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. 2021 Apr 30;196(1):59–65. doi: 10.1007/s00605-021-01560-6

Diophantine equations in separated variables and polynomial power sums

Clemens Fuchs 1,, Sebastian Heintze 1
PMCID: PMC8550583  PMID: 34776538

Abstract

We consider Diophantine equations of the shape f(x)=g(y), where the polynomials f and g are elements of power sums. Using a finiteness criterion of Bilu and Tichy, we will prove that under suitable assumptions infinitely many rational solutions (xy) with a bounded denominator are only possible in trivial cases.

Keywords: Diophantine equation, Bilu–Tichy theorem, Linear recurrences

Introduction

Let f and g be integer polynomials. Diophantine equations of the shape f(x)=g(y) were already considered by many authors and under different assumptions. See [8] for an overview.

Bilu and Tichy gave in [3] a criterion based on Siegel’s theorem which characterizes the situations when the equation f(x)=g(y) has infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator (see also [2]). For that, they used the notion of so-called standard pairs. We shall describe standard pairs and their result in section 3.

Furthermore, several authors studied the case when f and/or g come from special families of polynomials. Recently, Kreso (cf. [7]) considered the case when f and g are lacunary polynomials and used the criterion of Bilu and Tichy to deduce results about the finiteness of the number of solutions of the equation f(x)=g(y). Lacunary polynomials are polynomials of the shape c1xe1++clxel+cl+1 for a fixed number l of nonconstant terms where the ci and ei may vary with the only restriction that the ei must be pairwise distinct. Kreso proved that under some assumptions on the exponents ei and if g is indecomposable, then f(x)=g(y) has infinitely many solutions with a bounded denominator if and only if f=gμ for a linear polynomial μ.

Dujella and Tichy proved in [6] the finiteness of the number of integer solutions for the situation when fg are generalized Fibonacci polynomials. Moreover, Dujella and Gusic [5] as well as Stoll [10] considered families of polynomials parametrized by two parameters and a binary recurrence relation. Beyond this the case of truncated binomial polynomials was considered in [4] by Dubickas and Kreso, sums of products of consecutive integers are considered in [1] by Bazso et al., and Bernoulli and Euler polynomial related families in [9] by Pinter and Rakaczki.

In the present paper we are also considering Diophantine equations of the type f(x)=g(y). Here we are going to assume that the polynomials f and g come from polynomial power sums, i.e. simple linear recurrence sequences of polynomials. We remark that polynomial power sums can be seen as a variant of lacunary polynomials since its Binet representation has a fixed number of summands.

Results

Let Gn(x)=a1α1(x)n++adαd(x)n with d2 and polynomial characteristic roots α1(x),,αd(x)Q[x] as well as constants a1,,adQ be the n-th polynomial in a linear recurrence sequence of polynomials satisfying the dominant root condition degα1>maxi=2,,ddegαi and having at most one constant characteristic root. Assume furthermore that Gn(x) cannot be written in the form a1~α1~(x)n+a2~α2~n for α1~(x)Q[x] a perfect power of a linear polynomial and a1~,a2~,α2~Q. We will refer to the assumptions in this paragraph by saying Gn(x)=a1α1(x)n++adαd(x)n is the n-th polynomial in a linear recurrence sequence of the required shape.

We call a polynomial f of degree degf2 decomposable if it can be written in the form f=gh for polynomials gh satisfying degg2 and degh2. Here denotes the composition of functions. If such a decomposition does not exist, then we call the polynomial f indecomposable.

Furthermore, we say that an equation f(x)=g(y) has infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator if there exists a positive integer z such that f(x)=g(y) has infinitely many solutions (x,y)Q2 with zx,zyZ.

Our main result is the following theorem. In Remark 1 below we give a possibility how to generalize it to arbitrary number fields:

Theorem 1

Let Gn(x)=a1α1(x)n++adαd(x)n be the n-th polynomial in a linear recurrence sequence of the required shape. Analogously, let Hm(y)=b1β1(y)m++btβt(y)m be the m-th polynomial in a linear recurrence sequence of the required shape. Moreover, assume that n,m>2. If Gn(x) is indecomposable, then the equation in separated variables

Gn(x)=Hm(y) 1

has infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator if and only if there exists a polynomial P(y)Q[y] such that Hm(y)=Gn(P(y)) holds identically.

If in addition Hm(y) is also indecomposable, then in the above statement we can restrict P(y) to be linear.

We exclude the case when Gn or Hm has exactly one constant and one nonconstant characteristic root, where the nonconstant one is (a perfect power of) a linear polynomial, since the conclusion is not true in general in this situation. Consider for instance Gn(x)=a(ex+c)n+b and Hm(y)=a(fy+d)m+b for integers abcdef, where aef are non-zero, and different primes nm. Then all other assumptions of the theorem are satisfied. Moreover, there is no polynomial P such that Hm(y)=Gn(P(y)) since the degrees of Gn and Hm are different primes. But there are obviously infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator of the form x=(tm-c)/e and y=(tn-d)/f for tZ.

Now we give two examples where all assumptions of the theorem are satisfied and where in the first one we have infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator whereas in the second one there are only finitely many such solutions. Thus both situations can occur. Let

G3(x)=(x2)3+(x+1)3=x6+x3+3x2+3x+1,H3(y)=(y4-2y2+1)3+(y2)3=y12-6y10+15y8-19y6+15y4-6y2+1.

We leave it up to the reader to verify that all assumptions of the theorem are satisfied. One can check that the identity Hm(y)=Gn(P(y)) holds for the polynomial P(y)=y2-1. Therefore, by Theorem 1, we have infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator. If we consider G3(x) from above and

H7(y)=(y2)7+(y+2)7,

then we get degG3=6 as well as degH7=14. Hence degG3 does not divide degH7 and therefore there is no polynomial P such that Hm(y)=Gn(P(y)). By Theorem 1 we cannot have infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator.

Note that we can check whether there exists a polynomial P(y) such that Hm(y)=Gn(P(y)) holds a priori. To do so we first determine degP by the equality degHm=degGn·degP. If this equation has no solution in positive integers, then there is no such polynomial P. Otherwise we start with a polynomial P of the given degree and unknown coefficients. By a comparison of coefficients we determine step by step (starting with the leading coefficient) the values for the coefficients of P. If we end up in a contradiction, then there is no such polynomial P. In the case that there is no contradiction we have found a polynomial with the sought property. We remark that in the case that there are only finitely many solutions our result is ineffective in the sense that we do not find all the solutions (for a given common denominator).

Note that Gn and Hm can be elements of different linear recurrence sequences, but they could also be elements of the same linear recurrence sequence. We do neither require nor exclude the situation Gn(x)=Gm(y) for nm if the assumptions of our theorem are satisfied.

Furthermore, we remark that the polynomial of the second linear recurrence sequence Hm can be replaced by an arbitrary fixed polynomial h(y)Q[y]. If we replace all assumptions about Hm by the two assumptions that degh>4 and that h is not of the shape h(y)=a(cy+d)k+b for rational numbers abcd, then the same result as in Theorem 1 holds. The proof is completely analogous to the below given proof of Theorem 1.

Preliminaries

The proof of our theorem uses a criterion of Bilu and Tichy [3], for which the following terminology of so-called standard pairs is needed.

In our notation, k and l are positive integers, a and b are non-zero rational numbers and p(x) is a non-zero polynomial with coefficients in Q. We denote by Dk(x,a) the k-th Dickson polynomial which is defined by the equation

Dkx+ax,a=xk+axk.

Using this notation we have the following five kinds of standard pairs (over Q); in each of them the two coordinates can be switched: A standard pair of the

  • first kind is
    (xk,axlp(x)k)
    with 0l<k, gcd(k,l)=1 and l+degp(x)>0;
  • second kind is
    (x2,(ax2+b)p(x)2);
  • third kind is
    (Dk(x,al),Dl(x,ak))
    with gcd(k,l)=1;
  • fourth kind is
    (a-k/2Dk(x,a),-b-l/2Dl(x,b))
    with gcd(k,l)=2;
  • fifth kind is
    ((ax2-1)3,3x4-4x3).

Our main tool is now the following theorem which is proven as Theorem 1.1 in [3] by Bilu and Tichy:

Theorem 2

Let f(x),g(x)Q[x] be non-constant polynomials. Then the following two assertions are equivalent:

  1. The equation f(x)=g(y) has infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator.

  2. We have f=φf1λ and g=φg1μ, where λ(x),μ(x)Q[x] are linear polynomials, φ(x)Q[x], and (f1(x),g1(x)) is a standard pair over Q such that the equation f1(x)=g1(y) has infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator.

Proof

All necessary preparations that are needed for the proof of our theorem are finished. So we can start with the proof:

Proof of Theorem 1

First note that by the dominant root condition we have the bounds degα11 and degGn=ndegα1>2. Analogously, the bound degHm=mdegβ1>2 holds.

The next important observation is that we can neither have degα1=1 nor degβ1=1. Otherwise, if degα1=1, then Gn(x) would have exactly two characteristic roots and one of them would be constant. This shape is forbidden by the conditions of the theorem. The argument for degβ1 is the same.

Now assume that Eq. (1) has infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator. Thus, by Theorem 2, we have

Gn=φgλ

and

Hm=φhμ

for a polynomial φ(x)Q[x], linear polynomials λ(x),μ(x)Q[x] and a standard pair (g(x), h(x)) .

From here on we distinguish between two cases. In the first case we assume that degφ=1.

Then (g(x), h(x)) cannot be a standard pair of the first kind. Otherwise we would either have

Gn(x)=e1(λ(x))ndegα1+e0=e1(λ(x))degα1n+e0

or

Hm(y)=e1(μ(y))mdegβ1+e0=e1(μ(y))degβ1m+e0,

which contradicts the restrictions on the shape of Gn(x) and Hm(y).

Moreover, (g(x), h(x)) cannot be a standard pair of the second kind since we have degGn>2 and degHm>2.

If (g(x), h(x)) is a standard pair of the third kind, then we get

Gn(x)=e1Dp(λ(x),a)+e0. 2

Since Gn(x) is indecomposable and Dickson polynomials have the composition property

Dkl(x,a)=Dk(Dl(x,a),al)

the index p in (2) must be a prime. Hence

ndegα1=degGn=degDp=p

together with n>2 implies degα1=1. As shown above this is a contradiction. Therefore (g(x), h(x)) cannot be a standard pair of the third kind.

Also, (g(x), h(x)) cannot be a standard pair of the fourth kind since otherwise

Gn(x)=e1Dk(λ(x),a)+e0

with an even k would contradict the fact that Gn(x) is indecomposable.

Furthermore, (g(x), h(x)) cannot be a standard pair of the fifth kind. Otherwise we would have either g(x)=3x4-4x3 or h(x)=3x4-4x3. This means ndegGn=4 or mdegHm=4 and therefore n=4 or m=4, since n,m>2. This ends up in the contradiction degα1=1 or degβ1=1.

Thus the case degφ=1 is not possible. So we can assume the second case, namely that degφ>1. Since Gn is indecomposable, we have degg=1. Consequently the identities

Gn(x)=φ(c1x+c0)

and

Hm(y)=φ(q(y))

hold for a polynomial q(y)Q[y]. Now we define the polynomial P(y)Q[y] by the equation

P(y):=q(y)-c0c1

which gives us the final identity

Gn(P(y))=Gnq(y)-c0c1=φ(q(y))=Hm(y).

If Hm(y) is indecomposable, then q(y) is linear. Thus by construction P(y) is linear, too.

Conversely, if we assume the identity Gn(P(y))=Hm(y), then Eq. (1) obviously has infinitely many rational solutions with a bounded denominator.

Remark 1

We remark that if we utilize Theorem 10.5 in [3] instead of Theorem 1.1, then we can replace Q by an arbitrary number field K and get for a finite set S of places of K, containing all archimedean ones, the analogous result as above for infinitely many solutions with a bounded OS-denominator.

Funding Information

Open access funding provided by Paris Lodron University of Salzburg.

Footnotes

Supported by Austrian Science Fund (FWF): I4406.

Publisher's Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Contributor Information

Clemens Fuchs, Email: clemens.fuchs@sbg.ac.at.

Sebastian Heintze, Email: sebastian.heintze@sbg.ac.at.

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