In mathematics, Cramer's paradox or the Cramer–Euler paradox[1] is the statement that the number of points of intersection of two higher-order curves in the plane can be greater than the number of arbitrary points that are usually needed to define one such curve. It is named after the Genevan mathematician Gabriel Cramer.
This phenomenon appears paradoxical because the points of intersection fail to uniquely define any curve (they belong to at least two different curves) despite their large number.It is the result of a naive understanding or a misapplication of two theorems:
n
n2
n
n(n+3)/2
For all
n\ge3
n2\gen(n+3)/2
n(n+3)/2
n(n+3)/2
The paradox was first published by Colin Maclaurin in 1720.[2] [3] Cramer and Leonhard Euler corresponded on the paradox in letters of 1744 and 1745 and Euler explained the problem to Cramer. It has become known as Cramer's paradox after featuring in his 1750 book Introduction à l'analyse des lignes courbes algébriques, although Cramer quoted Maclaurin as the source of the statement.[4] At about the same time, Euler published examples showing a cubic curve which was not uniquely defined by 9 points[5] [6] and discussed the problem in his book Introductio in analysin infinitorum. The result was publicized by James Stirling and explained by Julius Plücker.[1]
For first-order curves (that is, lines) the paradox does not occur, because
n=1
n2=1<n(n+3)/2=2
Two nondegenerate conics intersect in at most at four finite points in the real plane, which is precisely the number given as a maximum by Bézout's theorem. However, five points are needed to define a nondegenerate conic, so again in this case there is no paradox.
In a letter to Euler, Cramer pointed out that the cubic curves
x3-x=0
y3-y=0
x=-1
x=0
x=1
A bivariate equation of degree n has 1 + n(n + 3) / 2 coefficients, but the set of points described by the equation is preserved if the equation is divided through by one of the non-zero coefficients, leaving one coefficient equal to 1 and only n(n + 3) / 2 coefficients to characterize the curve. Given n(n + 3) / 2 points (xi, yi), each of these points can be used to create a separate equation by substituting it into the general polynomial equation of degree n, giving n(n + 3) / 2 equations linear in the n(n + 3) / 2 unknown coefficients. If this system is non-degenerate in the sense of having a non-zero determinant, the unknown coefficients are uniquely determined and hence the polynomial equation and its curve are uniquely determined. But if this determinant is zero, the system is degenerate and the points can be on more than one curve of degree n.