Pell's equation
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Named by Leonhard Euler after the 17th-century mathematician John Pell, whom Euler mistakenly believed to be the first to find a general solution.[1]
Noun
Pell's equation (plural Pell's equations)
- (number theory) The Diophantine equation for a given integer m, to be solved in integers x and y.
- 1974, Allan M. Kirch, Elementary Number Theory: A Computer Approach, Intext Educational Publishers, page 212:
- However, due to Euler's mistake in attributing the equation to English mathematician John Pell (1610-1585), Equation (27.14) is called Pell's equation. Results concerning Pell's equation will be stated without proof.
- 1989, Mathematics Magazine, Volume 62, Mathematical Association of America, page 258:
- Thus satisfies Pell's equation and so by Lemma 1, is a convergent to .
- 2013, John J. Watkins, Number Theory: A Historical Approach, Princeton University Press, page 409:
- We introduced Pell's equation
in Chapter 4 as an example of a Diophantine equation. The solution of the Pell equation was used in India in the fourth century to produce the fraction as an excellent rational approximation for .
It is easy to see why solutions to Pell's equation can be used to approximate solutions to —this was known to Archimedes, who used this method to approximate square roots.
Synonyms
Derived terms
- generalised Pell's equation
Related terms
Translations
Diophantine equation
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Further reading
- Pell's equation on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Pell number on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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