Analytická a kombinatorická teorie čísel (Analytic and Combinatorial Number Theory) NDMI045, LS 2017/18
Místo a čas přednášky (place and time of the lecture): Monday 15:40 - 17:10, lecture room K358MUUK in Karlín building.
Výuka tohoto předmětu v minulých letech (past lectures): zde .
Plán letošní přednášky (plan of the course). 1st part. I begin with my favorite
Dirichlet's theorem on primes in arithmetic progression.
2nd part. Something on integer partitions, for example
Rogers-Ramanujan identities.
3rd part. Something from results of
J. Beck on applications of Fourier analysis to kinetic theory of gases (see
this or
this or
this article).
Exam: 1. Give general overview
(without going into details
) of the proof of Dirichlet's theorem on primes in arithmetic progression.
2. Prove Schur's asymptotics for the restricted partition function p_A(n).
3. Prove an upper bound on the partition function, of the form
p(n) <= e^{cn^{1/2}}(either by induction or by Euler's generating function).
lecture 1, February 27, 2018. I
started with the proof that for every integer m > 0 there are
infinitely many primes of the form 1 + mn; it is based on cyclotomic
polynomials. See my
lecture notes from the last year.
lecture 2, March 5, 2018. Proof of the lemma that every cyclotomic polynomial has integral coefficients.
Dirichlet's theorem on primes in arithmetic progression. Theorem 8 - Proposition 13 from my
lecture notes from the last year.
lecture 3, March 12, 2018. Proposition 14 (proof postponed) - proof of Proposition 20 (proofs of Lemmas 21 and 22 postponed to the next lecture) from my
lecture notes from the last year.
lecture 4, March 19, 2018. Proposition 23 -
Proposition 26 (but I skipped the proof of
Proposition 25) from my
lecture notes from the last year.
lecture 5, March 26, 2018. Finishing the proof of Dirichlet's theorem. Next we start with Partitions of integers.
April 2, 2018. Easter Monday.
lecture 6, April 9, 2018. General
remarks on compositions and partitions of a natural number n (the
former are ordered, the latter are not). Formulas for numbers of compositions: 2^{n-1}(total number) and B(n-1, k-1) (with k parts). Efficient computation of p(n) (the number of partitions of n) by recurrence: p(n) = p_1(n) + p_2(n) + ... + p_n(n), p_k(n) = p_{k-1}(n-1) + p_k(n-k), p_1(n) = p_n(n) = 1, p_k(n) = 0 for n < k (here p_k(n) counts partitions of n with k parts). Let p_A(n) be the number of partitions of n with parts in a finite set (of natural numbers) A. Theorem (Bell, 1943): p_A(n) is a (rational) quasipolynomial in n, with period equal to a common multiple of the numbers in A. Proof after the preprint of Robins and Vignat.
lecture 7, April 16, 2018. Schur's asymptotics for p_A(n), by partial fractions decomposition of the GF for the numbers p_A(n). An upper bound p(n) <= e^{cn^{1/2}}, c = pi(2/3)^{1/2}, by induction on n. It is all in Theorem 29 - Proposition 33 (the 2nd proof) of my lecture notes from the last year.
lecture 8, April 23, 2018. An
upper bound p(n) < pi.e^{cn^{1/2}}/(6(n-1))^{1/2}, c =
pi(2/3)^{1/2}, by generating function. See Proposition 33 (the
1st proof) of my lecture notes from the last year. The Rogers--Ramanujan--Schur identities:
the number of partitions of n in parts that are 1 or 4 (resp. 2 and 3)
modulo 5 is the same as the number of partitions of n in parts
differing by at least 2 (resp. in parts differing by at least 2 and no
part 1) - see my lecture notes in Czech from 16 years ago (yes...), beginning of the proof.
lecture 9, April 30, 2018. Proof of the Rogers--Ramanujan--Schur identities (Věta 227 in my lecture notes in Czech).
lecture 10, May 7, 2018. I stated
Theorem 4 from this Beck's article.
It says: Let A be any Lebesgue measurable subset of the unit square
I^2, then for all ep > 0 and all T > 100 the measure M of the set
{ (y, alpha) in I^2 times S_2}
| |m({ t in [0, T] | x(t) in A }) - T.mju(A)| <
(10/ep)sqrt{mju(A)(1 - mju(A))}sqrt{log_2T}log_2log_2T }
is greater than 1 - ep. Here M(.) is
the normed product measure on the space I^2 times S_2 of initial
conditions of the billiard ball, S_2 is the unit circle, m(.) is the
1-dimensional L. measure (it measures the time the ball spends in A),
mju(.) is the 2-dimensional L. measure (it measures the area of
the test set A), and x(t) = (y_1 + alpha_1.t, y_2 + alpha_2.t) (mod 1)
is the billiard ball trajectory ( y = (y_1, y_2) is the starting point
and alpha = (alpha_1, alpha_2) is the starting direction of the ball
that moves with unit speed ) in the unit square. This theorem I will
attempt to prove. I also stated Theorem 2 but did not have time to
state Theorem 1. It would take maybe 1 hour to copy all these theorems
on the blackboard.
lecture 11, May 14, 2018. Something
less than 1/2 of the proof of Theorem 4, in Beck's paper it takes about
7 pages which is a rather short proof by his standards, mainly Lemma
6.1 and statement of Lemma 6.2.
lecture 12, May 21, 2018. The rest of the proof of Theorem 4: conclusion and then overview of the proof Lemma 2.
Here are the relevant parts of
Beck's paper,
few initial pages (statement of Theorem 1), statement of Theorem 4 and
its proof (a short detour in the much longer proof of Theorem 1).
May 2018