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Sums of powers

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In mathematics and statistics, sums of powers occur in a number of contexts:

  • Sums of squares arise in many contexts.
  • Faulhaber's formula expresses 1 k + 2 k + 3 k + + n k as a polynomial in n.
  • Fermat's right triangle theorem states that there is no solution in positive integers for a 4 = b 4 + c 2 .
  • Fermat's Last Theorem states that x k + y k = z k is impossible in positive integers with k>2.
  • The equation of a superellipse is | x / a | k + | y / b | k = 1 . The squircle is the case k = 4 , a = b .
  • Euler's sum of powers conjecture (disproved) concerns situations in which the sum of n integers, each a kth power of an integer, equals another kth power.
  • The Fermat-Catalan conjecture asks whether there are an infinitude of examples in which the sum of two coprime integers, each a power of an integer, with the powers not necessarily equal, can equal another integer that is a power, with the reciprocals of the three powers summing to less than 1.
  • Beal's conjecture concerns the question of whether the sum of two coprime integers, each a power greater than 2 of an integer, with the powers not necessarily equal, can equal another integer that is a power greater than 2.
  • The Jacobi–Madden equation is a 4 + b 4 + c 4 + d 4 = ( a + b + c + d ) 4 in integers.
  • The Prouhet–Tarry–Escott problem considers sums of two sets of kth powers of integers that are equal for multiple values of k.
  • A taxicab number is the smallest integer that can be expressed as a sum of two positive third powers in n distinct ways.
  • The Riemann zeta function is the sum of the reciprocals of the positive integers each raised to the power s, where s is a complex number whose real part is greater than 1.
  • The Lander, Parkin, and Selfridge conjecture concerns the minimal value of m + n in i = 1 n a i k = j = 1 m b j k .
  • Waring's problem asks whether for every natural number k there exists an associated positive integer s such that every natural number is the sum of at most s kth powers of natural numbers.
  • The successive powers of the golden ratio φ obey the Fibonacci recurrence:
  • Newton's identities express the sum of the kth powers of all the roots of a polynomial in terms of the coefficients in the polynomial.
  • The sum of cubes of numbers in arithmetic progression is sometimes another cube.
  • The Fermat cubic, in which the sum of three cubes equals another cube, has a general solution.
  • The power sum symmetric polynomial is a building block for symmetric polynomials.
  • The sum of the reciprocals of all perfect powers including duplicates (but not including 1) equals 1.
  • References

    Sums of powers Wikipedia


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