Further results on Hilbert's Tenth Problem

Abstract

Hilbert's Tenth Problem (HTP) asks for an algorithm to test whether an arbitrary polynomial Diophantine equation with integer coefficients has solutions over the ring Z of the integers. This was finally solved by Matiyasevich negatively in 1970. In this paper we obtain some further results on HTP over Z. We prove that there is no algorithm to determine for any P(z1,…,z9)∈ Z[z1,…,z9] whether the equation P(z1,…,z9)=0 has integral solutions with z90. Consequently, there is no algorithm to test whether an arbitrary polynomial Diophantine equation P(z1,…,z11)=0 (with integer coefficients) in 11 unknowns has integral solutions, which provides the best record on the original HTP over Z. We also prove that there is no algorithm to test for any P(z1,…,z17)∈ Z[z1,…,z17] whether P(z12,…,z172)=0 has integral solutions, and that there is a polynomial Q(z1,…,z20)∈ Z[z1,…,z20] such that \Q(z12,…,z202):\ z1,…,z20∈ Z\\0,1,2,…\ coincides with the set of all primes.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…