I am trying to find a conjecture apparently made by Erdős and Straus. I say apparently because I hav
lobht98
Answered question
2022-06-28
I am trying to find a conjecture apparently made by Erdős and Straus. I say apparently because I have had so much trouble finding anything information about it that I'm beginning to doubt its existence. Here it is: Let be a rational function over that is defined at every positive integer. If the sum converges, it is either rational or transcendental, i.e., it is never an irrational algebraic number. Has anyone heard of this conjecture? I was told about it by my supervisor, but he doesn't remember where he heard about it.
Answer & Explanation
massetereqe
Beginner2022-06-29Added 21 answers
The introduction discusses variations on the following conjecture of Erdős, which apparently goes back to 1949 but did not appear in print in Erdős's intended form until a 1965 paper of Livingston. Conjecture (Erdős). Let f be a number-theoretic function with period such that for and . Then
whenever the series converges. In 1973, Baker, Birch, and Wirsing attribute the following problem to Chowla: Problem. Does there exist a rational-valued function , periodic with prime period , such that
Baker, Birch, and Wirsing disprove the claim by proving the following theorem. Theorem: Suppose is a nonvanishing function with period . If (i) whenever , and (ii) the qth cyclotomic polynomial is irreducible over , then
This result and a related result of Okada are used as a basis for Adhikari, Saradha, Shorey, and Tijdeman to prove the following theorem. Theorem. Suppose is periodic with period . If the series
converges to some number , then either or is transcendental. Applying Baker's theorem tends to lead to dichotomies of the form "S is either rational or transcendental"; beyond that I don't find direct motivation for the claim or prior conjectures of the form you indicate. (But I'm no number theorist.)
Yahir Tucker
Beginner2022-06-30Added 8 answers
Assume that Erdos theorem is true. Then , are clearly a rational functions and
will be rationals or transcendentals, which I think is highly considerable statement. Hence I expect the proof to your answer must be quite hard. Note also that rational function is but is not, where is the th Fibonacci number.