Remarks on the inverse Littlewood conjecture
Abstract: The Littlewood conjecture, proven by Konyagin and McGehee-Pigno-Smith in the 1980s, states that if $A\subset \mathbb{Z}$ is a finite set of integers with $\lvert A\rvert=N$ then $| \widehat{1_A}|_1\geq c\log N$ for some absolute constant $c > 0$. We explore what structure $A$ must have if $| \widehat{1_A}|_1\leq K\log N$ for some constant $K$. Under such an assumption we prove, for instance, that $A$ contains a subset $A'\subseteq A$ with $\lvert A\rvert \geq N{0.99}$ such that $\lvert A'+A'\rvert \ll K{O(1)}\lvert A'\rvert$. As a consequence, for any $k\geq 3$, if $N$ is sufficiently large depending on $k$ and $K$, then $A$ must contain an arithmetic progression of length $k$. A byproduct of our analysis is a (slightly) improved bound for the constant $c$.
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