Goormaghtigh conjecture

In mathematics, the Goormaghtigh conjecture is a conjecture in number theory named for the Belgian mathematician René Goormaghtigh. It concerns the exponential Diophantine equation

satisfying and , and in turn .

The conjecture states that the only non-trivial integer solutions are

and

Representation

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The fraction of either side of the conjecture exactly represents a geometric series. Indeed,   and so, for example,  . As such, the exponential Diophantine equation equates two univariate polynomials, with   terms and highest order   on the left hand side, and   on the right.

Alternatively, by cross-multiplication of the fraction's denominators, the equation is equivalently expressed as

 

or similar forms.

In terms of repunits

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Equating two expressions of the form  , the Goormaghtigh conjecture may also be expressed as saying that 31 (which is 111 in base 5 or 11111 in base 2) and 8191 (111 in base 90 or 1111111111111 in base 2) are the only two numbers that are repunits with at least three digits in two different bases.

Partial results

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Yuan (2005) showed that for   and odd  , the equation has no solution   other than the two solutions given above.

The conjecture has been subject to extensive computer supported solution search, especially in small cases (restricting to   in the thousands, or alternatively restricting to   with around a dozen digits) or when the fraction is prime (hundreds of digits). This is aided by various necessary congruence relations. For fixed   and  , loose upper bounds for   can be computed from  . Taking logs relates the exponents as  .

Nesterenko & Shorey (1998) showed that, if   and   with  ,  , and  , then   is bounded by an effectively computable constant depending only on   and  .

Davenport, Lewis & Schinzel (1961) showed that, for each pair of fixed exponents   and  , the equation has only finitely many solutions. The proof of this, however, depends on Siegel's finiteness theorem, which is ineffective.

Balasubramanian and Shorey proved in 1980 that there are only finitely many possible solutions   to the equations with prime divisors of   and   lying in a given finite set and that they may be effectively computed.

He & Togbé (2008) showed that, for each fixed   and  , this equation has at most one solution. For fixed x (or y), equation has at most 15 solutions, and at most two unless y is either odd prime power times a power of two, or in the finite set {15, 21, 30, 33, 35, 39, 45, 51, 65, 85, 143, 154, 713}, in which case there are at most three solutions. Furthermore, there is at most one solution if the odd part of y is squareful unless y has at most two distinct odd prime factors or y is in a finite set {315, 495, 525, 585, 630, 693, 735, 765, 855, 945, 1035, 1050, 1170, 1260, 1386, 1530, 1890, 1925, 1950, 1953, 2115, 2175, 2223, 2325, 2535, 2565, 2898, 2907, 3105, 3150, 3325, 3465, 3663, 3675, 4235, 5525, 5661, 6273, 8109, 17575, 39151}. If y is a power of two, there is at most one solution except for y = 2, in which case there are two known solutions. In fact,   and  .

Beware that the alternative convention,  , is also used in the literature.

See also

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References

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