In mathematics, Roth's theorem or Thue–Siegel–Roth theorem is a fundamental result in diophantine approximation to algebraic numbers. It is of a qualitative type, stating that algebraic numbers cannot have many rational approximations that are 'very good'. Over half a century, the meaning of very good here was refined by a number of mathematicians, starting with Joseph Liouville in 1844 and continuing with work of,,, and .
Roth's theorem states that every irrational algebraic number
\alpha
\varepsilon>0
\left|\alpha-
p | |
q |
\right|<
1 | |
q2 |
can have only finitely many solutions in coprime integers
p
q
\left|\alpha-
p | |
q |
\right|>
C(\alpha,\varepsilon) | |
q2 |
with
C(\alpha,\varepsilon)
\varepsilon>0
\alpha
The first result in this direction is Liouville's theorem on approximation of algebraic numbers, which gives an approximation exponent of d for an algebraic number α of degree d ≥ 2. This is already enough to demonstrate the existence of transcendental numbers. Thue realised that an exponent less than d would have applications to the solution of Diophantine equations and in Thue's theorem from 1909 established an exponent
d/2+1+\varepsilon
Roth's result with exponent 2 is in some sense the best possible, because this statement would fail on setting
\varepsilon=0
\left|\alpha-
p | |
q |
\right|<
1 | |
q2log(q)1+\varepsilon |
\alpha
The theorem is not currently effective: that is, there is no bound known on the possible values of p,q given
\alpha
The proof technique involves constructing an auxiliary multivariate polynomial in an arbitrarily large number of variables depending upon
\varepsilon
There is a higher-dimensional version, Schmidt's subspace theorem, of the basic result. There are also numerous extensions, for example using the p-adic metric, based on the Roth method.
William J. LeVeque generalized the result by showing that a similar bound holds when the approximating numbers are taken from a fixed algebraic number field. Define the height H(ξ) of an algebraic number ξ to be the maximum of the absolute values of the coefficients of its minimal polynomial. Fix κ>2. For a given algebraic number α and algebraic number field K, the equation
|\alpha-\xi|<
1 | |
H(\xi)\kappa |
has only finitely many solutions in elements ξ of K.