Book Summary of Elementary Number Theory
Elementary Number Theory, Seventh Edition, is written for undergraduate number theory
course taken by math majors, secondary education majors, and computer science students.
This contemporary text provides a simple account of classical number theory, set against a
historical background that shows the subject's evolution from antiquity to recent research.
Written in David Burton's engaging style, Elementary Number Theory reveals the attraction
that has drawn leading mathematicians and amateurs alike to number theory over the course
of history.
About the Author
David M. Burton University of New Hampshire
Table of Contents
1 Preliminaries
About the Author
David M. Burton University of New Hampshire
Table of Contents
1 Preliminaries
- 1.1 Mathematical Induction
1.2 The Binomial Theorem
- 2.1 Early Number Theory
2.2 The Division Algorithm
2.3 The Greatest Common Divisor
2.4 The Euclidean Algorithm
2.5 The Diophantine Equation
- 3.1 The Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic
3.2 The Sieve of Eratosthenes
3.3 The Goldbach Conjecture
- 4.1 Carl Friedrich Gauss
4.2 Basic Properties of Congruence
4.3 Binary and Decimal Representations of Integers
4.4 Linear Congruences and the Chinese Remainder Theorem
- 5.1 Pierre de Fermat
5.2 Fermat’s Little Theorem and Pseudoprimes
5.3 Wilson’s Theorem
5.4 The Fermat-Kraitchik Factorization Method
- 6.1 The Sum and Number of Divisors
6.2 The Mobius Inversion Formula
6.3 The Greatest Integer Function
6.4 An Application to the Calendar
- 7.1 Leonhard Euler
7.2 Euler’s Phi-Function
7.3 Euler’s Theorem
7.4 Some Properties of the Phi-Function
- 8.1 The Order of an Integer Modulo n
8.2 Primitive Roots for Primes
8.3 Composite Numbers Having Primitive Roots
8.4 The Theory of Indices
- 9.1 Euler’s Criterion
9.2 The Legendre Symbol and Its Properties
9.3 Quadratic Reciprocity
9.4 Quadratic Congruences with Composite Moduli
- 10.1 From Caesar Cipher to Public Key Cryptography
10.2 The Knapsack Cryptosystem
10.3 An Application of Primitive Roots to Cryptography
- 11.1 Marin Mersenne
11.2 Perfect Numbers
11.3 Mersenne Primes and Amicable Numbers
11.4 Fermat Numbers
- 12.1 The Equation
12.2 Fermat’s Last Theorem
- 13.1 Joseph Louis Lagrange
13.2 Sums of Two Squares
13.3 Sums of More Than Two Squares
- 14.1 Fibonacci
14.2 The Fibonacci Sequence
14.3 Certain Identities Involving Fibonacci Numbers
- 15.1 Srinivasa Ramanujan
15.2 Finite Continued Fractions
15.3 Infinite Continued Fractions
15.4 Farey Fractions
15.5 Pell’s Equation
- 16.1 Hardy, Dickson, and Erdos
16.2 Primality Testing and Factorization
16.3 An Application to Factoring: Remote Coin Flipping
16.4 The Prime Number Theorem and Zeta Function
- Appendixes
General References
Suggested Further Reading
Tables
Answers to Selected Problems
Index
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