2000 character limit reached
On the solution of the Collatz problem (1110.3465v28)
Published 16 Oct 2011 in math.GM
Abstract: In this paper, we first prove that given a non-negative integer $m$ and an odd number $t$ not divisible by $3$, there exists a unique Collatz's Sequence [ S_{c}(m,t)={n_{0}(m,t),n_{1}(m,t),n_{2}(m,t),\ldots,n_{m}(m,t),n_{m+1}(m,t)} ] produced by a function $n_{i+1}(m,t)=(3n_{i}(m,t)+1)/2$ for $i=0,1,2,\ldots,m$ and ended by an even number $n_{m+1}(m,t)$ where $n_{i}(m,t)=2{m+1-i}\times3{i}t-1$ for $i=0,1,2,\ldots,m+1$, by which all odd numbers can be expressed. Then in two ways we prove that each Collatz's Sequence always returns to 1, i.e., the Collatz problem is solved.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.