
Reversing a Philosophy: From Counting to Square Functions and Decoupling
Breakthrough work of Bourgain, Demeter, and Guth recently established that decoupling inequalities can prove powerful results on counting integral solutions to systems of Diophantine equations. In this note we demonstrate that in appropriate situations this implication can also be reversed. As a first example, we observe that a count for the number of integral solutions to a system of Diophantine equations implies a discrete decoupling inequality. Second, in our main result we prove an L2n square function estimate (which implies a corresponding decoupling estimate) for the extension operator associated to a non-degenerate curve in Rn. The proof is via a combinatorial argument that builds on the idea that if γ is a non-degenerate curve in Rn, then as long as x1, … , x2n are chosen from a sufficiently well-separated set, then γ(x1) + ⋯ + γ(xn) = γ(xn+1) + ⋯ + γ(x2n) essentially only admits solutions in which x1, … , xn is a permutation of xn+1, … , x2n.
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- General Mathematics
- 4904 Pure mathematics
- 4901 Applied mathematics
- 0101 Pure Mathematics
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Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- General Mathematics
- 4904 Pure mathematics
- 4901 Applied mathematics
- 0101 Pure Mathematics