Pythagorician Divisors and Applications to Some Diophantine Equations
François E. Tanoé,Prosper Kimou +1 more
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TL;DR: In this paper , the Pythagorician divisors theorem was proved for solving the X2 + Y2 = Z2 Pythagoras equation, and for any solution of the type (a,b = 2sb1 ≠0,c) ∈ N*3, s ≥ 2, b1odd, (a and c) ≡ (± 1,0,1)(mod 4), c > a , c > b, and gcd(a, b,c,c)) = 1, the map is a bijection.
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Abstract: We consider the Pythagoras equation X2 +Y2 = Z2, and for any solution of the type (a,b = 2sb1 ≠0,c) ∈ N*3, s ≥ 2, b1odd, (a,b,c) ≡ (±1,0,1)(mod 4), c > a , c > b, and gcd(a,b,c) = 1, we then prove the Pythagorician divisors Theorem, which results in the following: , where (d,d′′) (resp. (e,en)) are unique particular divisors of a and b, such that a = dd′′ (resp. b = ee′′ ), these divisors are called: Pythagorician divisors from a, (resp. from b). Let’s put λ ∈{0,1}, defined by: and S = s -λ (s -1). Then such that . Moreover the map is a bijection. We apply this new tool to obtain a new classification of the primitive, positive and non-trivial solutions of the Pythagoras equations: a2 + b2 = c2 via the Pythagorician parameters (d,e,S ). We obtain for (d, e) fixed, the equivalence class of any Pythagorician solution (a,b,c), checking , namely: . We also update the solutions of some Diophantine equations of degree 2, already known, but very important for the resolution of other equations. With this tool of Pythagorean divisors, we have obtained (in another paper) new recurrent methods to solve Fermat’s equation: a4 + b4 = c4, other than usual infinite descent method; and to solve congruent numbers problem. We believe that this tool can bring new arguments, for Diophantine resolution, of the general equations of Fermat: a2p + b2p = c2p and ap + bp = cp. MSC2020-Mathematical Sciences Classification System: 11A05-11A51-11D25-11D41-11D72.
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Citations
Diophantine Quotients and Remainders with Applications to Fermat and Pythagorean Equations
Prosper Kimou,François E. Tanoé +1 more
Abstract: Diophantine equations have always fascinated mathematicians about existence, finitude, and the calculation of possible solutions. Among these equations, one of them will be the object of our research. This is the Pythagoras’-Fermat’s equation defined as follows.
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Fermat and Pythagoras Divisors for a New Explicit Proof of Fermat&amp;#8217;s Theorem:<i>a</i><sup>4</sup> + <i>b</i><sup>4</sup> = <i>c</i><sup>4</sup>. Part I
Prosper Kouadio Kimou,François Emmanuel Tanoé,Kouassi Vincent Kouakou +2 more
TL;DR: Fermat and Pythagoras divisors for a New Explicit Proof of Fermat's Theorem: a 4 + b 4 = c 4 is not solvable in ragazze when 0 abc ≠ .
A New Proof for Congruent Number&amp;#8217;s Problem via Pythagorician Divisors
Léopold Dèkpassi Keuméan,François Emmanuel Tanoé +1 more
TL;DR: A new proof for congruent numbers problem via Pythagorician divisors. New parameterization for Pythagorician triplets leads to a new proof of the congruent numbers problem.
New Asymptotic Results on Fermat-Wiles Theorem
Kimou Kouadio Prosper,Kouakou Kouassi Vincent,Tanoé François +2 more
TL;DR: New asymptotic results on Fermat-Wiles theorem establish surprising bounds on solutions to the Diophantine equation x p + y p = z p.
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On Fermat’s Last Theorem and Galaxies of Sequences of Positive Integers
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The solution of the Diophantine equation x^2+3y^2=z^2
S. Abdelalim,H. Dyani +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the diophantine equation x2 + 3y2 = z2 was solved using the arithmetic technical method using 20K30, 20K40, and 20K27 mathematics subject classification.
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