Daily fun fact 2:Summing of three cubes

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Sum of three cubes:

In the mathematics of sums of powers, it is an open problem to characterize the numbers that can be expressed as a sum of three cubes of integers, allowing both positive and negative cubes in the sum. A necessary condition for an integer n
{\displaystyle n}
to equal such a sum is that n
{\displaystyle n}
cannot equal 4 or 5 modulo 9, because the cubes modulo 9 are 0, 1, and −1, and no three of these numbers can sum to 4 or 5 modulo 9.It is unknown whether this necessary condition is sufficient.

Semi-log plot of solutions of x³+y³+z³=n for integer x
{\displaystyle x}
, y
{\displaystyle y}
, and z
{\displaystyle z}
, and 0≤n≤100. Green bands denote values of n
{\displaystyle n}
proven not to have a solution.
Variations of the problem include sums of non-negative cubes and sums of rational cubes. All integers have a representation as a sum of rational cubes, but it is unknown whether the sums of non-negative cubes form a set with non-zero natural density.

Small cases​

A nontrivial representation of 0 as a sum of three cubes would give a counterexample to Fermat's Last Theorem for the exponent three, as one of the three cubes would have the opposite sign as the other two and its negation would equal the sum of the other two. Therefore, by Leonhard Euler's proof of that case of Fermat's last theorem, there are only the trivial solutions

a³+(−a)³+0³=0.
For representations of 1 and 2, there are infinite families of solutions

(9b⁴)³+(3b−9b⁴)³+(1−9b³)³=1 (discovered by K. Mahler in 1936)
and

(1+6c3)³+(1−6c3)³+(−6c2)³=2
(discoveredby A.S. Verebrusov in 1908, quoted by L.J. Mordell).
These can be scaled to obtain representations for any cube or any number that is twice a cube.There are also other known representations of 2 that are not given by these infinite families:

1 214 928³+3 480 205³+(−3 528 875)³=2,37 404 275 617³+(−25 282 289 375)³ +(−33 071 554 596)³ =2,3 737 830 626 0903³ +1 490 220 318 001³+(−3 815 176 160 999)³=2.
However, 1 and 2 are the only numbers with representations that can be parameterized by quartic polynomials as above.Even in the case of representations of 3, Louis J. Mordell wrote in 1953 "I do not know anything" more than its small solutions

1³+1³+1³=4³+4³+(−5)³=3
and the fact that each of the three cubed numbers must be equal modulo 9.





Computational results​

Since 1955, and starting with the instigation of Mordell, many authors have implemented computational searches for these representations Elsenhans & Jahnel (2009) used a method of Noam Elkies (2000) involving lattice reduction to search for all solutions to the Diophantine equation

x³+y³+z³=n
for positive
{\displaystyle n}
at most 1000 and for max(|x|,|y|,|z|)<10¹⁴, leaving only 33, 42, 74, 114, 165, 390, 579, 627, 633, 732, 795, 906, 921, and 975 as open problems in 2009 for n≤1000, and 192, 375, and 600 remain with no primitive solutions (i.e. gcd(x,y,z)=1). After Timothy Browning covered the problem on Numberphile in 2016, Huisman (2016) extended these searches to max(|x|,|y|,|z|)<10¹⁵ solving the case of 74, with solution

74=(−284 650 292 555 885)3+66 229 832 190 5563+283 450 105 697 7273.
Through these searches, it was discovered that all n<100 that are unequal to 4 or 5 modulo 9 have a solution, with at most two exceptions, 33 and 42.

However, in 2019, Andrew Booker settled the case n=33 by discovering that

33=8 866 128 975 287 5283+(−8 778 405 442 862 239)3+(−2 736 111 468 807 040)3.
In order to achieve this, Booker exploited an alternative search strategy with running time proportional to min(|x|,|y|,|z|) rather than to their maximum,an approach originally suggested by Heath-Brown et al. He also found that

795=(−14 219 049 725 358 227)3+14 197 965 759 741 5713+2 337 348 783 323 9233,
and established that there are no solutions for n=42 or any of the other unresolved n≤1000 with |z|≤.

Shortly thereafter, in September 2019, Booker and Andrew Sutherland finally settled the n=42 case, using 1.3 million hours of computing on the Charity Engine global grid to discover that

42=(−80 538 738 812 075 974)3+80 435 758 145 817 5153+12 602 123 297 335 6313,
as well as solutions for several other previously unknown cases including n=165 and 579 for n≤1000.

Booker and Sutherland also found a third representation of 3 using a further 4 million computer-hours on Charity Engine:

3=569 936 821 221 962 380 7203+(−569 936 821 113 563 493 509)3+(−472 715 493 453 327 032)3.
This discovery settled a 65-year-old question of Louis J. Mordell that has stimulated much of the research on this problem.

While presenting the third representation of 3 during his appearance in a video on the Youtube channel Numberphile, Booker also presented a representation for 906:

906=(−74 924 259 395 610 397)3+72 054 089 679 353 3783+35 961 979 615 356 5033.
The only remaining unsolved cases up to 1,000 are the seven numbers 114, 390, 627, 633, 732, 921, and 975, and there are no known primitive solutions (i.e. gcd(x,y,z)=1) for 192, 375, and 600.

Primitive solutions for n from 1 to 78
nxyznxyz
1910−1239117367134476−159380
212149283480205−3528875421260212329733563180435758145817515−80538738812075974
311143223
6−1−1244−5−78
70−12452−34
8915−1646−233
90124767−8
1011248−23−2631
11−2−2351602659−796
12710−11522396129245460702901317−61922712865
15−12253−133
16−511−1609162654−7−1112
1712255133
18−1−2356−11−2122
190−23571−24
201−2360−1−45
21−11−1416610−45
24−2901096694−155505555551558413982762233
25−1−13630−14
260−1364−3−56
27−4−5665014
2801366114
29113692−45
30−283059965−22188885172220422932701120−21
33−2736111468807040−8778405442862239886612897528752871−124
34−1237279−10
3502373124
361237466229832190556283450105697727−284650292555885
370−34754381159435203083−435203231
381−3

Solvability and decidability​

In 1992, Roger Heath-Brown conjectured that every n
{\displaystyle n}
unequal to 4 or 5 modulo 9 has infinitely many representations as sums of three cubes. The case n=33
{\displaystyle n=33}
of this problem was used by Bjorn Poonen as the opening example in a survey on undecidable problems in number theory, of which Hilbert's tenth problem is the most famous example. Although this particular case has since been resolved, it is unknown whether representing numbers as sums of cubes is decidable. That is, it is not known whether an algorithm can, for every input, test in finite time whether a given number has such a representation. If Heath-Brown's conjecture is true, the problem is decidable. In this case, an algorithm could correctly solve the problem by computing n
{\displaystyle n}
modulo 9, returning false when this is 4 or 5, and otherwise returning true. Heath-Brown's research also includes more precise conjectures on how far an algorithm would have to search to find an explicit representation rather than merely determining whether one exists.

Variations​

A variant of this problem related to Waring's problem asks for representations as sums of three cubes of non-negative integers. In the 19th century, Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi and collaborators compiled tables of solutions to this problem.[58] It is conjectured that the representable numbers have positive natural density.This remains unknown, but Trevor Wooley has shown that Ω(n0.917) of the numbers from 1
{\displaystyle 1}
to n
{\displaystyle n}
have such representations. The density is at most Γ(4/3)3/6≈0.119

Every integer can be represented as a sum of three cubes of rational numbers (rather than as a sum of cubes of integers).




Detail explanation(pdf)



Summary:


x³+y³+z³=k, with k being all the numbers from one to 100, is a Diophantine equation that's sometimes known as "summing of three cubes."
∴ The required result will be 3xyz.





If you have any questions, then feel free to ask. I'll answer them(probably).

Also check out:Beyond Infinity.

Why so i know this?
Its astronomy related.that's all you need to know.
 
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