Historical Introduction to Number Theory : Part -3 #Number #theory
Historical Introduction to Number Theory : Part -3
( part 2 continuation )
After Euclid in 300 BC no significant advances were made
in number theory until about AD 250 when
another Greek mathematician, Diophantus
of Alexandria, published 13 books , six of which have been preserved. This was
the first Greek work to make symmetric use of algebraic symbols. Although his
algebraic notation seems awkward by present – day standards, Diophantus was
able to solve certain algebraic equations involved two or three unknowns. Many
of his problems originated from number theory and it was natural for him to
seek integer solutions of equations. Equations to be solved with integer values
of the unknowns are now called Diophantine equations, and the study of such
equations is known as Diophantine analysis. The equation x2+y2=z2
for Pythagorean triples is an example of a Diophantine equation.
After Diophantus, not much progress was made in the theory
of numbers until the seventeenth century, although there is some evidence that the subject began to
flourish in the Far East ---- especiallly in India- in the period between AD
500 an AD 1200.
In the 17th
century the subject was revived in western Europe , largely through the efforts
of a remarkable French mathematician , Pierre de Fermat (1601 - 1665), who is generally acknowledged to be
the father of modern number theory. Fermat derived much of his inspiration from
the works of Diophantus . he was the first to discover really deep properties
of the integers. For example, Fermat proved the following surprising theorems-
“ Every integer is either a triangular number or a sum of
two or three triangular numbers “
“ every integer is either a square or a sum of two, three or
four squares. “
“ Every integer is either a pentagonal or the sum of two,
three, four or five pentagonal numbers” and so on.
Fermat also discovered that every prime number of the form 4n+1 such as 5,13,17,29,37,41
etc., is a sum of two squares. For example
5= 12+22,
13=22+32,
17=12+42,
29=22+52,
37=12+62,
41=42+52.
Shortly after Fermat’s time, the names of Euler (1707-1783),
Lagrange(1736-1813), Legendre (1752-1833), Gauss ( 1777-1855), and Dirichlet
(1805-1859) became prominent in the
further development of the subject. The first textbook in number theory was
published by Legendre in 1798. Three years later Gauss published Disquisitions
Arithmeticae, a book which transformed the subject into systematic
and beautiful science. Although he made a wealth of contributions to other
branches of mathematics, as well as to other sciences, Gauss himself considered his book on number
theory to be his greatest work.
In the last 100 years or so since Gauss’s time there has
been an intensive development of the subject in many different directions. It would be impossible
to give in a few pages a fair cross-section of the types of problems that are
studied in the theory of numbers. The field
is vast and some parts require a profound knowledge of higher mathematics. Nevertheless,
there are many problems in number theory which are very easy to state. Some of
these deal with prime numbers, and we devote the rest of this introduction to
such problems.
The primes less than 100 have been listed above. A table
listing all primes less than 10 million was published in 1914 by an American mathematician
, D. N. Lehmer . There are exactly 664,579 primes less than 10 million , or
about 6 ½ % . More recently the son of D.N. Lehmer , D.H. Lehmer calculated the
total number of primes less than 10 billion; there are exactly 455,052,512 such
primes or about 4 ½ % although all these
primes are not known individually .
A close examination of a table of primes reveals that they
are distributed in a very irregular fashion. The tables show long gaps between
primes. For example, the prime 370,261
is followed by 111 composite numbers. There are no primes between
20,831,323 and 20,831,533 . It is easy
to prove that arbitrary large gaps between prime numbers must eventually occur.
***Historical Introduction to Number Theory : Part -4***
#Number #theory

wonderful and deep collection
ReplyDelete