In mathematics, the ABC conjecture relates the prime factors of two integers to those of their sum. It was proposed by David Masser and Joseph Oesterlé in 1985. It is connected with other problems of number theory: for example, the truth of the ABC conjecture would provide a new proof of Fermat's Last Theorem.
Statement
Define the radical of an integer to be the product of its distinct prime factors
![{\displaystyle r(n)=\prod _{p|n}p\ .}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/2bbf115a852f53d7744f2915e3f30c1f9fad4f62)
Suppose now that the equation
holds for coprime integers
. The conjecture asserts that for every
there exists
such that
![{\displaystyle |A|,|B|,|C|<\kappa (\epsilon )r(ABC)^{1+\epsilon }\ .}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/03501ee61835631e65946dec8527cfbd749b9f17)
A weaker form of the conjecture states that
![{\displaystyle (|A|\cdot |B|\cdot |C|)^{1/3}<\kappa (\epsilon )r(ABC)^{1+\epsilon }\ .}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/28e2da8768869f368de4718b2e7790b4b1f57b80)
If we define
![{\displaystyle \kappa (\epsilon )=\inf _{A+B+C=0,\ (A,B)=1}{\frac {\max\{|A|,|B|,|C|\}}{N^{1+\epsilon }}}\ ,}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/0f2607a059276e087d2d62865c60c7b749faff45)
then it is known that
as
.
Baker introduced a more refined version of the conjecture in 1998. Assume as before that
holds for coprime integers
. Let
be the radical of
and
the number of distinct prime factors of
. Then there is an absolute constant
such that
![{\displaystyle |A|,|B|,|C|<c(\epsilon ^{-\omega }N)^{1+\epsilon }\ .}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/04dbf244fe49bc18f44688f358e50cf957826fb7)
This form of the conjecture would give very strong bounds in the method of linear forms in logarithms.
Results
It is known that there is an effectively computable
such that
![{\displaystyle |A|,|B|,|C|<\exp \left({\kappa (\epsilon )N^{1/3}(\log N)^{3}}\right)\ .}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/fe7e7f9185af236619fc8126ec67b9ef3e7d9273)