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I'm interested in whether $$ 2x^3-1=z^3 $$ has any positive integer solutions. It has solutions mod $m$ for $m\le10^7$ so it seems unlikely that modular means would suffice to prove that there are not solutions. On the other hand I can't find any solutions for $x<10^9$ either.

I'm sure this is a routine problem but I don't know the techniques. Help?

Application: I was reading about near-Fermat triples $x^3+y^3=z^3+1$ where the restriction $x<y<z$ was given rather than $x\le y<z$ and I wondered if the excluded case was possible.

Charles
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    I presume you don't count the positive integer solution $x=z=1$? Since your equation (and hence any modular version of it) has this rather trivial positive integer solution, I think modulus methods are doomed to fail. – Old John Sep 16 '13 at 20:35
  • @OldJohn: Good point. Are there methods that can show there are no others (or to find others)? – Charles Sep 16 '13 at 20:43
  • The number of integer solutions is finite by Thue-Siegel-Roth. Meanwhile, this can be transformed into an elliptic curve, but probably not a Mordell curve, for which there are tables of integer points online. Where did you get this? I have seen something similar recently but cannot quite recall. – Will Jagy Sep 16 '13 at 20:43
  • @WillJagy: It came up in relation to near-Fermat triples, see my last paragraph. – Charles Sep 16 '13 at 20:46
  • An old theorem of Delone and Nagell (discovered independently) says that, given $a$ and $b$, the equation $ax^3-by^3=1$ has at most one solution in positive integers $x$ and $y$ (and moreover tells you how to find the solution, if it exists). – Mike Bennett Sep 17 '13 at 00:54
  • @MikeBennett: Fantastic! Do you have a reference by chance? Please submit this as an answer in any case! – Charles Sep 17 '13 at 01:58
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    Found reference, PDF at http://www.ams.org/mcom/1998-67-221/S0025-5718-98-00900-4/S0025-5718-98-00900-4.pdf‎ with the first author being Michael A. Bennett, who is probably the same @MikeBennett who gave the answer in comment – Will Jagy Sep 17 '13 at 04:01
  • Please see the following similar question which has some relevant answers: http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/61014/solve-x3-1-2y3/98469#98469 – Adam Bailey Sep 17 '13 at 15:41

2 Answers2

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Euler gave an elementary proof that there are no non-trivial solutions. (Actually, he solved the more general equation $y^3+z^3=2x^3$.)

Having asked this before (see Rational solutions of $x^3+y^3=2$) I was pointed to Chapter II, pg 78 here: http://matwbn-old.icm.edu.pl/kstresc.php?wyd=10&tom=42&jez=en.

If you are interested to (partially) solve the equation yourself, the substitutions made in the beginning might allow you to proceed the proof.

Bart Michels
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Some points:

Greatest common divisor: If $g=gcd(x,y)$, from $1=2x^3-z^3$ we know that $g^3|1$, or $g=1$ and $x$ and $y$ are relative prime.


Parity: Since $2x^3$ is even and 1 is odd, $z^3$ is odd and $z$ is odd.


Factors of z: If $p|z$, so $p^3|z^3=2x^3-1$ hence $2x^3\equiv 1 \pmod {p^3}$. Computer search shows $y$ is not dividable by any of $\{2, 3, 7, 13, 19, 37, 61, 67, 73, 79, 97\}$.


Solving mod primes using computer: From this I found some results that may help in solving or brute-forcing the problem: $x\equiv 0,1,2 ,4 \pmod7$, $x\equiv 0,1,3,9 \pmod{13}$, $x\equiv 0,1,7,11\pmod{19}$,

LeeNeverGup
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