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On fewnomials, integral points and a toric version of Bertini's theorem

Clemens Fuchs, Vincenzo Mantova, Umberto Zannier

Abstract

An old conjecture of Erdős and Rényi, proved by Schinzel, predicted a bound for the number of terms of a polynomial $g(x) \in \mathbb{C}[x]$ when its square $g(x)^2$ has a given number of terms. Further conjectures and results arose, but some fundamental questions remained open. In this paper, with methods which appear to be new, we achieve a final result in this direction for completely general algebraic equations $f(x,g(x))=0$, where $f(x,y)$ is monic of arbitrary degree in $y$, and has boundedly many terms in $x$: we prove that the number of terms of such a $g(x)$ is necessarily bounded. This includes the previous results as extremely special cases. We shall interpret polynomials with boundedly many terms as the restrictions to 1-parameter subgroups or cosets of regular functions of bounded degree on a given torus $\mathbb{G}_{\mathrm{m}}^l$. Such a viewpoint shall lead to some best-possible corollaries in the context of finite covers of $\mathbb{G}_{\mathrm{m}}^l$, concerning the structure of their integral points over function fields (in the spirit of conjectures of Vojta) and a Bertini-type irreducibility theorem above algebraic multiplicative cosets. A further natural reading occurs in non-standard arithmetic, where our result translates into an algebraic and integral-closedness statement inside the ring of non-standard polynomials.

On fewnomials, integral points and a toric version of Bertini's theorem

Abstract

An old conjecture of Erdős and Rényi, proved by Schinzel, predicted a bound for the number of terms of a polynomial when its square has a given number of terms. Further conjectures and results arose, but some fundamental questions remained open. In this paper, with methods which appear to be new, we achieve a final result in this direction for completely general algebraic equations , where is monic of arbitrary degree in , and has boundedly many terms in : we prove that the number of terms of such a is necessarily bounded. This includes the previous results as extremely special cases. We shall interpret polynomials with boundedly many terms as the restrictions to 1-parameter subgroups or cosets of regular functions of bounded degree on a given torus . Such a viewpoint shall lead to some best-possible corollaries in the context of finite covers of , concerning the structure of their integral points over function fields (in the spirit of conjectures of Vojta) and a Bertini-type irreducibility theorem above algebraic multiplicative cosets. A further natural reading occurs in non-standard arithmetic, where our result translates into an algebraic and integral-closedness statement inside the ring of non-standard polynomials.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 19 sections, 26 theorems, 68 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1.1

Let $f(x,y)\in\mathbb{C}[x,y]$ have $l$ terms in $x$ and be monic of degree $d > 0$ in $y$. If $g(x)\in\mathbb{C}[x]$ satisfies $f(x,g(x))=0$, then $g(x)$ has at most $B=B(d,l)$ terms.

Theorems & Definitions (51)

  • Theorem 1.1
  • Theorem 1.2
  • Theorem 1.3
  • Corollary 1.4
  • Theorem 1.5
  • Corollary 1.6
  • Theorem 1.7
  • Corollary : Theorem ${}^{*}$\ref{['thm:main']}
  • Theorem 2.1
  • Theorem 2.2
  • ...and 41 more