The Fueter–Pólya theorem, first proved by Rudolf Fueter and George Pólya, states that the only quadratic polynomial pairing functions are the Cantor polynomials.

Introduction

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In 1873, Georg Cantor showed that the so-called Cantor polynomial[1]

is a bijective mapping from to . The polynomial given by swapping the variables is also a pairing function.

Fueter was investigating whether there are other quadratic polynomials with this property, and concluded that this is not the case assuming . He then wrote to Pólya, who showed the theorem does not require this condition.[2]

Statement

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If is a real quadratic polynomial in two variables whose restriction to is a bijection from to then it is

or

Proof

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The original proof is surprisingly difficult, using the Lindemann–Weierstrass theorem to prove the transcendence of for a nonzero algebraic number .[3] In 2002, M. A. Vsemirnov published an elementary proof of this result.[4]

Fueter–Pólya conjecture

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The theorem states that the Cantor polynomial is the only quadratic pairing polynomial of and . The conjecture is that these are the only such pairing polynomials, of any degree.

Higher dimensions

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A generalization of the Cantor polynomial in higher dimensions is as follows:[5]

The sum of these binomial coefficients yields a polynomial of degree in variables. This is just one of at least inequivalent packing polynomials for dimensions.[6]

References

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  1. ^ G. Cantor: Ein Beitrag zur Mannigfaltigkeitslehre, J. Reine Angew. Math., Band 84 (1878), Pages 242–258
  2. ^ Rudolf Fueter, Georg Pólya: Rationale Abzählung der Gitterpunkte, Vierteljschr. Naturforsch. Ges. Zürich 68 (1923), Pages 380–386
  3. ^ Craig Smoryński: Logical Number Theory I, Springer-Verlag 1991, ISBN 3-540-52236-0, Chapters I.4 and I.5: The Fueter–Pólya Theorem I/II
  4. ^ M. A. Vsemirnov, Two elementary proofs of the Fueter–Pólya theorem on pairing polynomials. St. Petersburg Math. J. 13 (2002), no. 5, pp. 705–715. Correction: ibid. 14 (2003), no. 5, p. 887.
  5. ^ P. Chowla: On some Polynomials which represent every natural number exactly once, Norske Vid. Selsk. Forh. Trondheim (1961), volume 34, pages 8–9
  6. ^ Sánchez Flores, Adolfo (1995). "A family of diagonal polynomial orders of ". Order. 12 (2): 173–187. doi:10.1007/BF01108626.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Rudolf Fueter

Cauchy-Riemann equations. He also published a proof of the Fueter–Pólya theorem with George Pólya. In 1910 he was one of the founders of the Swiss Mathematical

George Pólya

Polya distribution Pólya enumeration theorem Pólya–Vinogradov inequality Pólya inequality Pólya urn model Pólya's theorem Pólya's proof that there is

Fueter

medalist Lewis Fueter (1746–1784), American silversmith Rudolf Fueter (1880–1950), Swiss mathematician Fueter–Pólya theorem, Mathematical theorem This page

Pairing function

that this is the only quadratic pairing function is known as the Fueter–Pólya theorem. Whether this is the only polynomial pairing function is still an

David Hilbert

of analytic number theory, but his name has become known for the Hilbert–Pólya conjecture, for reasons that are anecdotal. Ernst Hellinger, a student of