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Jacobi's four-square theorem

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In number theory, Jacobi's four-square theorem gives a formula for the number of ways that a given positive integer n can be represented as the sum of four squares (of integers).

History

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The theorem was proved in 1834 by Carl Gustav Jakob Jacobi.

Theorem

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Two representations are considered different if their terms are in different order or if the integer being squared (not just the square) is different; to illustrate, these are three of the eight different ways to represent 1:

The number of ways to represent n as the sum of four squares is eight times the sum of the divisors of n if n is odd and 24 times the sum of the odd divisors of n if n is even (see divisor function), i.e.

Equivalently, it is eight times the sum of all its divisors which are not divisible by 4, i.e.

An immediate consequence is ; for odd , .[1]

We may also write this as

where the second term is to be taken as zero if n is not divisible by 4. In particular, for a prime number p we have the explicit formula r4(p) = 8(p + 1).[2]

Some values of r4(n) occur infinitely often as r4(n) = r4(2mn) whenever n is even. The values of r4(n) can be arbitrarily large: indeed, r4(n) is infinitely often larger than [2]

Proof

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The theorem can be proved by elementary means starting with the Jacobi triple product.[3]

The proof shows that the Theta series for the lattice Z4 is a modular form of a certain level, and hence equals a linear combination of Eisenstein series.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Grosswald, Emil (1985). Representations of integers as sums of squares. Internet Archive. New York : Springer-Verlag. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-387-96126-2.
  2. ^ a b Williams 2011, p. 119.
  3. ^ 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.

References

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