Pell's equation
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Pell's equation is any Diophantine equation of the form
where n is a nonsquare integer and x and y are integers. Trivially, x = 1 and y = 0 always solve this equation. Lagrange proved that for any natural number n that is not a perfect square there are x and y > 0 that satisfy Pell's equation. Moreover, infinitely many such solutions of this equation exist. These solutions yield good rational approximations of the form x/y to the square root of n.
The name of this equation arose from Leonhard Euler's mistakenly attributing its study to John Pell. Euler was aware of the work of Lord Brouncker, the first European mathematician to find a general solution of the equation, but apparently confused Brouncker with Pell. This equation was first studied extensively in ancient India, starting with Brahmagupta, who developed the chakravala method to solve Pell's equation and other quadratic indeterminate equations in his Brahma Sphuta Siddhanta in 628, about a thousand years before Pell's time. His Brahma Sphuta Siddhanta was translated into Arabic in 773 and was subsequently translated into Latin in 1126. Bhaskara II in the 12th century and Narayana in the 14th century both found general solutions to Pell's equation and other quadratic indeterminate equations. Solutions to specific examples of the Pell equation, such as the Pell numbers arising from the equation with n = 2, had been known for much longer, since the time of Pythagoras in Greece and to a similar date in India.
For a more detailed discussion of much of the material here, see Lenstra (2002) and Barbeau (2003).
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[edit] History
Pell's equations were studied as early as 400 BC in India and Greece. They were mainly interested in the equation
because of its connection to the square root of two. Indeed, if x and y are integers satisfying this equation, then x / y is an approximation of √2. For example, Baudhayana discovered that x = 17, y = 12 and x = 577, y = 408 are two solutions to the Pell equation, and give very close approximations to the square root of two.
Later, Archimedes used a similar equation to approximate the square root of 3, and found 1351/780.
Around AD 250, Diophantus created a different form of the Pell equation
He solved this equation for a = 1, and c = −1, 1, and 12, and also solved for a = 3 and c = 9.
Brahmagupta created a general way to solve Pell's equation known as the chakravala method. Alkarkhi worked on similar problems to Diophantus, and Bhāskara I created a way to create new solutions to Pell equations from one solution. E. Strachey published the work of Bhāskara I into English in 1813.
The general theory of Pell's equation, based on continued fractions and algebraic manipulations with numbers of the form
was developed by Lagrange in 1766–1769.[1]
[edit] Solution technique
Let
denote the sequence of convergents to the continued fraction for
. Then the pair (x1,y1) solving Pell's equation and minimizing x satisfies x1 = hi and y1 = ki for some i. This pair is called the fundamental solution. Thus, the fundamental solution may be found by performing the continued fraction expansion and testing each successive convergent until a solution to Pell's equation is found.
Once the fundamental solution is found, all remaining solutions may be calculated algebraically as
Equivalently, we may calculate subsequent solutions via the recurrence relations
[edit] Example
As an example, consider the instance of Pell's equation for n = 7; that is,
The sequence of convergents for the square root of seven are
-
h / k (Convergent) h2 −7k2 (Pell-type approximation) 2 / 1 −3 3 / 1 +2 5 / 2 −3 8 / 3 +1
Therefore, the fundamental solution is formed by the pair (8, 3). Applying the recurrence formula to this solution generates the infinite sequence of solutions
- (8, 3); (127, 48); (2024, 765); (32257, 12192); (514088, 194307); (8193151; 3096720); (130576328, 49353213); ...
[edit] Connection to algebraic number theory
Pell's equation is closely related to the theory of algebraic numbers, as the formula
is the norm for the ring
and for the closely related quadratic field
. Thus, a pair of integers (x,y) solves Pell's equation if and only if
is a unit with norm 1 in
. Dirichlet's unit theorem, that all units of
can be expressed as powers of a single fundamental unit (and multiplication by a sign), is an algebraic restatement of the fact that all solutions to the Pell equation can be generated from the fundamental solution. The fundamental unit can in general be found by solving a Pell-like equation but it does not always correspond directly to the fundamental solution of Pell's equation itself.
[edit] Connection to Chebyshev polynomials
Demeyer (2007) mentions a connection between Pell's equation and the Chebyshev polynomials: If Ti (x) and Ui (x) are the Chebyshev polynomials of the first and second kind, respectively, then these polynomials satisfy a form of Pell's equation in any polynomial ring R[x], with n = x2 − 1:
Thus, these polynomials can be generated by the standard technique for Pell equations of taking powers of a fundamental solution:
It may further be observed that, if (xi,yi) are the solutions to any integer Pell equation, then xi = Ti (x1) and yi = y1Ui − 1(x1) (Barbeau, chapter 3).
[edit] Pell's equation and continued fractions
A general development of solutions of Pell's equation in terms of continued fractions can be presented, as the solutions x and y are approximates to the square root of n and thus are a special case of continued fraction approximations for quadratic irrationals.
The relationship to the continued fractions implies that the solutions to Pell's equation form a semigroup subset of the modular group. Thus, for example, if p and q satisfy Pell's equation, then
is a matrix of unit determinant. Products of such matrices take exactly the same form, and thus all such products yield solutions to Pell's equation. This can be understood in part to arise from the fact that successive convergents of a continued fraction share the same property: If pk−1/qk−1 and pk/qk are two successive convergents of a continued fraction, then the matrix
has determinant (−1)k.
Størmer's theorem applies Pell equations to find pairs of consecutive smooth numbers. As part of this theory, Størmer also investigated divisibility relations among solutions to Pell's equation; in particular, he showed that each solution other than the fundamental solution has a prime factor that does not divide n.
As Lenstra (2002) describes, Pell's equation can also be used to solve Archimedes' cattle problem.
[edit] The negative Pell equation
The negative Pell equation is given by
It has also been extensively studied and can be solved via a method of using continued fractions. However, unlike the Pell equation, we do not know exactly when the negative Pell equation is soluble. Cremona & Odoni (1989) demonstrate that the proportion of square-free n for which the negative Pell equation is soluble is at least 40%.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Solution d'un Probleme d'Arithmetique, in Oeveres, t.1, 671–732
[edit] References
- Barbeau, Edward J. (2003), Pell's Equation, Problem Books in Mathematics, Springer-Verlag, MR1949691, ISBN 0387955291.
- Cremona, John E.; Odoni, R. W. K. (1989), "Some density results for negative Pell equations; an application of graph theory", Journal of the London Mathematical Society. Second Series 39 (1): 16–28, doi:, ISSN 0024-6107.
- Demeyer, Jeroen (2007), Diophantine Sets over Polynomial Rings and Hilbert’s Tenth Problem for Function Fields, Ph.D. thesis, Universiteit Gent, p. 70, http://cage.ugent.be/~jdemeyer/phd.pdf.
- Edwards, Harold M. (1996), Fermat's Last Theorem: A Genetic Introduction to Algebraic Number Theory, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 50, Springer-Verlag, MR0616635, ISBN 0-387-90230-9. Originally published 1977.
- Lenstra, H. W., Jr. (2002), "Solving the Pell Equation", Notices of the American Mathematical Society 49 (2): 182–192, MR1875156, http://www.ams.org/notices/200202/fea-lenstra.pdf.
- Pinch, R. G. E. (1988), "Simultaneous Pellian equations", Math. Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc. 103 (1): 35–46, doi:.
[edit] External links
- Pell's equation
- IMO Compendium text on Pell's equation in problem solving.














