ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Let $f_0(z) = exp(z/(1-z))$, $f_1(z) = exp(1/(1-z))E_1(1/(1-z))$, where $E_1(x) = int_x^infty e^{-t}t^{-1}{,d}t$. Let $a_n = [z^n]f_0(z)$ and $b_n = [z^n]f_1(z)$ be the corresponding Maclaurin series coefficients. We show that $a_n$ and $b_n$ may be expressed in terms of confluent hypergeometric functions. We consider the asymptotic behaviour of the sequences $(a_n)$ and $(b_n)$ as $n to infty$, showing that they are closely related, and proving a conjecture of Bruno Salvy regarding $(b_n)$. Let $rho_n = a_n b_n$, so $sum rho_n z^n = (f_0,odot f_1)(z)$ is a Hadamard product. We obtain an asymptotic expansion $2n^{3/2}rho_n sim -sum d_k n^{-k}$ as $n to infty$, where the $d_kinmathbb Q$, $d_0=1$. We conjecture that $2^{6k}d_k in mathbb Z$. This has been verified for $k le 1000$.
We call a polynomial monogenic if a root $theta$ has the property that $mathbb{Z}[theta]$ is the full ring of integers in $mathbb{Q}(theta)$. Consider the two families of trinomials $x^n + ax + b$ and $x^n + cx^{n-1} + d$. For any $n>2$, we show that
In this paper, we confirm the following conjecture of Guo and Schlosser: for any odd integer $n>1$ and $M=(n+1)/2$ or $n-1$, $$ sum_{k=0}^{M}[4k-1]_{q^2}[4k-1]^2frac{(q^{-2};q^4)_k^4}{(q^4;q^4)_k^4}q^{4k}equiv (2q+2q^{-1}-1)[n]_{q^2}^4pmod{[n]_{q^2}^
Using arithmetic jet spaces, we attach perfectoid spaces to smooth schemes and to $delta$-morphisms of smooth schemes. We also study perfectoid spaces attached to arithmetic differential equations defined by some of the remarkable $delta$-morphisms a
We embed the somewhat unusual multiplicative function, which was serendipitously discovered in 2010 during a study of mutually unbiased bases in the Hilbert space of quantum physics, into two families of multiplicative functions that we construct as
Let $p$ be a prime number and $F$ a totally real number field. For each prime $mathfrak{p}$ of $F$ above $p$ we construct a Hecke operator $T_mathfrak{p}$ acting on $(mathrm{mod}, p^m)$ Katz Hilbert modular classes which agrees with the classical Hec