Arithmetic regularity as an alternative to transference
Abstract
Since Green (2005), the Fourier-analytic transference principle has dominated the landscape of combinatorial theorems relative to sparse arithmetic sets. We demonstrate a different approach using arithmetic regularity. This is more versatile and has the potential to succeed when no obvious `dense model' is forthcoming. Moreover, we contend that, just as the traditional circle method disassembles an arithmetic problem into real and p-adic parts which can be solved individually, the arithmetic regularity method generalises this to yield an additional `combinatorial' factor. This framework leads directly to a correct lower bound on the number of configurations in a dense set. We illustrate this using a system comprising a linear equation together with a higher-degree equation.
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