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Four exponentials conjecture

In mathematics, specifically the field of transcendental number theory, the four exponentials conjecture is a conjecture which, given the right conditions on the exponents, would guarantee the transcendence of at least one of four exponentials. The conjecture, along with two related, stronger conjectures, is at the top of a hierarchy of conjectures and theorems concerning the arithmetic nature of a certain number of values of the exponential function.

Statement edit

If x1, x2 and y1, y2 are two pairs of complex numbers, with each pair being linearly independent over the rational numbers, then at least one of the following four numbers is transcendental:

 

An alternative way of stating the conjecture in terms of logarithms is the following. For 1 ≤ i, j ≤ 2 let λij be complex numbers such that exp(λij) are all algebraic. Suppose λ11 and λ12 are linearly independent over the rational numbers, and λ11 and λ21 are also linearly independent over the rational numbers, then

 

An equivalent formulation in terms of linear algebra is the following. Let M be the 2×2 matrix

 

where exp(λij) is algebraic for 1 ≤ i, j ≤ 2. Suppose the two rows of M are linearly independent over the rational numbers, and the two columns of M are linearly independent over the rational numbers. Then the rank of M is 2.

While a 2×2 matrix having linearly independent rows and columns usually means it has rank 2, in this case we require linear independence over a smaller field so the rank isn't forced to be 2. For example, the matrix

 

has rows and columns that are linearly independent over the rational numbers, since π is irrational. But the rank of the matrix is 1. So in this case the conjecture would imply that at least one of e, eπ, and eπ2 is transcendental (which in this case is already known since e is transcendental).

History edit

The conjecture was considered in the early 1940s by Atle Selberg who never formally stated the conjecture.[1] A special case of the conjecture is mentioned in a 1944 paper of Leonidas Alaoglu and Paul Erdős who suggest that it had been considered by Carl Ludwig Siegel.[2] An equivalent statement was first mentioned in print by Theodor Schneider who set it as the first of eight important, open problems in transcendental number theory in 1957.[3]

The related six exponentials theorem was first explicitly mentioned in the 1960s by Serge Lang[4] and Kanakanahalli Ramachandra,[5] and both also explicitly conjecture the above result.[6] Indeed, after proving the six exponentials theorem Lang mentions the difficulty in dropping the number of exponents from six to four — the proof used for six exponentials "just misses" when one tries to apply it to four.

Corollaries edit

Using Euler's identity this conjecture implies the transcendence of many numbers involving e and π. For example, taking x1 = 1, x2 = 2, y1 = , and y2 = 2, the conjecture—if true—implies that one of the following four numbers is transcendental:

 

The first of these is just −1, and the fourth is 1, so the conjecture implies that e2 is transcendental (which is already known, by consequence of the Gelfond–Schneider theorem).

An open problem in number theory settled by the conjecture is the question of whether there exists a non-integer real number t such that both 2t and 3t are integers, or indeed such that at and bt are both integers for some pair of integers a and b that are multiplicatively independent over the integers. Values of t such that 2t is an integer are all of the form t = log2m for some integer m, while for 3t to be an integer, t must be of the form t = log3n for some integer n. By setting x1 = 1, x2 = t, y1 = log(2), and y2 = log(3), the four exponentials conjecture implies that if t is irrational then one of the following four numbers is transcendental:

 

So if 2t and 3t are both integers then the conjecture implies that t must be a rational number. Since the only rational numbers t for which 2t is also rational are the integers, this implies that there are no non-integer real numbers t such that both 2t and 3t are integers. It is this consequence, for any two primes (not just 2 and 3), that Alaoglu and Erdős desired in their paper as it would imply the conjecture that the quotient of two consecutive colossally abundant numbers is prime, extending Ramanujan's results on the quotients of consecutive superior highly composite number.[7]

Sharp four exponentials conjecture edit

The four exponentials conjecture reduces the pair and triplet of complex numbers in the hypotheses of the six exponentials theorem to two pairs. It is conjectured that this is also possible with the sharp six exponentials theorem, and this is the sharp four exponentials conjecture.[8] Specifically, this conjecture claims that if x1, x2, and y1, y2 are two pairs of complex numbers with each pair being linearly independent over the rational numbers, and if βij are four algebraic numbers for 1 ≤ i, j ≤ 2 such that the following four numbers are algebraic:

 

then xi yj = βij for 1 ≤ i, j ≤ 2. So all four exponentials are in fact 1.

This conjecture implies both the sharp six exponentials theorem, which requires a third x value, and the as yet unproven sharp five exponentials conjecture that requires a further exponential to be algebraic in its hypotheses.

Strong four exponentials conjecture edit

 
The logical implications between the various problems in this circle. Those in red are as yet unproven while those in blue are known results. The top most result refers to that discussed at Baker's theorem, while the lower two rows are detailed at the six exponentials theorem article.

The strongest result that has been conjectured in this circle of problems is the strong four exponentials conjecture.[9] This result would imply both aforementioned conjectures concerning four exponentials as well as all the five and six exponentials conjectures and theorems, as illustrated to the right, and all the three exponentials conjectures detailed below. The statement of this conjecture deals with the vector space over the algebraic numbers generated by 1 and all logarithms of non-zero algebraic numbers, denoted here as L. So L is the set of all complex numbers of the form

 

for some n ≥ 0, where all the βi and αi are algebraic and every branch of the logarithm is considered. The statement of the strong four exponentials conjecture is then as follows. Let x1, x2, and y1, y2 be two pairs of complex numbers with each pair being linearly independent over the algebraic numbers, then at least one of the four numbers xi yj for 1 ≤ i, j ≤ 2 is not in L.

Three exponentials conjecture edit

The four exponentials conjecture rules out a special case of non-trivial, homogeneous, quadratic relations between logarithms of algebraic numbers. But a conjectural extension of Baker's theorem implies that there should be no non-trivial algebraic relations between logarithms of algebraic numbers at all, homogeneous or not. One case of non-homogeneous quadratic relations is covered by the still open three exponentials conjecture.[10] In its logarithmic form it is the following conjecture. Let λ1, λ2, and λ3 be any three logarithms of algebraic numbers and γ be a non-zero algebraic number, and suppose that λ1λ2 = γλ3. Then λ1λ2 = γλ3 = 0.

The exponential form of this conjecture is the following. Let x1, x2, and y be non-zero complex numbers and let γ be a non-zero algebraic number. Then at least one of the following three numbers is transcendental:

 

There is also a sharp three exponentials conjecture which claims that if x1, x2, and y are non-zero complex numbers and α, β1, β2, and γ are algebraic numbers such that the following three numbers are algebraic

 

then either x2y = β2 or γx1 = αx2.

The strong three exponentials conjecture meanwhile states that if x1, x2, and y are non-zero complex numbers with x1y, x2y, and x1/x2 all transcendental, then at least one of the three numbers x1y, x2y, x1/x2 is not in L.

As with the other results in this family, the strong three exponentials conjecture implies the sharp three exponentials conjecture which implies the three exponentials conjecture. However, the strong and sharp three exponentials conjectures are implied by their four exponentials counterparts, bucking the usual trend. And the three exponentials conjecture is neither implied by nor implies the four exponentials conjecture.

The three exponentials conjecture, like the sharp five exponentials conjecture, would imply the transcendence of eπ2 by letting (in the logarithmic version) λ1 = iπ, λ2 = −iπ, and γ = 1.

Bertrand's conjecture edit

Many of the theorems and results in transcendental number theory concerning the exponential function have analogues involving the modular function j. Writing q = eiτ for the nome and j(τ) = J(q), Daniel Bertrand conjectured that if q1 and q2 are non-zero algebraic numbers in the complex unit disc that are multiplicatively independent, then J(q1) and J(q2) are algebraically independent over the rational numbers.[11] Although not obviously related to the four exponentials conjecture, Bertrand's conjecture in fact implies a special case known as the weak four exponentials conjecture.[12] This conjecture states that if x1 and x2 are two positive real algebraic numbers, neither of them equal to 1, then π2 and the product log(x1)log(x2) are linearly independent over the rational numbers. This corresponds to the special case of the four exponentials conjecture whereby y1 = iπ, y2 = −iπ, and x1 and x2 are real. Perhaps surprisingly, though, it is also a corollary of Bertrand's conjecture, suggesting there may be an approach to the full four exponentials conjecture via the modular function j.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Waldschmidt, (2006).
  2. ^ Alaoglu and Erdős, (1944), p.455: "It is very likely that q x and p x cannot be rational at the same time except if x is an integer. ... At present we can not show this. Professor Siegel has communicated to us the result that q x, r x and s x can not be simultaneously rational except if x is an integer."
  3. ^ Schneider, (1957).
  4. ^ Lang, (1966), chapter 2 section 1.
  5. ^ Ramachandra, (1967/8).
  6. ^ Waldschmidt, (2000), p.15.
  7. ^ Ramanujan, (1915), section IV.
  8. ^ Waldschmidt, "Hopf algebras..." (2005), p.200.
  9. ^ Waldschmidt, (2000), conjecture 11.17.
  10. ^ Waldschmidt, "Variations..." (2005), consequence 1.9.
  11. ^ Bertrand, (1997), conjecture 2 in section 5.
  12. ^ Diaz, (2001), section 4.

References edit

  • Alaoglu, Leonidas; Erdős, Paul (1944). "On highly composite and similar numbers". Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 56 (3): 448–469. doi:10.2307/1990319. JSTOR 1990319. MR 0011087.
  • Bertrand, Daniel (1997). "Theta functions and transcendence". The Ramanujan Journal. 1 (4): 339–350. doi:10.1023/A:1009749608672. MR 1608721. S2CID 118628723.
  • Diaz, Guy (2001). "Mahler's conjecture and other transcendence results". In Nesterenko, Yuri V.; Philippon, Patrice (eds.). Introduction to algebraic independence theory. Lecture Notes in Math. Vol. 1752. Springer. pp. 13–26. ISBN 3-540-41496-7. MR 1837824. [text–source integrity?]
  • Lang, Serge (1966). Introduction to transcendental numbers. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co. MR 0214547.
  • Ramachandra, Kanakanahalli (1967–1968). "Contributions to the theory of transcendental numbers. I, II". Acta Arith. 14: 65–72, 73–88. doi:10.4064/aa-14-1-65-72. MR 0224566.
  • Ramanujan, Srinivasa (1915). "Highly Composite Numbers". Proc. London Math. Soc. 14 (2): 347–407. doi:10.1112/plms/s2_14.1.347. MR 2280858.
  • Schneider, Theodor (1957). Einführung in die transzendenten Zahlen (in German). Berlin-Göttingen-Heidelberg: Springer. MR 0086842.
  • Waldschmidt, Michel (2000). Diophantine approximation on linear algebraic groups. Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften. Vol. 326. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 3-540-66785-7. MR 1756786.
  • Waldschmidt, Michel (2005). "Hopf algebras and transcendental numbers". In Aoki, Takashi; Kanemitsu, Shigeru; Nakahara, Mikio; et al. (eds.). Zeta functions, topology, and quantum physics: Papers from the symposium held at Kinki University, Osaka, March 3–6, 2003. Developments in mathematics. Vol. 14. Springer. pp. 197–219. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.170.5648. MR 2179279.
  • Waldschmidt, Michel (2005). "Variations on the six exponentials theorem". In Tandon, Rajat (ed.). Algebra and number theory. Delhi: Hindustan Book Agency. pp. 338–355. MR 2193363. [text–source integrity?]
  • Waldschmidt, Michel (2006). "On Ramachandra's contributions to transcendental number theory". In Balasubramanian, B.; Srinivas, K. (eds.). The Riemann zeta function and related themes: papers in honour of Professor K. Ramachandra. Ramanujan Math. Soc. Lect. Notes Ser. Vol. 2. Mysore: Ramanujan Math. Soc. pp. 155–179. MR 2335194. [text–source integrity?]

External links edit

four, exponentials, conjecture, mathematics, specifically, field, transcendental, number, theory, four, exponentials, conjecture, conjecture, which, given, right, conditions, exponents, would, guarantee, transcendence, least, four, exponentials, conjecture, al. In mathematics specifically the field of transcendental number theory the four exponentials conjecture is a conjecture which given the right conditions on the exponents would guarantee the transcendence of at least one of four exponentials The conjecture along with two related stronger conjectures is at the top of a hierarchy of conjectures and theorems concerning the arithmetic nature of a certain number of values of the exponential function Contents 1 Statement 2 History 3 Corollaries 4 Sharp four exponentials conjecture 5 Strong four exponentials conjecture 6 Three exponentials conjecture 7 Bertrand s conjecture 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksStatement editIf x1 x2 and y1 y2 are two pairs of complex numbers with each pair being linearly independent over the rational numbers then at least one of the following four numbers is transcendental e x 1 y 1 e x 1 y 2 e x 2 y 1 e x 2 y 2 displaystyle e x 1 y 1 e x 1 y 2 e x 2 y 1 e x 2 y 2 nbsp An alternative way of stating the conjecture in terms of logarithms is the following For 1 i j 2 let lij be complex numbers such that exp lij are all algebraic Suppose l11 and l12 are linearly independent over the rational numbers and l11 and l21 are also linearly independent over the rational numbers then l 11 l 22 l 12 l 21 displaystyle lambda 11 lambda 22 neq lambda 12 lambda 21 nbsp An equivalent formulation in terms of linear algebra is the following Let M be the 2 2 matrix M l 11 l 12 l 21 l 22 displaystyle M begin pmatrix lambda 11 amp lambda 12 lambda 21 amp lambda 22 end pmatrix nbsp where exp lij is algebraic for 1 i j 2 Suppose the two rows of M are linearly independent over the rational numbers and the two columns of M are linearly independent over the rational numbers Then the rank of M is 2 While a 2 2 matrix having linearly independent rows and columns usually means it has rank 2 in this case we require linear independence over a smaller field so the rank isn t forced to be 2 For example the matrix 1 p p p 2 displaystyle begin pmatrix 1 amp pi pi amp pi 2 end pmatrix nbsp has rows and columns that are linearly independent over the rational numbers since p is irrational But the rank of the matrix is 1 So in this case the conjecture would imply that at least one of e ep and ep2 is transcendental which in this case is already known since e is transcendental History editThe conjecture was considered in the early 1940s by Atle Selberg who never formally stated the conjecture 1 A special case of the conjecture is mentioned in a 1944 paper of Leonidas Alaoglu and Paul Erdos who suggest that it had been considered by Carl Ludwig Siegel 2 An equivalent statement was first mentioned in print by Theodor Schneider who set it as the first of eight important open problems in transcendental number theory in 1957 3 The related six exponentials theorem was first explicitly mentioned in the 1960s by Serge Lang 4 and Kanakanahalli Ramachandra 5 and both also explicitly conjecture the above result 6 Indeed after proving the six exponentials theorem Lang mentions the difficulty in dropping the number of exponents from six to four the proof used for six exponentials just misses when one tries to apply it to four Corollaries editUsing Euler s identity this conjecture implies the transcendence of many numbers involving e and p For example taking x1 1 x2 2 y1 ip and y2 ip 2 the conjecture if true implies that one of the following four numbers is transcendental e i p e i p 2 e i p 2 e 2 i p displaystyle e i pi e i pi sqrt 2 e i pi sqrt 2 e 2i pi nbsp The first of these is just 1 and the fourth is 1 so the conjecture implies that eip 2 is transcendental which is already known by consequence of the Gelfond Schneider theorem An open problem in number theory settled by the conjecture is the question of whether there exists a non integer real number t such that both 2t and 3t are integers or indeed such that at and bt are both integers for some pair of integers a and b that are multiplicatively independent over the integers Values of t such that 2t is an integer are all of the form t log2m for some integer m while for 3t to be an integer t must be of the form t log3n for some integer n By setting x1 1 x2 t y1 log 2 and y2 log 3 the four exponentials conjecture implies that if t is irrational then one of the following four numbers is transcendental 2 3 2 t 3 t displaystyle 2 3 2 t 3 t nbsp So if 2t and 3t are both integers then the conjecture implies that t must be a rational number Since the only rational numbers t for which 2t is also rational are the integers this implies that there are no non integer real numbers t such that both 2t and 3t are integers It is this consequence for any two primes not just 2 and 3 that Alaoglu and Erdos desired in their paper as it would imply the conjecture that the quotient of two consecutive colossally abundant numbers is prime extending Ramanujan s results on the quotients of consecutive superior highly composite number 7 Sharp four exponentials conjecture editThe four exponentials conjecture reduces the pair and triplet of complex numbers in the hypotheses of the six exponentials theorem to two pairs It is conjectured that this is also possible with the sharp six exponentials theorem and this is the sharp four exponentials conjecture 8 Specifically this conjecture claims that if x1 x2 and y1 y2 are two pairs of complex numbers with each pair being linearly independent over the rational numbers and if bij are four algebraic numbers for 1 i j 2 such that the following four numbers are algebraic e x 1 y 1 b 11 e x 1 y 2 b 12 e x 2 y 1 b 21 e x 2 y 2 b 22 displaystyle e x 1 y 1 beta 11 e x 1 y 2 beta 12 e x 2 y 1 beta 21 e x 2 y 2 beta 22 nbsp then xi yj bij for 1 i j 2 So all four exponentials are in fact 1 This conjecture implies both the sharp six exponentials theorem which requires a third x value and the as yet unproven sharp five exponentials conjecture that requires a further exponential to be algebraic in its hypotheses Strong four exponentials conjecture edit nbsp The logical implications between the various problems in this circle Those in red are as yet unproven while those in blue are known results The top most result refers to that discussed at Baker s theorem while the lower two rows are detailed at the six exponentials theorem article The strongest result that has been conjectured in this circle of problems is the strong four exponentials conjecture 9 This result would imply both aforementioned conjectures concerning four exponentials as well as all the five and six exponentials conjectures and theorems as illustrated to the right and all the three exponentials conjectures detailed below The statement of this conjecture deals with the vector space over the algebraic numbers generated by 1 and all logarithms of non zero algebraic numbers denoted here as L So L is the set of all complex numbers of the form b 0 i 1 n b i log a i displaystyle beta 0 sum i 1 n beta i log alpha i nbsp for some n 0 where all the bi and ai are algebraic and every branch of the logarithm is considered The statement of the strong four exponentials conjecture is then as follows Let x1 x2 and y1 y2 be two pairs of complex numbers with each pair being linearly independent over the algebraic numbers then at least one of the four numbers xi yj for 1 i j 2 is not in L Three exponentials conjecture editThe four exponentials conjecture rules out a special case of non trivial homogeneous quadratic relations between logarithms of algebraic numbers But a conjectural extension of Baker s theorem implies that there should be no non trivial algebraic relations between logarithms of algebraic numbers at all homogeneous or not One case of non homogeneous quadratic relations is covered by the still open three exponentials conjecture 10 In its logarithmic form it is the following conjecture Let l1 l2 and l3 be any three logarithms of algebraic numbers and g be a non zero algebraic number and suppose that l1l2 gl3 Then l1l2 gl3 0 The exponential form of this conjecture is the following Let x1 x2 and y be non zero complex numbers and let g be a non zero algebraic number Then at least one of the following three numbers is transcendental e x 1 y e x 2 y e g x 1 x 2 displaystyle e x 1 y e x 2 y e gamma x 1 x 2 nbsp There is also a sharp three exponentials conjecture which claims that if x1 x2 and y are non zero complex numbers and a b1 b2 and g are algebraic numbers such that the following three numbers are algebraic e x 1 y b 1 e x 2 y b 2 e g x 1 x 2 a displaystyle e x 1 y beta 1 e x 2 y beta 2 e gamma x 1 x 2 alpha nbsp then either x2y b2 or gx1 ax2 The strong three exponentials conjecture meanwhile states that if x1 x2 and y are non zero complex numbers with x1y x2y and x1 x2 all transcendental then at least one of the three numbers x1y x2y x1 x2 is not in L As with the other results in this family the strong three exponentials conjecture implies the sharp three exponentials conjecture which implies the three exponentials conjecture However the strong and sharp three exponentials conjectures are implied by their four exponentials counterparts bucking the usual trend And the three exponentials conjecture is neither implied by nor implies the four exponentials conjecture The three exponentials conjecture like the sharp five exponentials conjecture would imply the transcendence of ep2 by letting in the logarithmic version l1 ip l2 ip and g 1 Bertrand s conjecture editMany of the theorems and results in transcendental number theory concerning the exponential function have analogues involving the modular function j Writing q e2pit for the nome and j t J q Daniel Bertrand conjectured that if q1 and q2 are non zero algebraic numbers in the complex unit disc that are multiplicatively independent then J q1 and J q2 are algebraically independent over the rational numbers 11 Although not obviously related to the four exponentials conjecture Bertrand s conjecture in fact implies a special case known as the weak four exponentials conjecture 12 This conjecture states that if x1 and x2 are two positive real algebraic numbers neither of them equal to 1 then p2 and the product log x1 log x2 are linearly independent over the rational numbers This corresponds to the special case of the four exponentials conjecture whereby y1 ip y2 ip and x1 and x2 are real Perhaps surprisingly though it is also a corollary of Bertrand s conjecture suggesting there may be an approach to the full four exponentials conjecture via the modular function j Notes edit Waldschmidt 2006 Alaoglu and Erdos 1944 p 455 It is very likely that qx and px cannot be rational at the same time except if x is an integer At present we can not show this Professor Siegel has communicated to us the result that qx rx and sx can not be simultaneously rational except if x is an integer Schneider 1957 Lang 1966 chapter 2 section 1 Ramachandra 1967 8 Waldschmidt 2000 p 15 Ramanujan 1915 section IV Waldschmidt Hopf algebras 2005 p 200 Waldschmidt 2000 conjecture 11 17 Waldschmidt Variations 2005 consequence 1 9 Bertrand 1997 conjecture 2 in section 5 Diaz 2001 section 4 References editAlaoglu Leonidas Erdos Paul 1944 On highly composite and similar numbers Trans Amer Math Soc 56 3 448 469 doi 10 2307 1990319 JSTOR 1990319 MR 0011087 Bertrand Daniel 1997 Theta functions and transcendence The Ramanujan Journal 1 4 339 350 doi 10 1023 A 1009749608672 MR 1608721 S2CID 118628723 Diaz Guy 2001 Mahler s conjecture and other transcendence results In Nesterenko Yuri V Philippon Patrice eds Introduction to algebraic independence theory Lecture Notes in Math Vol 1752 Springer pp 13 26 ISBN 3 540 41496 7 MR 1837824 text source integrity Lang Serge 1966 Introduction to transcendental numbers Reading Mass Addison Wesley Publishing Co MR 0214547 Ramachandra Kanakanahalli 1967 1968 Contributions to the theory of transcendental numbers I II Acta Arith 14 65 72 73 88 doi 10 4064 aa 14 1 65 72 MR 0224566 Ramanujan Srinivasa 1915 Highly Composite Numbers Proc London Math Soc 14 2 347 407 doi 10 1112 plms s2 14 1 347 MR 2280858 Schneider Theodor 1957 Einfuhrung in die transzendenten Zahlen in German Berlin Gottingen Heidelberg Springer MR 0086842 Waldschmidt Michel 2000 Diophantine approximation on linear algebraic groups Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften Vol 326 Berlin Springer ISBN 3 540 66785 7 MR 1756786 Waldschmidt Michel 2005 Hopf algebras and transcendental numbers In Aoki Takashi Kanemitsu Shigeru Nakahara Mikio et al eds Zeta functions topology and quantum physics Papers from the symposium held at Kinki University Osaka March 3 6 2003 Developments in mathematics Vol 14 Springer pp 197 219 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 170 5648 MR 2179279 Waldschmidt Michel 2005 Variations on the six exponentials theorem In Tandon Rajat ed Algebra and number theory Delhi Hindustan Book Agency pp 338 355 MR 2193363 text source integrity Waldschmidt Michel 2006 On Ramachandra s contributions to transcendental number theory In Balasubramanian B Srinivas K eds The Riemann zeta function and related themes papers in honour of Professor K Ramachandra Ramanujan Math Soc Lect Notes Ser Vol 2 Mysore Ramanujan Math Soc pp 155 179 MR 2335194 text source integrity External links edit Four exponentials conjecture PlanetMath Weisstein Eric W Four Exponentials Conjecture MathWorld Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Four exponentials conjecture amp oldid 1162029093, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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