Gauss circle problem
In mathematics, the Gauss circle problem is the problem of determining how many integer lattice points there are in a circle centered at the origin and with radius . This number is approximated by the area of the circle, so the real problem is to accurately bound the error term describing how the number of points differs from the area. The first progress on a solution was made by Carl Friedrich Gauss, hence its name.
The problem
Consider a circle in with center at the origin and radius . Gauss' circle problem asks how many points there are inside this circle of the form where and are both integers. Since the equation of this circle is given in Cartesian coordinates by , the question is equivalently asking how many pairs of integers m and n there are such that
If the answer for a given is denoted by then the following list shows the first few values of for an integer between 0 and 12 followed by the list of values rounded to the nearest integer:
Bounds on a solution and conjecture
is roughly , the area inside a circle of radius . This is because on average, each unit square contains one lattice point. Thus, the actual number of lattice points in the circle is approximately equal to its area, . So it should be expected that
for some error term of relatively small absolute value. Finding a correct upper bound for is thus the form the problem has taken. Note that does not have to be an integer. After one has At these places increases by after which it decreases (at a rate of ) until the next time it increases.
Gauss managed to prove[1] that
Hardy[2] and, independently, Landau found a lower bound by showing that
using the little o-notation. It is conjectured[3] that the correct bound is
Writing , the current bounds on are
with the lower bound from Hardy and Landau in 1915, and the upper bound proved by Huxley in 2000.[4]
Exact forms
The value of can be given by several series. In terms of a sum involving the floor function it can be expressed as:[5]
This is a consequence of Jacobi's two-square theorem, which follows almost immediately from the Jacobi triple product.[6]
A much simpler sum appears if the sum of squares function is defined as the number of ways of writing the number as the sum of two squares. Then[1]
Most recent progress rests on the following Identity, which has been first discovered by Hardy: [7]
where denotes the Bessel function of the first kind with order 1.
Generalizations
Although the original problem asks for integer lattice points in a circle, there is no reason not to consider other shapes, for example conics; indeed Dirichlet's divisor problem is the equivalent problem where the circle is replaced by the rectangular hyperbola.[3] Similarly one could extend the question from two dimensions to higher dimensions, and ask for integer points within a sphere or other objects. There is an extensive literature on these problems. If one ignores the geometry and merely considers the problem an algebraic one of Diophantine inequalities then there one could increase the exponents appearing in the problem from squares to cubes, or higher.
The primitive circle problem
Another generalization is to calculate the number of coprime integer solutions to the inequality
This problem is known as the primitive circle problem, as it involves searching for primitive solutions to the original circle problem.[8] It can be intuitively understood as the question of how many trees within a distance of r are visible in the Euclid's orchard, standing in the origin. If the number of such solutions is denoted then the values of for taking small integer values are
Using the same ideas as the usual Gauss circle problem and the fact that the probability that two integers are coprime is , it is relatively straightforward to show that
As with the usual circle problem, the problematic part of the primitive circle problem is reducing the exponent in the error term. At present the best known exponent is if one assumes the Riemann hypothesis.[8] Without assuming the Riemann hypothesis, the best known upper bound is
for a positive constant .[8] In particular, no bound on the error term of the form for any is currently known that does not assume the Riemann Hypothesis.
Notes
- G.H. Hardy, Ramanujan: Twelve Lectures on Subjects Suggested by His Life and Work, 3rd ed. New York: Chelsea, (1959), p.67.
- G.H. Hardy, On the Expression of a Number as the Sum of Two Squares, Quart. J. Math. 46, (1915), pp.263–283.
- R.K. Guy, Unsolved problems in number theory, Third edition, Springer, (2004), pp.365–366.
- M.N. Huxley, Integer points, exponential sums and the Riemann zeta function, Number theory for the millennium, II (Urbana, IL, 2000) pp.275–290, A K Peters, Natick, MA, 2002, MR1956254.
- D. Hilbert and S. Cohn-Vossen, Geometry and the Imagination, New York: Chelsea, (1999), pp.37–38.
- Hirschhorn, Michael D. (2000). "Partial Fractions and Four Classical Theorems of Number Theory". The American Mathematical Monthly. 107 (3): 260–264. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.28.1615. doi:10.2307/2589321. JSTOR 2589321.
- Landau, Edmund (1927). Vorlesungen über Zahlentheorie - 2. Band. Verlag S. Hirzel. p. 189.
- J. Wu, On the primitive circle problem, Monatsh. Math. 135 (2002), pp.69–81.