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1.29: Epilogue

  • Page ID
    83356
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    With our discussion of sums of squares in the last chapter, at this point we’ve answered the last of our questions from Section 1.1. In this text we have seen some gems of number theory from throughout ancient and more recent history. Still, please don’t let this text contain your final interactions with number theory!

    Exciting discoveries are being made today that lead to the resolution of old conjectures and spur intriguing new questions of their own. If you wish to see other books, browse the shelves in a university library; many number theory books have a Library of Congress call number of QA 241 or something nearby. One may also obtain much interesting and current information about number theory online. See particularly the websites listed in the Bibliography. The websites by Chris Caldwell [2] and by Eric Weisstein [11] are especially recommended. To see what is going on at the frontier of research on the subject, you may take a look at some recent issues of the Journal of Number Theory and other number theory journals, which you may find through a university library.

    You don’t have to just read other people’s work, though. Hopefully by this point you’ve developed some curiosity of your own about the integers. What questions occur to you that you’d like to see answered? Can you come up with any answers, or at least helpful first steps, on your own?

    Where will you go next?


    This page titled 1.29: Epilogue is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Mike Barrus & W. Edwin Clark.

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