fbpx
Wikipedia

Roth's theorem on arithmetic progressions

Roth's theorem on arithmetic progressions is a result in additive combinatorics concerning the existence of arithmetic progressions in subsets of the natural numbers. It was first proven by Klaus Roth in 1953.[1] Roth's theorem is a special case of Szemerédi's theorem for the case .

Statement edit

A subset A of the natural numbers is said to have positive upper density if

 .

Roth's theorem on arithmetic progressions (infinite version): A subset of the natural numbers with positive upper density contains a 3-term arithmetic progression.

An alternate, more qualitative, formulation of the theorem is concerned with the maximum size of a Salem–Spencer set which is a subset of  . Let   be the size of the largest subset of   which contains no 3-term arithmetic progression.

Roth's theorem on arithmetic progressions (finitary version):  .

Improving upper and lower bounds on   is still an open research problem.

History edit

The first result in this direction was Van der Waerden's theorem in 1927, which states that for sufficiently large N, coloring the integers   with   colors will result in a   term arithmetic progression.[2]

Later on in 1936 Erdős and Turán conjectured a much stronger result that any subset of the integers with positive density contains arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions. In 1942, Raphaël Salem and Donald C. Spencer provided a construction of a 3-AP-free set (i.e. a set with no 3-term arithmetic progressions) of size  ,[3] disproving an additional conjecture of Erdős and Turán that   for some  .[4]

In 1953, Roth partially resolved the initial conjecture by proving they must contain an arithmetic progression of length 3 using Fourier analytic methods. Eventually, in 1975, Szemerédi proved Szemerédi's theorem using combinatorial techniques, resolving the original conjecture in full.

Proof techniques edit

The original proof given by Roth used Fourier analytic methods. Later on another proof was given using Szemerédi's regularity lemma.

Proof sketch via Fourier analysis edit

In 1953, Roth used Fourier analysis to prove an upper bound of  . Below is a sketch of this proof.

Define the Fourier transform of a function   to be the function   satisfying

 ,

where  .

Let   be a 3-AP-free subset of  . The proof proceeds in 3 steps.

  1. Show that a   admits a large Fourier coefficient.
  2. Deduce that there exists a sub-progression of   such that   has a density increment when restricted to this subprogression.
  3. Iterate Step 2 to obtain an upper bound on  .

Step 1 edit

For functions,   define

 

Counting Lemma Let   satisfy  . Define  . Then  .

The counting lemma tells us that if the Fourier Transforms of   and   are "close", then the number of 3-term arithmetic progressions between the two should also be "close." Let   be the density of  . Define the functions   (i.e the indicator function of  ), and  . Step 1 can then be deduced by applying the Counting Lemma to   and  , which tells us that there exists some   such that

 .

Step 2 edit

Given the   from step 1, we first show that it's possible to split up   into relatively large subprogressions such that the character   is roughly constant on each subprogression.

Lemma 1: Let  . Assume that   for a universal constant  . Then it is possible to partition   into arithmetic progressions   with length   such that   for all  .

Next, we apply Lemma 1 to obtain a partition into subprogressions. We then use the fact that   produced a large coefficient in step 1 to show that one of these subprogressions must have a density increment:

Lemma 2: Let   be a 3-AP-free subset of  , with   and  . Then, there exists a sub progression   such that   and  .

Step 3 edit

We now iterate step 2. Let   be the density of   after the  th iteration. We have that   and   First, see that   doubles (i.e. reach   such that  ) after at most   steps. We double   again (i.e reach  ) after at most   steps. Since  , this process must terminate after at most   steps.

Let   be the size of our current progression after   iterations. By Lemma 2, we can always continue the process whenever   and thus when the process terminates we have that   Also, note that when we pass to a subprogression, the size of our set decreases by a cube root. Therefore

 

Therefore   so   as desired.  

Unfortunately, this technique does not generalize directly to larger arithmetic progressions to prove Szemerédi's theorem. An extension of this proof eluded mathematicians for decades until 1998, when Timothy Gowers developed the field of higher-order Fourier analysis specifically to generalize the above proof to prove Szemerédi's theorem.[5]

Proof sketch via graph regularity edit

Below is an outline of a proof using the Szemerédi regularity lemma.

Let   be a graph and  . We call   an  -regular pair if for all   with  , one has  .

A partition   of   is an  -regular partition if

 .

Then the Szemerédi regularity lemma says that for every  , there exists a constant   such that every graph has an  -regular partition into at most   parts.

We can also prove that triangles between  -regular sets of vertices must come along with many other triangles. This is known as the triangle counting lemma.

Triangle Counting Lemma: Let   be a graph and   be subsets of the vertices of   such that   are all  -regular pairs for some  . Let   denote the edge densities   respectively. If  , then the number of triples   such that   form a triangle in   is at least

 .

Using the triangle counting lemma and the Szemerédi regularity lemma, we can prove the triangle removal lemma, a special case of the graph removal lemma.[6]

Triangle Removal Lemma: For all  , there exists   such that any graph on   vertices with less than or equal to   triangles can be made triangle-free by removing at most   edges.

This has an interesting corollary pertaining to graphs   on   vertices where every edge of   lies in a unique triangle. In specific, all of these graphs must have   edges.

Take a set   with no 3-term arithmetic progressions. Now, construct a tripartite graph   whose parts   are all copies of  . Connect a vertex   to a vertex   if  . Similarly, connect   with   if  . Finally, connect   with   if  .

This construction is set up so that if   form a triangle, then we get elements   that all belong to  . These numbers form an arithmetic progression in the listed order. The assumption on   then tells us this progression must be trivial: the elements listed above are all equal. But this condition is equivalent to the assertion that   is an arithmetic progression in  . Consequently, every edge of   lies in exactly one triangle. The desired conclusion follows.  

Extensions and generalizations edit

Szemerédi's theorem resolved the original conjecture and generalized Roth's theorem to arithmetic progressions of arbitrary length. Since then it has been extended in multiple fashions to create new and interesting results.

Furstenberg and Katznelson[7] used ergodic theory to prove a multidimensional version and Leibman and Bergelson[8] extended it to polynomial progressions as well. Most recently, Green and Tao proved the Green–Tao theorem which says that the prime numbers contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions. Since the prime numbers are a subset of density 0, they introduced a "relative" Szemerédi theorem which applies to subsets with density 0 that satisfy certain pseudorandomness conditions. Later on Conlon, Fox, and Zhao[9][10] strengthened this theorem by weakening the necessary pseudorandomness condition. In 2020, Bloom and Sisask[11] proved that any set   such that   diverges must contain arithmetic progressions of length 3; this is the first non-trivial case of another conjecture of Erdős postulating that any such set must in fact contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions.

Improving bounds edit

There has also been work done on improving the bound in Roth's theorem. The bound from the original proof of Roth's theorem showed that

 

for some constant  . Over the years this bound has been continually lowered by Szemerédi,[12] Heath-Brown,[13] Bourgain,[14][15] and Sanders.[16][17] The current (July 2020) best bound is due to Bloom and Sisask[11] who have showed the existence of an absolute constant c>0 such that

 

In February 2023 a preprint by Kelley and Meka[18][19] gave a new bound of:

 .

Four days later, Bloom and Sisask published an exposition of the result, simplifying the argument and yielding some additional applications.[20] Several months later, Bloom and Sisask obtained a further improvement to  , and stated (without proof) that their techniques can be used to show  .[21]

There has also been work done on the other end, constructing the largest set with no three-term arithmetic progressions. The best construction has barely been improved since 1946 when Behrend[22] improved on the initial construction by Salem and Spencer and proved

 .

Due to no improvements in over 70 years, it is conjectured that Behrend's set is asymptotically very close in size to the largest possible set with no three-term progressions.[11] If correct, the Kelley-Meka bound will prove this conjecture.

Roth's theorem in finite fields edit

As a variation, we can consider the analogous problem over finite fields. Consider the finite field  , and let   be the size of the largest subset of   which contains no 3-term arithmetic progression. This problem is actually equivalent to the cap set problem, which asks for the largest subset of   such that no 3 points lie on a line. The cap set problem can be seen as a generalization of the card game Set.

In 1982, Brown and Buhler[23] were the first to show that   In 1995, Roy Mesuhlam[24] used a similar technique to the Fourier-analytic proof of Roth's theorem to show that   This bound was improved to   in 2012 by Bateman and Katz.[25]

In 2016, Ernie Croot, Vsevolod Lev, Péter Pál Pach, Jordan Ellenberg and Dion Gijswijt developed a new technique based on the polynomial method to prove that  .[26][27][28]

The best known lower bound is  , discovered in December 2023 by Google DeepMind researchers using a large language model (LLM).[29]

Roth's theorem with popular differences edit

Another generalization of Roth's theorem shows that for positive density subsets, there not only exists a 3-term arithmetic progression, but that there exist many 3-APs all with the same common difference.

Roth's theorem with popular differences: For all  , there exists some   such that for every   and   with   there exists some   such that  

If   is chosen randomly from   then we would expect there to be   progressions for each value of  . The popular differences theorem thus states that for each   with positive density, there is some   such that the number of 3-APs with common difference   is close to what we would expect.

This theorem was first proven by Green in 2005,[30] who gave a bound of   where   is the tower function. In 2019, Fox and Pham recently improved the bound to  [31]

A corresponding statement is also true in   for both 3-APs and 4-APs.[32] However, the claim has been shown to be false for 5-APs.[33]

References edit

  1. ^ Roth, Klaus (1953). "On certain sets of integers". Journal of the London Mathematical Society. 28 (1): 104–109. doi:10.1112/jlms/s1-28.1.104.
  2. ^ van der Waerden, B. L. (1927). "Beweis einer Baudetschen Vermutung". Nieuw. Arch. Wisk. 15: 212–216.
  3. ^ Salem, Raphaël; Spencer, Donald C. (1942). "On sets of integers which contain no three terms in arithmetical progression". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 28 (12): 561–563. Bibcode:1942PNAS...28..561S. doi:10.1073/pnas.28.12.561. MR 0007405. PMC 1078539. PMID 16588588.
  4. ^ Erdös, Paul; Turán, Paul (1936). "On Some Sequences of Integers". Journal of the London Mathematical Society. 4 (4): 261–264. doi:10.1112/jlms/s1-11.4.261. MR 1574918.
  5. ^ Gowers, W. T. (1998). "A new proof of Szemerédi's theorem for arithmetic progressions of length four". Geometric and Functional Analysis. 8 (3): 529–551. doi:10.1007/s000390050065.
  6. ^ Fox, Jacob (2011), "A new proof of the graph removal lemma", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 174 (1): 561–579, arXiv:1006.1300, doi:10.4007/annals.2011.174.1.17, MR 2811609, S2CID 8250133
  7. ^ Furstenberg, Hillel; Katznelson, Yitzhak (1978). "An ergodic Szemerédi theorem for commuting transformations". Journal d'Analyse Mathématique. 38 (1): 275–291. doi:10.1007/BF02790016. MR 0531279. S2CID 123386017.
  8. ^ Bergelson, Vitaly; Leibman, Alexander (1996). "Polynomial extensions of van der Waerden's and Szemerédi's theorems". Journal of the American Mathematical Society. 9 (3): 725–753. doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-96-00194-4. MR 1325795.
  9. ^ Conlon, David; Fox, Jacob; Zhao, Yufei (2015). "A relative Szemerédi theorem". Geometric and Functional Analysis. 25 (3): 733–762. arXiv:1305.5440. doi:10.1007/s00039-015-0324-9. MR 3361771.
  10. ^ Zhao, Yufei (2014). "An arithmetic transference proof of a relative Szemerédi theorem". Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 156 (2): 255–261. arXiv:1307.4959. Bibcode:2014MPCPS.156..255Z. doi:10.1017/S0305004113000662. MR 3177868. S2CID 119673319.
  11. ^ a b c Thomas F. Bloom, Olof Sisask, Breaking the logarithmic barrier in Roth's theorem on arithmetic progressions, arXiv:2007.03528, 2020
  12. ^ Szemerédi, Endre (1990). "Integer sets containing no arithmetic progressions". Acta Mathematica Hungarica. 56 (1–2): 155–158. doi:10.1007/BF01903717. MR 1100788.
  13. ^ Heath-Brown, Roger (1987). "Integer sets containing no arithmetic progressions". Journal of the London Mathematical Society. 35 (3): 385–394. doi:10.1112/jlms/s2-35.3.385. MR 0889362.
  14. ^ Bourgain, Jean (1999). "On triples in arithmetic progression". Geometric and Functional Analysis. 9 (5): 968–984. doi:10.1007/s000390050105. MR 1726234. S2CID 392820.
  15. ^ Bourgain, Jean (2008). "Roth's theorem on progressions revisited". Journal d'Analyse Mathématique. 104 (1): 155–192. doi:10.1007/s11854-008-0020-x. MR 2403433. S2CID 16985451.
  16. ^ Sanders, Tom (2012). "On certain other sets of integers". Annals of Mathematics. 185 (1): 53–82. arXiv:1007.5444. doi:10.1007/s11854-012-0003-9. MR 2892617. S2CID 119727492.
  17. ^ Sanders, Tom (2011). "On Roth's theorem on progressions". Annals of Mathematics. 174 (1): 619–636. arXiv:1011.0104. doi:10.4007/annals.2011.174.1.20. MR 2811612. S2CID 53331882.
  18. ^ Kelley, Zander; Meka, Raghu (2023-02-10). "Strong Bounds for 3-Progressions". arXiv:2302.05537 [math.NT].
  19. ^ Sloman, Leila (2023-03-21). "Surprise Computer Science Proof Stuns Mathematicians". Quanta Magazine.
  20. ^ Bloom, Thomas F.; Sisask, Olof (2023-02-14). "The Kelley--Meka bounds for sets free of three-term arithmetic progressions". arXiv:2302.07211 [math.NT].
  21. ^ Bloom, Thomas F.; Sisask, Olof (2023-09-05). "An improvement to the Kelley-Meka bounds on three-term arithmetic progressions". arXiv:2309.02353 [math.NT].
  22. ^ Behrend, F. A. (1946). "On sets of integers which contain no three terms in arithmetical progression". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 32 (12): 331–332. Bibcode:1946PNAS...32..331B. doi:10.1073/pnas.32.12.331. PMC 1078964. PMID 16578230.
  23. ^ Brown, T. C.; Buhler, J. P. (1982). "A density version of a geometric Ramsey theorem". Journal of Combinatorial Theory. Series A. 32 (1): 20–34. doi:10.1016/0097-3165(82)90062-0.
  24. ^ Mesuhlam, Roy (1995). "On subsets of finite abelian groups with no 3-term arithmetic progressions". Journal of Combinatorial Theory. Series A. 71 (1): 168–172. doi:10.1016/0097-3165(95)90024-1.
  25. ^ Bateman, M.; Katz, N. (2012). "New bounds on cap sets". Journal of the American Mathematical Society. 25 (2): 585–613. doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-2011-00725-X. hdl:2022/19057.
  26. ^ Ellenberg, Jordan S.; Gijswijt, Dion (2016). "On large subsets of   with no three-term arithmetic progression". Annals of Mathematics, Second Series. 185 (1): 339–343. arXiv:1605.09223. doi:10.4007/annals.2017.185.1.8. S2CID 119683140.
  27. ^ Croot, Ernie; Lev, Vsevolod F.; Pach, Péter Pál (2017). "Progression-free sets in   are exponentially small". Annals of Mathematics. 2nd series. 185 (1): 331–337. arXiv:1605.01506. doi:10.4007/annals.2017.185.1.7.
  28. ^ Klarreich, Erica (May 31, 2016). "Simple Set Game Proof Stuns Mathematicians". Quanta.
  29. ^ Romera-Paredes, Bernardino; Barekatain, Mohammadamin; Novikov, Alexander; Balog, Matej; Kumar, M. Pawan; Dupont, Emilien; Ruiz, Francisco J. R.; Ellenberg, Jordan S.; Wang, Pengming; Fawzi, Omar; Kohli, Pushmeet; Fawzi, Alhussein (2023-12-14). "Mathematical discoveries from program search with large language models". Nature: 1–3. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06924-6. ISSN 1476-4687. PMC 10794145.
  30. ^ Green, Ben (2005). "A Szemerédi-type regularity lemma in abelian groups, with applications". Geometric and Functional Analysis. 15 (2): 340–376. doi:10.1007/s00039-005-0509-8. MR 2153903.
  31. ^ Fox, Jacob; Pham, Huy Tuan (April 2021). "Popular progression differences in vector spaces". International Mathematics Research Notices. 2021 (7): 5261–5289. arXiv:1708.08482. Bibcode:2017arXiv170808482F. doi:10.1093/imrn/rny240.
  32. ^ Green, Ben; Tao, Terrence (2010). "An Arithmetic Regularity Lemma, an Associated Counting Lemma, and Applications". An Irregular Mind. Bolyai Society Mathematical Studies. Vol. 21. Bolyai Society Mathematical Studies. pp. 261–334. arXiv:1002.2028. Bibcode:2010arXiv1002.2028G. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-14444-8_7. ISBN 978-3-642-14443-1. S2CID 115174575.
  33. ^ Bergelson, Vitaly; Host, Bernard; Kra, Bryna (2005). "Multiple recurrence and nilsequences. With an appendix by Imre Ruzsa". Inventiones Mathematicae. 160 (2): 261–303. doi:10.1007/s00222-004-0428-6. S2CID 1380361.

External links edit

  • Edmonds, Chelsea; Koutsoukou-Argyraki, Angeliki; Paulson, Lawrence C. Roth's Theorem on Arithmetic Progressions (Formal proof development in Isabelle/HOL, Archive of Formal Proofs)

roth, theorem, arithmetic, progressions, roth, theorem, diophantine, approximation, algebraic, numbers, roth, theorem, result, additive, combinatorics, concerning, existence, arithmetic, progressions, subsets, natural, numbers, first, proven, klaus, roth, 1953. For Roth s theorem on Diophantine approximation of algebraic numbers see Roth s theorem Roth s theorem on arithmetic progressions is a result in additive combinatorics concerning the existence of arithmetic progressions in subsets of the natural numbers It was first proven by Klaus Roth in 1953 1 Roth s theorem is a special case of Szemeredi s theorem for the case k 3 displaystyle k 3 Contents 1 Statement 2 History 3 Proof techniques 3 1 Proof sketch via Fourier analysis 3 1 1 Step 1 3 1 2 Step 2 3 1 3 Step 3 3 2 Proof sketch via graph regularity 4 Extensions and generalizations 4 1 Improving bounds 4 2 Roth s theorem in finite fields 4 3 Roth s theorem with popular differences 5 References 6 External linksStatement editA subset A of the natural numbers is said to have positive upper density if lim sup n A 1 2 3 n n gt 0 displaystyle limsup n to infty frac A cap 1 2 3 dotsc n n gt 0 nbsp Roth s theorem on arithmetic progressions infinite version A subset of the natural numbers with positive upper density contains a 3 term arithmetic progression An alternate more qualitative formulation of the theorem is concerned with the maximum size of a Salem Spencer set which is a subset of N 1 N displaystyle N 1 dots N nbsp Let r 3 N displaystyle r 3 N nbsp be the size of the largest subset of N displaystyle N nbsp which contains no 3 term arithmetic progression Roth s theorem on arithmetic progressions finitary version r 3 N o N displaystyle r 3 N o N nbsp Improving upper and lower bounds on r 3 N displaystyle r 3 N nbsp is still an open research problem History editThe first result in this direction was Van der Waerden s theorem in 1927 which states that for sufficiently large N coloring the integers 1 n displaystyle 1 dots n nbsp with r displaystyle r nbsp colors will result in a k displaystyle k nbsp term arithmetic progression 2 Later on in 1936 Erdos and Turan conjectured a much stronger result that any subset of the integers with positive density contains arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions In 1942 Raphael Salem and Donald C Spencer provided a construction of a 3 AP free set i e a set with no 3 term arithmetic progressions of size N e O log N log log N displaystyle frac N e O log N log log N nbsp 3 disproving an additional conjecture of Erdos and Turan that r 3 N N 1 d displaystyle r 3 N N 1 delta nbsp for some d gt 0 displaystyle delta gt 0 nbsp 4 In 1953 Roth partially resolved the initial conjecture by proving they must contain an arithmetic progression of length 3 using Fourier analytic methods Eventually in 1975 Szemeredi proved Szemeredi s theorem using combinatorial techniques resolving the original conjecture in full Proof techniques editThe original proof given by Roth used Fourier analytic methods Later on another proof was given using Szemeredi s regularity lemma Proof sketch via Fourier analysis edit In 1953 Roth used Fourier analysis to prove an upper bound of r 3 N O N log log N displaystyle r 3 N O left frac N log log N right nbsp Below is a sketch of this proof Define the Fourier transform of a function f Z C displaystyle f mathbb Z rightarrow mathbb C nbsp to be the function f displaystyle widehat f nbsp satisfying f 8 x Z f x e x 8 displaystyle widehat f theta sum x in mathbb Z f x e x theta nbsp where e t e 2 p i t displaystyle e t e 2 pi it nbsp Let A displaystyle A nbsp be a 3 AP free subset of 1 N displaystyle 1 dots N nbsp The proof proceeds in 3 steps Show that a A displaystyle A nbsp admits a large Fourier coefficient Deduce that there exists a sub progression of 1 N displaystyle 1 dots N nbsp such that A displaystyle A nbsp has a density increment when restricted to this subprogression Iterate Step 2 to obtain an upper bound on A displaystyle A nbsp Step 1 edit For functions f g h Z C displaystyle f g h mathbb Z rightarrow mathbb C nbsp define L f g h x y Z f x g x y h x 2 y displaystyle Lambda f g h sum x y in mathbb Z f x g x y h x 2y nbsp Counting Lemma Let f g Z C displaystyle f g mathbb Z rightarrow mathbb C nbsp satisfy n Z f n 2 n Z g n 2 M displaystyle sum n in mathbb Z f n 2 sum n in mathbb Z g n 2 leq M nbsp Define L 3 f L f f f displaystyle Lambda 3 f Lambda f f f nbsp Then L 3 f L 3 g 3 M f g displaystyle Lambda 3 f Lambda 3 g leq 3M widehat f g infty nbsp The counting lemma tells us that if the Fourier Transforms of f displaystyle f nbsp and g displaystyle g nbsp are close then the number of 3 term arithmetic progressions between the two should also be close Let a A N displaystyle alpha A N nbsp be the density of A displaystyle A nbsp Define the functions f 1 A displaystyle f mathbf 1 A nbsp i e the indicator function of A displaystyle A nbsp and g a 1 N displaystyle g alpha cdot mathbf 1 N nbsp Step 1 can then be deduced by applying the Counting Lemma to f displaystyle f nbsp and g displaystyle g nbsp which tells us that there exists some 8 displaystyle theta nbsp such that n 1 N 1 A a n e 8 n a 2 10 N displaystyle left sum n 1 N 1 A alpha n e theta n right geq frac alpha 2 10 N nbsp Step 2 edit Given the 8 displaystyle theta nbsp from step 1 we first show that it s possible to split up N displaystyle N nbsp into relatively large subprogressions such that the character x e x 8 displaystyle x mapsto e x theta nbsp is roughly constant on each subprogression Lemma 1 Let 0 lt h lt 1 8 R displaystyle 0 lt eta lt 1 theta in mathbb R nbsp Assume that N gt C h 6 displaystyle N gt C eta 6 nbsp for a universal constant C displaystyle C nbsp Then it is possible to partition N displaystyle N nbsp into arithmetic progressions P i displaystyle P i nbsp with length N 1 3 P i 2 N 1 3 displaystyle N 1 3 leq P i leq 2N 1 3 nbsp such that sup x y P i e x 8 e y 8 lt h displaystyle sup x y in P i e x theta e y theta lt eta nbsp for all i displaystyle i nbsp Next we apply Lemma 1 to obtain a partition into subprogressions We then use the fact that 8 displaystyle theta nbsp produced a large coefficient in step 1 to show that one of these subprogressions must have a density increment Lemma 2 Let A displaystyle A nbsp be a 3 AP free subset of N displaystyle N nbsp with A a N displaystyle A alpha N nbsp and N gt C a 12 displaystyle N gt C alpha 12 nbsp Then there exists a sub progression P N displaystyle P subset N nbsp such that P N 1 3 displaystyle P geq N 1 3 nbsp and A P a a 2 40 P displaystyle A cap P geq alpha alpha 2 40 P nbsp Step 3 edit We now iterate step 2 Let a t displaystyle a t nbsp be the density of A displaystyle A nbsp after the t displaystyle t nbsp th iteration We have that a 0 a displaystyle alpha 0 alpha nbsp and a t 1 a a 2 40 displaystyle alpha t 1 geq alpha alpha 2 40 nbsp First see that a displaystyle alpha nbsp doubles i e reach T displaystyle T nbsp such that a T 2 a 0 displaystyle alpha T geq 2 alpha 0 nbsp after at most 40 a 1 displaystyle 40 alpha 1 nbsp steps We double a displaystyle alpha nbsp again i e reach a T 4 a 0 displaystyle alpha T geq 4 alpha 0 nbsp after at most 20 a 1 displaystyle 20 alpha 1 nbsp steps Since a 1 displaystyle alpha leq 1 nbsp this process must terminate after at most O 1 a displaystyle O 1 alpha nbsp steps Let N t displaystyle N t nbsp be the size of our current progression after t displaystyle t nbsp iterations By Lemma 2 we can always continue the process whenever N t C a t 12 displaystyle N t geq C alpha t 12 nbsp and thus when the process terminates we have that N t C a t 12 C a 12 displaystyle N t leq C alpha t 12 leq C alpha 12 nbsp Also note that when we pass to a subprogression the size of our set decreases by a cube root Therefore N N t 3 t C a 12 3 O 1 a e e O 1 a displaystyle N leq N t 3 t leq C alpha 12 3 O 1 alpha e e O 1 alpha nbsp Therefore a O 1 log log N displaystyle alpha O 1 log log N nbsp so A O N log log N displaystyle A O left frac N log log N right nbsp as desired displaystyle blacksquare nbsp Unfortunately this technique does not generalize directly to larger arithmetic progressions to prove Szemeredi s theorem An extension of this proof eluded mathematicians for decades until 1998 when Timothy Gowers developed the field of higher order Fourier analysis specifically to generalize the above proof to prove Szemeredi s theorem 5 Proof sketch via graph regularity edit Below is an outline of a proof using the Szemeredi regularity lemma Let G displaystyle G nbsp be a graph and X Y V G displaystyle X Y subseteq V G nbsp We call X Y displaystyle X Y nbsp an ϵ displaystyle epsilon nbsp regular pair if for all A X B Y displaystyle A subset X B subset Y nbsp with A ϵ X B ϵ Y displaystyle A geq epsilon X B geq epsilon Y nbsp one has d A B d X Y ϵ displaystyle d A B d X Y leq epsilon nbsp A partition P V 1 V k displaystyle mathcal P V 1 ldots V k nbsp of V G displaystyle V G nbsp is an ϵ displaystyle epsilon nbsp regular partition if i j k 2 V i V j not ϵ regular V i V j ϵ V G 2 displaystyle sum i j in k 2 V i V j text not epsilon text regular V i V j leq epsilon V G 2 nbsp Then the Szemeredi regularity lemma says that for every ϵ gt 0 displaystyle epsilon gt 0 nbsp there exists a constant M displaystyle M nbsp such that every graph has an ϵ displaystyle epsilon nbsp regular partition into at most M displaystyle M nbsp parts We can also prove that triangles between ϵ displaystyle epsilon nbsp regular sets of vertices must come along with many other triangles This is known as the triangle counting lemma Triangle Counting Lemma Let G displaystyle G nbsp be a graph and X Y Z displaystyle X Y Z nbsp be subsets of the vertices of G displaystyle G nbsp such that X Y Y Z Z X displaystyle X Y Y Z Z X nbsp are all ϵ displaystyle epsilon nbsp regular pairs for some ϵ gt 0 displaystyle epsilon gt 0 nbsp Let d X Y d X Z d Y Z displaystyle d XY d XZ d YZ nbsp denote the edge densities d X Y d X Z d Y Z displaystyle d X Y d X Z d Y Z nbsp respectively If d X Y d X Z d Y Z 2 ϵ displaystyle d XY d XZ d YZ geq 2 epsilon nbsp then the number of triples x y z X Y Z displaystyle x y z in X times Y times Z nbsp such that x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp form a triangle in G displaystyle G nbsp is at least 1 2 ϵ d X Y ϵ d X Z ϵ d Y Z ϵ X Y Z displaystyle 1 2 epsilon d XY epsilon d XZ epsilon d YZ epsilon cdot X Y Z nbsp Using the triangle counting lemma and the Szemeredi regularity lemma we can prove the triangle removal lemma a special case of the graph removal lemma 6 Triangle Removal Lemma For all ϵ gt 0 displaystyle epsilon gt 0 nbsp there exists d gt 0 displaystyle delta gt 0 nbsp such that any graph on n displaystyle n nbsp vertices with less than or equal to d n 3 displaystyle delta n 3 nbsp triangles can be made triangle free by removing at most ϵ n 2 displaystyle epsilon n 2 nbsp edges This has an interesting corollary pertaining to graphs G displaystyle G nbsp on N displaystyle N nbsp vertices where every edge of G displaystyle G nbsp lies in a unique triangle In specific all of these graphs must have o N 2 displaystyle o N 2 nbsp edges Take a set A displaystyle A nbsp with no 3 term arithmetic progressions Now construct a tripartite graph G displaystyle G nbsp whose parts X Y Z displaystyle X Y Z nbsp are all copies of Z 2 N 1 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 2N 1 mathbb Z nbsp Connect a vertex x X displaystyle x in X nbsp to a vertex y Y displaystyle y in Y nbsp if y x A displaystyle y x in A nbsp Similarly connect z Z displaystyle z in Z nbsp with y Y displaystyle y in Y nbsp if z y A displaystyle z y in A nbsp Finally connect x X displaystyle x in X nbsp with z Z displaystyle z in Z nbsp if z x 2 A displaystyle z x 2 in A nbsp This construction is set up so that if x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp form a triangle then we get elements y x z x 2 z y displaystyle y x frac z x 2 z y nbsp that all belong to A displaystyle A nbsp These numbers form an arithmetic progression in the listed order The assumption on A displaystyle A nbsp then tells us this progression must be trivial the elements listed above are all equal But this condition is equivalent to the assertion that x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp is an arithmetic progression in Z 2 N 1 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 2N 1 mathbb Z nbsp Consequently every edge of G displaystyle G nbsp lies in exactly one triangle The desired conclusion follows displaystyle blacksquare nbsp Extensions and generalizations editSzemeredi s theorem resolved the original conjecture and generalized Roth s theorem to arithmetic progressions of arbitrary length Since then it has been extended in multiple fashions to create new and interesting results Furstenberg and Katznelson 7 used ergodic theory to prove a multidimensional version and Leibman and Bergelson 8 extended it to polynomial progressions as well Most recently Green and Tao proved the Green Tao theorem which says that the prime numbers contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions Since the prime numbers are a subset of density 0 they introduced a relative Szemeredi theorem which applies to subsets with density 0 that satisfy certain pseudorandomness conditions Later on Conlon Fox and Zhao 9 10 strengthened this theorem by weakening the necessary pseudorandomness condition In 2020 Bloom and Sisask 11 proved that any set A displaystyle A nbsp such that n A 1 n displaystyle sum n in A frac 1 n nbsp diverges must contain arithmetic progressions of length 3 this is the first non trivial case of another conjecture of Erdos postulating that any such set must in fact contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions Improving bounds edit See also Salem Spencer set Size and Erdos conjecture on arithmetic progressions Progress and related results There has also been work done on improving the bound in Roth s theorem The bound from the original proof of Roth s theorem showed that r 3 N c N log log N displaystyle r 3 N leq c cdot frac N log log N nbsp for some constant c displaystyle c nbsp Over the years this bound has been continually lowered by Szemeredi 12 Heath Brown 13 Bourgain 14 15 and Sanders 16 17 The current July 2020 best bound is due to Bloom and Sisask 11 who have showed the existence of an absolute constant c gt 0 such that r 3 N N log N 1 c displaystyle r 3 N leq frac N log N 1 c nbsp In February 2023 a preprint by Kelley and Meka 18 19 gave a new bound of r 3 N 2 W log N 1 12 N displaystyle r 3 N leq 2 Omega log N 1 12 cdot N nbsp Four days later Bloom and Sisask published an exposition of the result simplifying the argument and yielding some additional applications 20 Several months later Bloom and Sisask obtained a further improvement to r 3 N exp c log N 1 9 N displaystyle r 3 N leq exp c log N 1 9 N nbsp and stated without proof that their techniques can be used to show r 3 N exp c log N 5 41 N displaystyle r 3 N leq exp c log N 5 41 N nbsp 21 There has also been work done on the other end constructing the largest set with no three term arithmetic progressions The best construction has barely been improved since 1946 when Behrend 22 improved on the initial construction by Salem and Spencer and proved r 3 N N exp c log N displaystyle r 3 N geq N exp c sqrt log N nbsp Due to no improvements in over 70 years it is conjectured that Behrend s set is asymptotically very close in size to the largest possible set with no three term progressions 11 If correct the Kelley Meka bound will prove this conjecture Roth s theorem in finite fields edit As a variation we can consider the analogous problem over finite fields Consider the finite field F 3 n displaystyle mathbb F 3 n nbsp and let r 3 F 3 n displaystyle r 3 mathbb F 3 n nbsp be the size of the largest subset of F 3 n displaystyle mathbb F 3 n nbsp which contains no 3 term arithmetic progression This problem is actually equivalent to the cap set problem which asks for the largest subset of F 3 n displaystyle mathbb F 3 n nbsp such that no 3 points lie on a line The cap set problem can be seen as a generalization of the card game Set In 1982 Brown and Buhler 23 were the first to show that r 3 F 3 n o 3 n displaystyle r 3 mathbb F 3 n o 3 n nbsp In 1995 Roy Mesuhlam 24 used a similar technique to the Fourier analytic proof of Roth s theorem to show that r 3 F 3 n O 3 n n displaystyle r 3 mathbb F 3 n O left frac 3 n n right nbsp This bound was improved to O 3 n n 1 ϵ displaystyle O 3 n n 1 epsilon nbsp in 2012 by Bateman and Katz 25 In 2016 Ernie Croot Vsevolod Lev Peter Pal Pach Jordan Ellenberg and Dion Gijswijt developed a new technique based on the polynomial method to prove that r 3 F 3 n O 2 756 n displaystyle r 3 mathbb F 3 n O 2 756 n nbsp 26 27 28 The best known lower bound is 2 2202 n displaystyle 2 2202 n nbsp discovered in December 2023 by Google DeepMind researchers using a large language model LLM 29 Roth s theorem with popular differences edit Another generalization of Roth s theorem shows that for positive density subsets there not only exists a 3 term arithmetic progression but that there exist many 3 APs all with the same common difference Roth s theorem with popular differences For all ϵ gt 0 displaystyle epsilon gt 0 nbsp there exists some n 0 n 0 ϵ displaystyle n 0 n 0 epsilon nbsp such that for every n gt n 0 displaystyle n gt n 0 nbsp and A F 3 n displaystyle A subset mathbb F 3 n nbsp with A a 3 n displaystyle A alpha 3 n nbsp there exists some y 0 displaystyle y neq 0 nbsp such that x x x y x 2 y A a 3 ϵ 3 n displaystyle x x x y x 2y in A geq alpha 3 epsilon 3 n nbsp If A displaystyle A nbsp is chosen randomly from F 3 n displaystyle mathbb F 3 n nbsp then we would expect there to be a 3 3 n displaystyle alpha 3 3 n nbsp progressions for each value of y displaystyle y nbsp The popular differences theorem thus states that for each A displaystyle A nbsp with positive density there is some y displaystyle y nbsp such that the number of 3 APs with common difference y displaystyle y nbsp is close to what we would expect This theorem was first proven by Green in 2005 30 who gave a bound of n 0 tow 1 ϵ O 1 displaystyle n 0 text tow 1 epsilon O 1 nbsp where tow displaystyle text tow nbsp is the tower function In 2019 Fox and Pham recently improved the bound to n 0 tow O log 1 ϵ displaystyle n 0 text tow O log frac 1 epsilon nbsp 31 A corresponding statement is also true in Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp for both 3 APs and 4 APs 32 However the claim has been shown to be false for 5 APs 33 References edit Roth Klaus 1953 On certain sets of integers Journal of the London Mathematical Society 28 1 104 109 doi 10 1112 jlms s1 28 1 104 van der Waerden B L 1927 Beweis einer Baudetschen Vermutung Nieuw Arch Wisk 15 212 216 Salem Raphael Spencer Donald C 1942 On sets of integers which contain no three terms in arithmetical progression Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 28 12 561 563 Bibcode 1942PNAS 28 561S doi 10 1073 pnas 28 12 561 MR 0007405 PMC 1078539 PMID 16588588 Erdos Paul Turan Paul 1936 On Some Sequences of Integers Journal of the London Mathematical Society 4 4 261 264 doi 10 1112 jlms s1 11 4 261 MR 1574918 Gowers W T 1998 A new proof of Szemeredi s theorem for arithmetic progressions of length four Geometric and Functional Analysis 8 3 529 551 doi 10 1007 s000390050065 Fox Jacob 2011 A new proof of the graph removal lemma Annals of Mathematics Second Series 174 1 561 579 arXiv 1006 1300 doi 10 4007 annals 2011 174 1 17 MR 2811609 S2CID 8250133 Furstenberg Hillel Katznelson Yitzhak 1978 An ergodic Szemeredi theorem for commuting transformations Journal d Analyse Mathematique 38 1 275 291 doi 10 1007 BF02790016 MR 0531279 S2CID 123386017 Bergelson Vitaly Leibman Alexander 1996 Polynomial extensions of van der Waerden s and Szemeredi s theorems Journal of the American Mathematical Society 9 3 725 753 doi 10 1090 S0894 0347 96 00194 4 MR 1325795 Conlon David Fox Jacob Zhao Yufei 2015 A relative Szemeredi theorem Geometric and Functional Analysis 25 3 733 762 arXiv 1305 5440 doi 10 1007 s00039 015 0324 9 MR 3361771 Zhao Yufei 2014 An arithmetic transference proof of a relative Szemeredi theorem Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 156 2 255 261 arXiv 1307 4959 Bibcode 2014MPCPS 156 255Z doi 10 1017 S0305004113000662 MR 3177868 S2CID 119673319 a b c Thomas F Bloom Olof Sisask Breaking the logarithmic barrier in Roth s theorem on arithmetic progressions arXiv 2007 03528 2020 Szemeredi Endre 1990 Integer sets containing no arithmetic progressions Acta Mathematica Hungarica 56 1 2 155 158 doi 10 1007 BF01903717 MR 1100788 Heath Brown Roger 1987 Integer sets containing no arithmetic progressions Journal of the London Mathematical Society 35 3 385 394 doi 10 1112 jlms s2 35 3 385 MR 0889362 Bourgain Jean 1999 On triples in arithmetic progression Geometric and Functional Analysis 9 5 968 984 doi 10 1007 s000390050105 MR 1726234 S2CID 392820 Bourgain Jean 2008 Roth s theorem on progressions revisited Journal d Analyse Mathematique 104 1 155 192 doi 10 1007 s11854 008 0020 x MR 2403433 S2CID 16985451 Sanders Tom 2012 On certain other sets of integers Annals of Mathematics 185 1 53 82 arXiv 1007 5444 doi 10 1007 s11854 012 0003 9 MR 2892617 S2CID 119727492 Sanders Tom 2011 On Roth s theorem on progressions Annals of Mathematics 174 1 619 636 arXiv 1011 0104 doi 10 4007 annals 2011 174 1 20 MR 2811612 S2CID 53331882 Kelley Zander Meka Raghu 2023 02 10 Strong Bounds for 3 Progressions arXiv 2302 05537 math NT Sloman Leila 2023 03 21 Surprise Computer Science Proof Stuns Mathematicians Quanta Magazine Bloom Thomas F Sisask Olof 2023 02 14 The Kelley Meka bounds for sets free of three term arithmetic progressions arXiv 2302 07211 math NT Bloom Thomas F Sisask Olof 2023 09 05 An improvement to the Kelley Meka bounds on three term arithmetic progressions arXiv 2309 02353 math NT Behrend F A 1946 On sets of integers which contain no three terms in arithmetical progression Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 32 12 331 332 Bibcode 1946PNAS 32 331B doi 10 1073 pnas 32 12 331 PMC 1078964 PMID 16578230 Brown T C Buhler J P 1982 A density version of a geometric Ramsey theorem Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series A 32 1 20 34 doi 10 1016 0097 3165 82 90062 0 Mesuhlam Roy 1995 On subsets of finite abelian groups with no 3 term arithmetic progressions Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series A 71 1 168 172 doi 10 1016 0097 3165 95 90024 1 Bateman M Katz N 2012 New bounds on cap sets Journal of the American Mathematical Society 25 2 585 613 doi 10 1090 S0894 0347 2011 00725 X hdl 2022 19057 Ellenberg Jordan S Gijswijt Dion 2016 On large subsets of F q n displaystyle mathbb F q n nbsp with no three term arithmetic progression Annals of Mathematics Second Series 185 1 339 343 arXiv 1605 09223 doi 10 4007 annals 2017 185 1 8 S2CID 119683140 Croot Ernie Lev Vsevolod F Pach Peter Pal 2017 Progression free sets in Z 4 n displaystyle mathbb Z 4 n nbsp are exponentially small Annals of Mathematics 2nd series 185 1 331 337 arXiv 1605 01506 doi 10 4007 annals 2017 185 1 7 Klarreich Erica May 31 2016 Simple Set Game Proof Stuns Mathematicians Quanta Romera Paredes Bernardino Barekatain Mohammadamin Novikov Alexander Balog Matej Kumar M Pawan Dupont Emilien Ruiz Francisco J R Ellenberg Jordan S Wang Pengming Fawzi Omar Kohli Pushmeet Fawzi Alhussein 2023 12 14 Mathematical discoveries from program search with large language models Nature 1 3 doi 10 1038 s41586 023 06924 6 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 10794145 Green Ben 2005 A Szemeredi type regularity lemma in abelian groups with applications Geometric and Functional Analysis 15 2 340 376 doi 10 1007 s00039 005 0509 8 MR 2153903 Fox Jacob Pham Huy Tuan April 2021 Popular progression differences in vector spaces International Mathematics Research Notices 2021 7 5261 5289 arXiv 1708 08482 Bibcode 2017arXiv170808482F doi 10 1093 imrn rny240 Green Ben Tao Terrence 2010 An Arithmetic Regularity Lemma an Associated Counting Lemma and Applications An Irregular Mind Bolyai Society Mathematical Studies Vol 21 Bolyai Society Mathematical Studies pp 261 334 arXiv 1002 2028 Bibcode 2010arXiv1002 2028G doi 10 1007 978 3 642 14444 8 7 ISBN 978 3 642 14443 1 S2CID 115174575 Bergelson Vitaly Host Bernard Kra Bryna 2005 Multiple recurrence and nilsequences With an appendix by Imre Ruzsa Inventiones Mathematicae 160 2 261 303 doi 10 1007 s00222 004 0428 6 S2CID 1380361 External links editEdmonds Chelsea Koutsoukou Argyraki Angeliki Paulson Lawrence C Roth s Theorem on Arithmetic Progressions Formal proof development in Isabelle HOL Archive of Formal Proofs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roth 27s theorem on arithmetic progressions amp oldid 1218062397, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.