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Extended Lagrange's four-square theorem (1805.04353v1)

Published 11 May 2018 in math.NT

Abstract: Lagrange's four-square theorem states that every natural number $n$ can be represented as the sum of four integer squares: $n=x_12+x_22+x_32+x_42$. Ramanujan generalized Lagrange's result by providing, up to equivalence, all $54$ quadratic forms $ax_12+bx_22+cx_32+dx_42$ that represent all positive integers. In this article, we prove the following extension of Lagrange's theorem: given a prime number $p$ and $v_1\in Z4$, $\dots$, $v_k\in Z4$, $1\leq k\leq 3$, such that $|v_i|2=p$ for all $1\leq i\leq k$ and $\langle v_i|v_j\rangle=0$ for all $1\leq i<j\leq k$, then there exists $v=(x_1,x_2,x_3,x_4)\in Z4$ such that $\langle v_i|v\rangle=0$ for all $1\leq i\leq k$ and $$ |v|2=x_12+x_22+x_32+x_42=p $$ This means that, in $Z4$, any system of orthogonal vectors of norm $p$ can be completed to a base. We conjecture that the result holds for every norm $p\geq 1$. The problem comes up from the study of a discrete quantum computing model in which the qubits have Gaussian integers as coordinates, except for a normalization factor $\sqrt{2{-k}}$.

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