English

The true complexity of a system of linear equations

Number Theory 2014-02-26 v1 Combinatorics

Abstract

It is well-known that if a subset A of a finite Abelian group G satisfies a quasirandomness property called uniformity of degree k, then it contains roughly the expected number of arithmetic progressions of length k, that is, the number of progressions one would expect in a random subset of G of the same density as A. One is naturally led to ask which degree of uniformity is required of A in order to control the number of solutions to a general system of linear equations. Using so-called "quadratic Fourier analysis", we show that certain linear systems that were previously thought to require quadratic uniformity are in fact governed by linear uniformity. More generally, we conjecture a necessary and sufficient condition on a linear system L which guarantees that any subset A of F_p^n which is uniform of degree k contains the expected number of solutions to L.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0711.0185,
  title  = {The true complexity of a system of linear equations},
  author = {W. T. Gowers and J. Wolf},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0711.0185},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

30 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:38:55.739Z