^3+y^3+z^3+t^3=1999 has infinitely many solutions (x,y,z,t) in integers.

I found a way of constructing these solutions, which I will describe right now: Consider the quadruple of real numbers of the form (10+n,10-n,-(60n^2)^1/3,-1), where n is an integer. The sum of the cubes of these real numbers, for arbitrary n, is always 1999. Let n be of the form s^3*60, where s is any integer. Then the quadruple described above becomes an integer quadruple. Since there are infinitely many such n, there are infinitely many integer solutions to the equation.
...
mathguy15(whos now 16)

Seems you're right!

107pcvr.png
 
  • #24
If you want to generalize further mathguy15...

for any n or k in N

First term: (1*k^0*n^3) + (3*k^1*n^2) + (3*k^2*n^1) + (1*k^3*n^0) = (n+k)^3
Second term: -(1*k^0*n^3) + (3*k^1*n^2) - (3*k^2*n^1) + (1*k^3*n^0)
Third term: (Derived from above 2nd terms doubled)
Fourth term: -1

... then figure out the formula for those coefficients (x) above (which is almost certainly related to the Binomial Coefficients aka "the coefficients of the expansion of (x+1)^n"). Do that and then you'll have a nice little equation in 3 variables that will work for any n, k or x in N.

Binomial Coefficients:
1
1 1 --> Powers of 1
1 2 1 --> Powers of 2
1 3 3 1 --> Powers of 3...
1 4 6 4 1 --> Powers of 4...

...when inserted into Polynomials.

In the example you posted, then set k = 10

- AC
 
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  • #25
Here's an example of what I was referring to in the previous post, thinking-wise. Take the form...

(10 + n)^5 + (10 - n)^5 + (-100*n^4) + (-20000*n^2) + (-1) = 199999

Echoing the form used by mathguy15...

v = (10 + n)
w = (10 - n)
x = (-100*n^4)^(1/5)
y = (-20000*n'^2))^(1/5)
z = -1

x = an integer for (-100*(100*s^5)^4)^(1/5); n =(100*s^5)
y = an integer for (-20000*(125*s'^10)^2))^(1/5); n' = (125*s^10)

Will have to see where to go from there, meaning what conclusions one might come to regarding:
v^5 + w^5 + x^5 + y^5 + z^5
 
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