Sums of powers explained
In mathematics and statistics, sums of powers occur in a number of contexts:
as a polynomial in, or alternatively in terms of a Bernoulli polynomial.
and
.
is impossible in positive integers with .
. The
squircle is the case, .
- Euler's sum of powers conjecture (disproved) concerns situations in which the sum of integers, each a th power of an integer, equals another th power.
- The Fermat-Catalan conjecture asks whether there are an infinitude of examples in which the sum of two coprime integers, each a power of an integer, with the powers not necessarily equal, can equal another integer that is a power, with the reciprocals of the three powers summing to less than 1.
- Beal's conjecture concerns the question of whether the sum of two coprime integers, each a power greater than 2 of an integer, with the powers not necessarily equal, can equal another integer that is a power greater than 2.
- The Jacobi–Madden equation is
in integers.
- Waring's problem asks whether for every natural number there exists an associated positive integer such that every natural number is the sum of at most th powers of natural numbers.
- The successive powers of the golden ratio φ obey the Fibonacci recurrence:
\varphi^ = \varphi^n + \varphi^.
- Newton's identities express the sum of the th powers of all the roots of a polynomial in terms of the coefficients in the polynomial.
- The sum of cubes of numbers in arithmetic progression is sometimes another cube.
- The Fermat cubic, in which the sum of three cubes equals another cube, has a general solution.
- The power sum symmetric polynomial is a building block for symmetric polynomials.
- The sum of the reciprocals of all perfect powers including duplicates (but not including 1) equals 1.
- The Erdős–Moser equation,
where and are positive integers, is conjectured to have no solutions other than .
- The sums of three cubes cannot equal 4 or 5 modulo 9, but it is unknown whether all remaining integers can be expressed in this form.
- The sum of the terms in the geometric series is
See also
Notes and References
- Graham . R. L. . June 1964 . Complete sequences of polynomial values . Duke Mathematical Journal . 31 . 2 . 275–285 . 10.1215/S0012-7094-64-03126-6 . 0012-7094.