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Number of solutions to a special type of unit equations in two unknowns, III

Takafumi Miyazaki, István Pink

Abstract

It is conjectured that for any fixed relatively prime positive integers $a,b$ and $c$ all greater than 1 there is at most one solution to the equation $a^x+b^y=c^z$ in positive integers $x,y$ and $z$, except for specific cases. We develop the methods in our previous work which rely on a variety from Baker's theory and thoroughly study the conjecture for cases where $c$ is small relative to $a$ or $b$. Using restrictions derived under which there is more than one solution to the equation, we obtain a number of finiteness results on the conjecture, which in particular enables us to find some new values of $c$ being presumably infinitely many such that for each such $c$ the conjecture holds true except for only finitely many pairs of $a$ and $b$. Most importantly we prove that if $c=13$ then the equation has at most one solution, except for $(a,b)=(3,10)$ or $(10,3)$ which exactly gives two solutions. Further our study with the help of Schmidt Subspace Theorem among others brings strong contributions to the study of Pillai's type Diophantine equations, which includes a general and satisfactory result on a well-known conjecture of M. Bennett on the equation $a^x-b^y=c$ for any fixed positive integers $a,b$ and $c$ with both $a$ and $b$ greater than 1. Some conditional results are presented under the $abc$-conjecture as well.

Number of solutions to a special type of unit equations in two unknowns, III

Abstract

It is conjectured that for any fixed relatively prime positive integers and all greater than 1 there is at most one solution to the equation in positive integers and , except for specific cases. We develop the methods in our previous work which rely on a variety from Baker's theory and thoroughly study the conjecture for cases where is small relative to or . Using restrictions derived under which there is more than one solution to the equation, we obtain a number of finiteness results on the conjecture, which in particular enables us to find some new values of being presumably infinitely many such that for each such the conjecture holds true except for only finitely many pairs of and . Most importantly we prove that if then the equation has at most one solution, except for or which exactly gives two solutions. Further our study with the help of Schmidt Subspace Theorem among others brings strong contributions to the study of Pillai's type Diophantine equations, which includes a general and satisfactory result on a well-known conjecture of M. Bennett on the equation for any fixed positive integers and with both and greater than 1. Some conditional results are presented under the -conjecture as well.
Paper Structure (17 sections, 48 theorems, 263 equations)

This paper contains 17 sections, 48 theorems, 263 equations.

Key Result

Proposition 1.1

There are in general at most two solutions to equation $abc-pillai.$

Theorems & Definitions (79)

  • Conjecture 1: Pillai's conjecture
  • Proposition 1.1: Theorem 1.1 of Be_cjm_01
  • Conjecture 2: Conjecture 1.2 of Be_cjm_01
  • Proposition 1.2
  • Theorem 1
  • Corollary 1
  • Corollary 2
  • Proposition 1.3: Theorem 1 of MiyPin
  • Conjecture 3: ScoSt_PMD_2016
  • Proposition 1.4
  • ...and 69 more