During our study of the Beal Conjecture with my friend and fellow mathematics graduate Jonathan Beal, we looked at the equation
A^x + B^y = C^z
where A, B, C, x, y, and z are integers. As a result A^x, B^y, and C^z are integers.
Let A^x be even (where A is a multiple of 2). Let B = p*m where p is a prime number. Then B^y = p^y * m^y.
The only even prime is 2. All other prime numbers (3, 5, 7, etc. ) are odd.
So if A^x is even and
p = 2 and m is even: p^y is even, m^y is even, B^y is even, and C^z is even.
p = 2 and m is odd: p^y is even, m^y is odd, B^y is even, and C^z is even.
p ≠ 2 and m is even: p^y is odd, m^y is even, B^y is even, and C^z is even.
p ≠ 2 and m is odd: p^y is odd, m^y is odd, B^y is odd, and C^z is odd
Assuming A^x is odd and
p = 2 and m is even: p^y is even, m^y is even, B^y is even, and C^z is odd.
p = 2 and m is odd: p^y is even, m^y is odd, B^y is even, and C^z is odd.
p ≠ 2 and m is even: p^y is odd, m^y is even, B^y is even, and C^z is odd.
p ≠ 2 and m is odd: p^y is odd, m^y is odd, B^y is odd, and C^z is even.
Eddie
This blog is property of Edward Shore. 2013
A blog is that is all about mathematics and calculators, two of my passions in life.
Showing posts with label Jonathan Neal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jonathan Neal. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Properties of A^x + B^y = C^z with Jonathan Neal
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
RPN HP 12C: Fibonacci and Lucas Sequences
RPN HP 12C: Fibonacci and Lucas Sequences Golden Ratio, Formulas, and Sequences Let φ be the Golden Ratio: φ = (1 + √5) ÷ 2...