7,344 research outputs found
Roth's theorem in the primes
We show that any set containing a positive proportion of the primes contains
a 3-term arithmetic progression. An important ingredient is a proof that the
primes enjoy the so-called Hardy-Littlewood majorant property. We derive this
by giving a new proof of a rather more general result of Bourgain which,
because of a close analogy with a classical argument of Tomas and Stein from
Euclidean harmonic analysis, might be called a restriction theorem for the
primes.Comment: 23 pages. Updated references and made some minor changes recommended
by the referee. To appear in Annals of Mathematic
Three topics in additive prime number theory
This is an expository article to accompany my two lectures at the CDM
conference. I have used this an excuse to make public two sets of notes I had
lying around, and also to put together a short reader's guide to some recent
joint work with T.Tao. Contents: 1. An exposition, without much detail, of the
work of Goldston, Pintz and Yildirim on gaps between primes; 2. A detailed
discussion of the work of Mauduit and Rivat establishing that 50 percent of the
primes have odd digit sum when written in base 2; 3. A reader's guide to recent
work of T.Tao and the author on linear equations in primes.
The sections can be read independently.Comment: 40 pages, notes to accompany my lectures at the Current Developments
in Mathematics Conference, Harvard, 16th-17th November 200
Counting sets with small sumset, and the clique number of random Cayley graphs
Given a set A in Z/NZ we may form a Cayley sum graph G_A on vertex set Z/NZ
by joining i to j if and only if i + j is in A. We investigate the extent to
which performing this construction with a random set A simulates the generation
of a random graph, proving that the clique number of G_A is a.s. O(log N). This
shows that Cayley sum graphs can furnish good examples of Ramsey graphs. To
prove this result we must study the specific structure of set addition on Z/NZ.
Indeed, we also show that the clique number of a random Cayley sum graph on
(Z/2Z)^n, 2^n = N, is almost surely not O(log N).
Despite the graph-theoretical title, this is a paper in number theory. Our
main results are essentially estimates for the number of sets A in {1,...,N}
with |A| = k and |A + A| = m, for various values of k and m.Comment: 18 pages; to appear in Combinatorica, exposition has been improved
thanks to comments from Imre Ruzsa and Seva Le
Generalising the Hardy-Littlewood Method for Primes
The Hardy-Littlewood method is a well-known technique in analytic number
theory. Among its spectacular applications are Vinogradov's 1937 result that
every sufficiently large odd number is a sum of three primes, and a related
result of Chowla and Van der Corput giving an asymptotic for the number of
3-term progressions of primes, all less than N. This article surveys recent
developments of the author and T. Tao, in which the Hardy-Littlewood method has
been generalised to obtain, for example, an asymptotic for the number of 4-term
arithmetic progressions of primes less than N.Comment: 26 pages, submitted to Proceedings of ICM 200
Sarkozy's theorem in function fields
S\'ark\"ozy proved that dense sets of integers contain two elements differing
by a th power. The bounds in quantitative versions of this theorem are
rather weak compared to what is expected. We prove a version of S\'ark\"ozy's
theorem for polynomials over with polynomial dependencies in the
parameters.
More precisely, let be the space of polynomials over
of degree in an indeterminate . Let be an integer and let
be a prime power. Set , where
is the sum of the digits of in base . If is
a set with , then contains distinct polynomials
such that for some .Comment: 7 pages. Fourth version incorporates some corrections noted by Lisa
Sauerman
The Cameron-Erdos Conjecture
A set A of integers is said to be sum-free if there are no solutions to the
equation x + y = z with x,y and z all in A. Answering a question of Cameron and
Erdos, we show that the number of sum-free subsets of {1,...,N} is O(2^(N/2)).Comment: 11 pages, to appear in Bull. London Math. So
Approximate groups and their applications: work of Bourgain, Gamburd, Helfgott and Sarnak
This is a survey of several exciting recent results in which techniques
originating in the area known as additive combinatorics have been applied to
give results in other areas, such as group theory, number theory and
theoretical computer science. We begin with a discussion of the notion of an
approximate group and also that of an approximate field, describing key results
of Freiman-Ruzsa, Bourgain-Katz-Tao, Helfgott and others in which the structure
of such objects is elucidated. We then move on to the applications. In
particular we will look at the work of Bourgain and Gamburd on expansion
properties of Cayley graphs on SL_2(F_p) and at its application in the work of
Bourgain, Gamburd and Sarnak on nonlinear sieving problems.Comment: 25 pages. Survey article to accompany my forthcoming talk at the
Current Events Bulletin of the AMS, 2010. A reference added and a few small
changes mad
- …