There is no 290-theorem for higher degree forms
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6648898
DOI10.1002/mana.202400253MaRDI QIDQ6648898
Publication date: 5 December 2024
Published in: Mathematische Nachrichten (Search for Journal in Brave)
Forms of degree higher than two (11E76) Waring's problem and variants (11P05) Quadratic forms over global rings and fields (11E12)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Waring's problem for algebraic number fields and primes of the form \((p^ r -1)/(p^ d-1)\)
- A Springer theorem for higher degree forms
- \(u\)-invariants for forms of higher degree
- A Grothendieck ring of higher degree forms
- Beweis für die Darstellbarkeit der ganzen Zahlen durch eine feste Anzahl \(n\)-ter Potenzen (Waringsches Problem).
- Round forms of higher degree
- Diagonalizable higher degree forms and symmetric tensors
- A lower bound for the rank of a universal quadratic form with integer coefficients in a totally real number field
- Minimal \(\mathcal S\)-universality criteria may vary in size
- Indecomposable forms of higher degree
- Über die Darstellung total positiver Zahlen des Körpers \(R(\sqrt{5})\) als Summe von drei Quadraten.
- Zu Linniks Lösung des Waringschen Problems: Abschätzung von \(g(n)\)
- Sums of \(m\)th powers of algebraic integers
- Quadratic Forms Representing All Odd Positive Integers
- On indecomposable quadratic forms.
- Representations of positive definite quadratic forms.
- Hilbert's Tenth Problem is Unsolvable
- A finiteness theorem for representability of quadratic forms by forms
- Extending Waring's Conjecture to 471,600,000
- Diagonal forms of higher degree over function fields of p-adic curves
- Number fields without n-ary universal quadratic forms
- Sums of m ‐th powers in p ‐adic rings
- An Unsolved Case of the Waring Problem
- Generalization of Waring's Problem to Algebraic Number Fields
- Number fields without universal quadratic forms of small rank exist in most degrees
- Can we recover an integral quadratic form by representing all its subforms?
This page was built for publication: There is no 290-theorem for higher degree forms