In 1873, Georg Cantor showed that the so-called Cantor polynomial[1]
is a bijective mapping from to .
The polynomial given by swapping the variables is also a pairing function.
Fueter was investigating whether there are other quadratic polynomials with this property, and concluded that this is not the case assuming . He then wrote to Pólya, who showed the theorem does not require this condition.[2]
Statement
If is a real quadratic polynomial in two variables whose restriction to is a bijection from to then it is
or
Proof
The original proof is surprisingly difficult, using the Lindemann–Weierstrass theorem to prove the transcendence of
for a nonzero algebraic number .[3]
In 2002, M. A. Vsemirnov published an elementary proof of this result.[4]
Fueter–Pólya conjecture
The theorem states that the Cantor polynomial is the only quadratic pairing polynomial of and . The conjecture is that these are the only such pairing polynomials, of any degree.
Higher dimensions
A generalization of the Cantor polynomial in higher dimensions is as follows:[5]
The sum of these binomial coefficients yields a polynomial of degree in variables. This is just one of at least inequivalent packing polynomials for dimensions.[6]
References
^G. Cantor: Ein Beitrag zur Mannigfaltigkeitslehre, J. Reine Angew. Math., Band 84 (1878), Pages 242–258
^Craig Smoryński: Logical Number Theory I, Springer-Verlag 1991, ISBN3-540-52236-0, Chapters I.4 and I.5: The Fueter–Pólya Theorem I/II
^M. A. Vsemirnov, Two elementary proofs of the Fueter–Pólya theorem on pairing polynomials.
St. Petersburg Math. J. 13 (2002), no. 5, pp. 705–715. Correction: ibid. 14 (2003), no. 5, p. 887.
^P. Chowla: On some Polynomials which represent every natural number exactly once, Norske Vid. Selsk. Forh. Trondheim (1961), volume 34, pages 8–9
^Sánchez Flores, Adolfo (1995). "A family of diagonal polynomial orders of ". Order. 12 (2): 173–187. doi:10.1007/BF01108626.