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Article

Lucas Numbers Which Are Concatenations of Two Repdigits

1
School of Mathematical Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, China
2
School of Mathematical Sciences, Guizhou Normal University, Guiyang 550001, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Submission received: 21 July 2020 / Revised: 10 August 2020 / Accepted: 10 August 2020 / Published: 13 August 2020
(This article belongs to the Section Mathematics and Computer Science)

Abstract

:
In this paper, we find all Lucas numbers written in the form c c d d ¯ , where c c d d ¯ is the concatenation of two repdigits in base 10 with c , d { 0 , 1 , , 9 } , c d and c > 0 .

1. Introduction

Linear form in logarithms has many important applications in solving Diophantine equations [1,2,3,4]. In 2002, by applying linear form in logarithms, A. Dujella and B. Jadrijević [1] showed that the solutions to quartic Thue equations x 4 4 c x 3 y + ( 6 c + 2 ) x 2 y 2 + 4 c x y 3 + y 4 = 1 are only ( x , y ) = ( ± 1 , 0 ) and ( 0 , ± 1 ) for an integer c 3 . Suppose that { F n } n 0 is the Fibonacci sequence given by F n + 2 = F n + 1 + F n , with initial values F 0 = 0 and F 1 = 1 and let { L n } n 0 be the Lucas sequence defined by L n + 2 = L n + 1 + L n , where L 0 = 2 and L 1 = 1 . In 2011, F. Luca and R. Oyono [2] concluded that there is no solution ( m , n , s ) to the Diophantine equation F m s + F m + 1 s = F n for integers m 2 , n 1 , s 3 by applying linear form in logarithms. There are many papers in the literature which solve Diophantine equations related to Fibonacci numbers and Lucas numbers [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. In 2013, D. Marques and A. Togbé [3] found all solutions ( n , a , b , c ) to the Diophantine equation F n = 2 a + 3 b + 5 c and L n = 2 a + 3 b + 5 c for integers n , a , b , c with 0 max { a , b } c . In 2019, B. D. Bitim [4] investigated the solutions ( n , m , a ) to the Diophantine equation L n L m = 2 · 3 a for nonnegative integers n , m , a with n > m . Let p be a prime number and max { a , b } 2 , in 2009, F. Luca and P. Stǎnicǎ [5] concluded that there are only finitely many positive integer solutions ( n , p , a , b ) to the Diophantine equation F n = p a ± p b .
Assume that q 2 is an integer. A positive number n N is called a base q repdigit if n = c q t 1 q 1 , for some t 1 and c { 1 , 2 , , q 1 } . When q = 10 , n is simply called a repdigit. We use B 1 B t ¯ ( q ) to express an integer’s base q representation which is the concatenation of the base q representations of positive integers B 1 , , B t . We ignore writing q if q = 10 . Then we can denote the repdigit n by n = c c t t i m e s ¯ and the concatenation of two repdigits in base 10 is c c s t i m e s d d t t i m e s ¯ , where c , d { 0 , 1 , , 9 } , c d , c > 0 , s 1 and t 1 . There are many papers in the literature on investigating Diophantine equations related to repdigits [8,9,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]. In 2000, Luca [15] proved that if F n = a 10 m 1 9 and L n = a 10 m 1 9 for some a { 0 , 1 , , 9 } and m 1 , then n = 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 10 and n = 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 respectively. In 2012, all repdigits in base 10 expressible as sums of three Fibonacci numbers were found in [16]. In 2018, all repdigits in base 10 which are sums of four Fibonacci or Lucas numbers were determined in [17]. In 2019, all solutions to the Diophantine equation F n = a a m t i m e s b b l t i m e s ¯ were found in [18], where a , b { 0 , 1 , , 9 } and a > 0 . For the research of concatenations of two repdigits in balancing numbers, Padovan numbers and Tribonacci numbers, please refer to the literature [19,20,21] respectively.
In this paper, we find all Lucas numbers which are concatenations of two repdigits. More precisely, we have the following result.
Theorem 1.
If
L n = c c s t i m e s d d t t i m e s ¯ ,
with c , d { 0 , 1 , , 9 } , c d , c > 0 , s 1 and t 1 , then
( n , L n ) { ( 6 , 18 ) , ( 7 , 29 ) , ( 8 , 47 ) , ( 9 , 76 ) , ( 11 , 199 ) , ( 12 , 322 ) } .

2. Preliminaries

Firstly, the Binet’s formula for Lucas sequence is
L n = α n + β n , n 0 ,
where α = 1 + 5 2 and β = 1 5 2 . For all positive integers n, we have the following inequality
α n 1 L n α n + 1 .
Secondly, we recall the definition and properties for logarithmic height of an algebraic number. Let η be an algebraic number of degree m and suppose that the minimal primitive polynomial of η is f ( X ) : = a 0 i = 1 m ( X η ( i ) ) Z [ X ] with a 0 > 0 . We give the logarithmic height of η by
h ( η ) : = 1 m log a 0 + i = 1 m log max { | η ( i ) | , 1 } .
In this paper, for any two integers a and b, we denote the greatest common divisor of a and b by gcd ( a , b ) . Specifically, h ( η ) = log max { | p | , q } when η = p q Q with gcd ( p , q ) = 1 and q > 0 . We have the following properties of the logarithmic height h ( · ) :
h ( η ± γ ) h ( η ) + h ( γ ) + log 2 ,
h ( η γ ± 1 ) h ( η ) + h ( γ ) ,
h ( η k ) = | k | h ( η ) ( k Z ) .
We need the following lemma to prove our theorem.
Lemma 1.
(see [22]) Let d L be the degree of an algebraic number field L over Q and L R . Let γ 1 , γ 2 , , γ l L be non-zero elements and let b 1 , , b l be rational integers. If Γ : = γ 1 b 1 γ l b l 1 0 , then
| Γ | exp ( 1.4 · 30 l + 3 l 4.5 d L 2 ( 1 + log d L ) ( 1 + log B ) A 1 A l ) ,
where A j are real numbers such that
A j max { d L h ( γ j ) , | log γ j | , 0.16 }
for j = 1 , , l and B max { | b 1 | , , | b l | , 3 } .
Thirdly, we need the following Lemma 2 and Lemma 3 to reduce some large upper bounds on the variables in the course of our calculations.
Lemma 2.
(see [23]) Let M be a positive integer and let p q be a convergent of the continued fraction of the irrational number α such that q > 6 M , and let A , B , τ be some real numbers with A > 0 and B > 1 . Let ϵ : = τ q M α q , where · denotes the distance from the nearest integer. If ϵ > 0 , then there exists no solution to the inequality
0 < | u α v + τ | < A B ω
in positive integers u , v , and ω with u M and w log ( A q / ϵ ) log B .
Lemma 3.
(see [24]) Let τ be an irrational number, M be a positive integer and p k q k ( k = 0 , 1 , 2 , ) be all the convergents of the continued fraction [ a 0 , a 1 , ] of τ. Let N be such that q N > M . Then putting a M : = max { a i : i = 0 , 1 , , N } , the inequality
| m τ n | > 1 ( a M + 2 ) m
holds for all pairs ( n , m ) of integers with 0 < m < M .

3. Proof of Theorem 1

3.1. Bounding n

According to (1), we get
L n = c c s t i m e s d d t t i m e s ¯ = c c s t i m e s ¯ · 10 t + d d t t i m e s ¯ = 1 9 ( c 10 s + t ( c d ) 10 t d ) .
Suppose that n > 1000 . From inequality (2), we can get α n 1 L n < 10 s + t and 10 s + t 1 L n α n + 1 , which implies that
( s + t ) log 10 log 10 log α n log α < ( s + t ) log 10 + log α .
Thus, we can get
4.78 ( s + t ) 5.8 < n < 4.79 ( s + t ) + 1 .
From (5), we get s + t > n 1 4.79 > 208 and n > s + t . According to (3) and Binet’s formulae for Lucas sequences, we get
| 9 α n c 10 s + t | = | 9 β n ( ( c d ) 10 t + d ) | 9 α n + 9 · 10 t + 9 < 27 · 10 t ,
which implies that
9 c α n 10 s t 1 < 27 10 s .
Let Γ 1 : = 9 c α n 10 s t 1 , then Γ 1 0 . If Γ 1 = 0 , then α n = 10 s + t c 9 Q , thus we have 10 s + t c 9 = ( 1 + 5 ) n 2 n = f + g 5 2 n , where f , g Z , f > 0 , g > 0 , this implies that 5 = 10 s + t c 2 n 9 f g Q , which is impossible. According to Lemma 1, we take l = 3 , γ 1 = 9 c , γ 2 = α , γ 3 = 10 and b 1 = 1 , b 2 = n , b 3 = s t . Thus, we have L = Q ( α ) , d L = [ L : Q ] = 2 . Note that h ( γ 1 ) = h ( 9 c ) log 9 , h ( γ 2 ) = 1 2 log α , h ( γ 3 ) = log 10 . Thus, we can take A 1 = 2 log 9 , A 2 = 0.5 , A 3 = 4.8 . Note that B = max { | b 1 | , | b 2 | , | b 3 | , 3 } = max { 1 , n , s + t , 3 } = n . Hence, we get
Γ 1 > exp ( C 1 ( 1 + log n ) ) ,
where C 1 = 1.025 × 10 13 . Thus from (7) and (8), we can get
s log 10 < C 1 ( 1 + log n ) + log 27 .
We rewrite Equation (3), then we get
α n c 10 s ( c d ) 9 · 10 t = β n + d 9 α n + 1 < 2 .
It follows that
c 10 s ( c d ) 9 · α n · 10 t 1 < 2 α n .
Let Γ 2 : = c 10 s ( c d ) 9 · α n · 10 t 1 , then Γ 2 0 . If Γ 2 = 0 , then α n = c 10 s ( c d ) 9 · 10 t Q , which is false. According to Lemma 1, we take l = 3 , γ 1 = c 10 s ( c d ) 9 , γ 2 = α , γ 3 = 10 and b 1 = 1 , b 2 = n , b 3 = t . Thus, we have L = Q ( α ) , d L = [ L : Q ] = 2 . From (9), we can get
h ( γ 1 ) h ( c 10 s ( c d ) ) + h ( 9 ) 3 log 9 + s log 10 + log 2 C 1 ( 1 + log n ) + log 27 + 3 log 9 + log 2 1.03 · 10 13 · ( 1 + log n ) ,
and we have h ( γ 2 ) = 1 2 log α , h ( γ 3 ) = log 10 . Thus, we can take A 1 = 2.06 · 10 13 · ( 1 + log n ) , A 2 = 0.5 , A 3 = 4.8 . Note that B = max { | b 1 | , | b 2 | , | b 3 | , 3 } = max { 1 , n , t , 3 } = n . Hence, we get
Γ 2 > exp ( C 2 ( 1 + log n ) 2 ) ,
where C 2 = 4.8 × 10 25 . Thus from (11) and (13), we can get
n log α < C 2 ( 1 + log n ) 2 + log 2 ,
this implies that n < 4.8 × 10 29 . Hence we can conclude that
s + t < n + 5.8 4.78 < 1.01 · 10 29 .
To sum up, we have the lemma as follows.
Lemma 4.
If ( n , c , d , s , t ) is a solution in non-negative integers of Equation (1), with c , d { 0 , 1 , , 9 } , c d and c > 0 , then
s + t < n < 4.8 · 10 29 , s + t < 1.01 · 10 29 .

3.2. Reducing the Bound on n

We use the Lemmas 2 and 3 to reduce the bound for n. Let
Λ 1 : = ( s + t ) log 10 n log α log 9 c .
From (7), we conclude that
e Λ 1 1 < 27 10 s .
If s 2 , then | e Λ 1 1 | < 27 10 s < 1 2 , which implies that 1 2 < e Λ 1 < 3 2 . If Λ 1 > 0 , then 0 < Λ 1 < e Λ 1 1 = e Λ 1 ( 1 e Λ 1 ) < 54 10 s . If Λ 1 < 0 , then 0 < | Λ 1 | < e | Λ 1 | 1 = e Λ 1 1 < 27 10 s . In any case, it is always holds true 0 < | Λ 1 | < 54 10 s , which implies
0 < ( s + t ) log 10 log α n log 9 c log α < 54 log α 10 s .
The continued fraction of log 10 log α is [ a 0 , a 1 , a 2 , a 3 , a 4 , ] = [ 4 , 1 , 3 , 1 , 1 , 1 , 6 , ] , and let p k q k be its kth convergent. Note that s + t < 1.01 · 10 29 by Lemma 4. It is easy to see that log 10 log α is irrational. In fact, if log 10 log α = p q ( p , q Z and p > 0 , q > 0 , gcd ( p , q ) = 1 ) , then α p = 10 q Q , which is an absurdity. For all c { 1 , , 8 } , according to (16) and Lemma 2, we take M = 1.01 · 10 29 and q 60 > 6 M , hence we get the minimum value of ϵ is 0.061483 and s < 34 . If c = 9 , from (16), we get
0 < ( s + t ) log 10 log α n < 54 log α 10 s .
According to Lemma 3, we take M = 1.01 · 10 29 and q 60 > M , hence we get a M : = max { a i : i = 0 , 1 , , 60 } = 106 and we have
( s + t ) log 10 log α n > 1 ( a M + 2 ) ( s + t ) > 1 108 · 1.01 · 10 29 .
Thus, from (17) and (18), we get
1 108 · 1.01 · 10 29 < 54 log α 10 s ,
this leads to s < 34 . So we always have s < 34 .
Let
Λ 2 : = t log 10 n log α + log c 10 s ( c d ) 9 .
From (11) and n > 1000 , we conclude that
e Λ 2 1 < 2 α n < 1 2 ,
which implies that 1 2 < e Λ 2 < 3 2 . If Λ 2 > 0 , then 0 < Λ 2 < e Λ 2 1 < 2 α n . If Λ 2 < 0 , then 0 < | Λ 2 | < e Λ 2 1 = e Λ 2 ( 1 e Λ 2 ) < 4 α n . In any case, since 0 < | Λ 2 | < 4 α n , thus we have
0 < t log 10 log α n + log c 10 s ( c d ) 9 log α < 4 log α α n ,
where s 33 , c { 1 , , 9 } and d { 0 , 1 , , 9 } . For inequality (20), we consider the following two cases: if ( s , c , d ) ( 1 , 1 , 0 ) , according to (20) and Lemma 2, we take M = 1.01 × 10 29 and q 60 > 6 M , hence we obtain 25 negative values of ϵ , the minimum value in the values of positive ϵ is 0.00004477 and n < 171 . For the values of ( s , c , d ) corresponding to the 25 negative values of ϵ , we take q 63 > 6 M , according to (20) and Lemma 2, we get the minimum value in the values of ϵ is 0.005613 and n < 168 . If ( s , c , d ) = ( 1 , 1 , 0 ) , from (20), we get
0 < t log 10 log α n < 4 log α α n .
According to Lemma 3, we take M = 1.01 · 10 29 and q 60 > M , hence we get a M : = max { a i : i = 0 , 1 , , 60 } = 106 and we have
t log 10 log α n > 1 ( a M + 2 ) t > 1 108 · 1.01 · 10 29 .
Thus, from (21) and (22), we get
1 108 · 1.01 · 10 29 < 4 log α α n ,
which leads to n < 153 . In summary, we have n < 171 . This contradicts the assumption n > 1000 . Finally, we search for the solutions to (1) in the range n 1000 by applying a program written in Mathematica and we obtain the solutions ( n , L n ) { ( 6 , 18 ) , ( 7 , 29 ) , ( 8 , 47 ) , ( 9 , 76 ) , ( 11 , 199 ) , ( 12 , 322 ) } . We complete the proof.

4. Conclusions and Future Research

For a fixed integer k 2 , let { F n ( k ) } n 2 k be the k generalized Fibonacci sequence defined by F n ( k ) = F n 1 ( k ) + F n 2 ( k ) + + F n k ( k ) with the initial values F ( k 2 ) ( k ) = F ( k 3 ) ( k ) = = F 0 ( k ) = 0 , F 1 ( k ) = 1 and { L n ( k ) } n 2 k be the k generalized Lucas sequence given by L n ( k ) = L n 1 ( k ) + L n 2 ( k ) + + L n k ( k ) with the initial values L ( k 2 ) ( k ) = L ( k 3 ) ( k ) = = L 1 ( k ) = 0 , L 0 ( k ) = 2 , L 1 ( k ) = 1 . Suppose that c , d { 0 , 1 , , 9 } , c d , c > 0 , s 1 and t 1 , our aim is to solve the two Diophantine equations
F n ( k ) = c c s t i m e s d d t t i m e s ¯
and
L n ( k ) = c c s t i m e s d d t t i m e s ¯ .
For k = 2 and k = 3 , the Diophantine Equation (23) has been solved in [18] and [21], respectively. In this paper, we solve the Diophantine Equation (24) for the case of k = 2 . Our future research work is to solve the Diophantine Equations (23) and (24) completely for the case of k 3 . In addition, for the main Mathematica programs used in this paper, readers can refer to Appendix A.

Author Contributions

Writing—original draft preparation, Y.Q. and J.Z.; Writing—review and editing, Y.Q. and J.Z.; Y.Q. and J.Z. have equally contributed to this work. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The research was supported by Guizhou Provincial Science and Technology Foundation(Grant No. QIANKEHEJICHU[2019]1221) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Grant No. 11261060).

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their very useful and detailed suggestions.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A. Mathematica Programs

We give the main Mathematica programs used in this paper as follows:
  • α = 1 + 5 2 ; γ = log [ 10 ] log [ α ] ;
  • Generates a list of the first n terms in γ s continued fraction representation:
    C o n t i n u e d F r a c t i o n [ γ , n ]
  • The denominator of the nth ( n = 0 , 1 , 2 , ) convergent of γ s continued fraction:
    q [ n   ̲ ] : = M o d u l e [ { γ = log [ 10 ] log [ 1 + 5 2 ] } , L a s t [ D e n o m i n a t o r [ C o n v e r g e n t s [ γ , n + 1 ] ] ] ] ;
  • The function x which denotes the distance from x to the nearest integer:
    c l d i s t [ x   ̲ , j d   ̲ ] : = M o d u l e [ { } , A b s [ N [ R o u n d [ x ] x , j d ] ] ] ;
  • The number ϵ : = τ q M α q in Lemma 2:
    e p s i l o n [ τ   ̲ , q   ̲ , M   ̲ , α   ̲ , j d   ̲ ] : = M o d u l e [ { } , c l d i s t [ τ q , j d ] M c l d i s t [ α q , j d ] ] ;
  • The number τ : = log 9 c log α in (16): τ [ c   ̲ ] : = log [ 9 c ] log [ α ] ;
  • The number τ : = log c 10 s ( c d ) 9 log α in (20): τ [ s   ̲ , c   ̲ , d   ̲ ] : = log [ c 10 s ( c d ) 9 ] log [ α ] ;
  • The nth term of Lucas sequence L n :
    L u c a s [ n   ̲ ] : = M o d u l e [ { α = 1 + 5 2 , β = 1 5 2 } , S i m p l i f y [ E x p a n d [ α n + β n ] ] ] ;

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Qu, Y.; Zeng, J. Lucas Numbers Which Are Concatenations of Two Repdigits. Mathematics 2020, 8, 1360. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/math8081360

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Qu Y, Zeng J. Lucas Numbers Which Are Concatenations of Two Repdigits. Mathematics. 2020; 8(8):1360. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/math8081360

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Qu, Yunyun, and Jiwen Zeng. 2020. "Lucas Numbers Which Are Concatenations of Two Repdigits" Mathematics 8, no. 8: 1360. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/math8081360

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