Indeterminate equation: Difference between revisions

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Importing Wikidata short description: "Equation that has more than one solution"
 
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Template:Short description In mathematics, particularly in algebra, an indeterminate equation is an equation for which there is more than one solution.[1] For example, the equation ax+by=c is a simple indeterminate equation, as is x2=1. Indeterminate equations cannot be solved uniquely. In fact, in some cases it might even have infinitely many solutions.[2] Some of the prominent examples of indeterminate equations include:

Univariate polynomial equation:

anxn+an1xn1++a2x2+a1x+a0=0,

which has multiple solutions for the variable x in the complex plane—unless it can be rewritten in the form an(xb)n=0.

Non-degenerate conic equation:

Ax2+Bxy+Cy2+Dx+Ey+F=0,

where at least one of the given parameters A, B, and C is non-zero, and x and y are real variables.

Pell's equation:

 x2Py2=1,

where P is a given integer that is not a square number, and in which the variables x and y are required to be integers.

The equation of Pythagorean triples:

x2+y2=z2,

in which the variables x, y, and z are required to be positive integers.

The equation of the Fermat–Catalan conjecture:

am+bn=ck,

in which the variables a, b, c are required to be coprime positive integers, and the variables m, n, and k are required to be positive integers satisfying the following equation:

1m+1n+1k<1.

See also

References


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