1 Introduction
A Cullen number is a positive integer of the form $n2^n+1$ . Arithmetic properties of these numbers have been investigated in various papers. In 1976, Hooley [Reference Hooley2] showed that almost all Cullen numbers are composite. Luca and Stănică [Reference Luca, Stănică and Howard5] showed that there are only finitely many Fibonacci numbers among the Cullen numbers. More recently, Luca and Noubissie [Reference Luca and Noubissie4] showed that the largest prime factor of $n2^n+1\pm m!$ tends to infinity with $\max \{m,n\}$ and found all pairs $(m,n)$ such that this number is of the form $\pm 3^a\cdot 5^b\cdot 7^c$ for some nonnegative integers $a,b,c$ .
An s-Cullen number is a number of the form $ns^n+1$ where $s\ge 2$ is a fixed integer. Grantham and Graves [Reference Grantham and Graves1] studied the Diophantine equation
and showed that under the $abc$ conjecture, it has only finitely many positive integer solutions $(n,s,b,m)$ with $s\ge 2,~b\ge 2$ and $m\ge 3$ . In this note, we assume that $s\ge 2$ is fixed and prove that the equation (1.1) has only finitely many positive solutions in the remaining variables $(n,b,m)$ again with $b\ge 2$ and $m\ge 3$ . More precisely, we have the following result.
Theorem 1.1.
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(i) For a fixed integer $s\ge 2$ , the Diophantine equation (1.1) has only finitely many positive integer solutions $(n,b,m)$ with $b\ge 2$ and $m\ge 3$ .
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(ii) When $s=2$ , it has no solution.
2 The proof
We consider (i) and (ii) together. Let $s:=q_1^{\alpha _1} \cdots q_k^{\alpha _k}$ , where $q_1,\ldots ,q_k$ are distinct primes and $\alpha _1,\ldots ,\alpha _k$ are positive integers. We expand the right-hand side and obtain
The proof proceeds in two cases.
Case 1. $\gcd (b,s)>1$ .
Assume that q is prime and $q\mid \gcd (s,b)$ . Letting $\nu _q(\ell )$ denote the exponent of q in the factorisation of the nonzero integer $\ell $ , we see that $\nu _q(ns^n)\ge n\nu _q(s)$ in the left-hand side of (2.1) whereas in the right-hand side of (2.1), we have $\nu _q(b^{m-1}+\cdots +b)=\nu _q(b)$ . Thus, if $q^{\alpha }\| s$ , then $q^{n\alpha }\mid b$ . Let i be such that $q_1,\ldots ,q_i$ all divide b. If $i=k$ , we then get that $s^n\mid b$ , so the right-hand side of (2.1) is at least $b^2>s^{2n}>ns^n$ , which is a contradiction. In particular, when $s=2$ , Case 1 cannot occur. Next, take $i<k$ . Write $s_1:=q_1^{\alpha _1}\cdots q_i^{\alpha _i}$ and put $s_2:=s/s_1$ and $b_1:=b/s_1^n$ . Then (2.1) can be rewritten as
Cancelling $s_1^n$ , we get
and since $b_1$ and $s_2$ are coprime, it follows that $b_1\mid n$ . Thus,
or
The right-hand side is nonzero, since $m\ge 3$ , and $q_1^n\mid b$ . Applying a linear form in $q_1$ -adic logarithms to the left-hand side (which is nonzero since $s_2\ge 2$ ), we get
where the constant implied by the $\ll $ symbol depends on s (in fact, it is of size $O(q_1\log s_2)=O(s\log s)$ , where the constant implied by O is absolute). This gives a bound on n in this case.
Case 2. $\gcd (b,s)=1$ .
Since (2.1) can be rewritten as
and s and b are coprime, we get $b\mid n$ . Thus,
In particular,
Since $b\mid n$ , it follows that $n^{m-1}\ge b^{m-1}>s^n\ge 2^n$ , and so $m\gg n/{\log}\, n$ . However, $b^{m-1}<n^2s^n+1<s^{4n}$ , so $m\ll n$ , where the constant implied by the last $\ll $ symbol depends on s (it is in fact of size $O(\log s)$ where the constant implied by the O symbol is absolute). Next, we rewrite (2.2) as
On the left-hand side (which is nonzero since the right-hand side is nonzero), we apply a linear form in logarithms á la Baker to get
where the constant implied by the $\ll $ symbol can be taken to be
and the constant implied by O is absolute. Hence,
giving $n\ll (\log n)^4$ , so n is bounded. This finishes the proof of (i).
For (ii), when $s=2$ , only Case 2 is possible so b is odd and the left-hand side of (2.1) is even. Hence, $(b^{m-1}-1)/(b-1)$ is even and b is odd showing that $m-1$ is even. Thus, (2.2) gives
Thus, $(X,Y):=(b^{(m-1)/2},2^{\lfloor n/2\rfloor })$ satisfy
Thus, $(X,Y)=(X_k,Y_k)$ is the kth solution of the Pell equation (2.3). Since Y is a power of $2$ , by the existence of primitive divisors for Lucas sequences, the only possibilities are $k\in \{1,2\}$ . Thus,
where the last inequality follows from Lemma 1 in [Reference Křížek and Luca3]. Since $d\le 2(b-1)(n/b)<2n$ , we get
giving $n<10^5$ . To reduce it, we played around with Mathematica. If $m\le 8$ , then since $b\mid n$ , we get
which gives $n\le 29$ . If $m\ge 9$ , then $n2^n\equiv b+b^2+b^3+\cdots +b^7\pmod {b^8}$ . For each $n<10^5$ , we generated all odd divisors $b>1$ of n and checked whether the above congruence held, and if it did, we recorded the value of b. The only b found was $b=3$ . Since $n2^n=(3^m-1)/2\ge (3^{9}-1)/2$ , we get $n\ge 10$ . If $m-1\ge n$ , we then get $n2^n=3^{m-1}+\cdots +1>3^n$ , which is a contradiction for $n\ge 10$ . Thus,
so $2^{n+1}\mid 3^{m-1}-1$ . This implies that $m-1$ is even and further, calculating the exponent of $2$ in $3^{m-1}-1$ , we get
which is false for $n\ge 10$ . This shows that $m\ge 9$ is not possible, and so only $m\le 8$ is possible for which we already saw that $n\le 29$ . Finally, we took all $n\in [2,29]$ , found all odd divisors $b>1$ of n (if any), calculated the potential m using the equation $m-1:= \lfloor \log (n2^n+1)/{\log}\, b\rfloor $ and checked whether (1.1) holds with $s=2$ . No solution was found.
This finishes the proof.
3 Comments
Closely related to Cullen numbers are the Woodall numbers of the form $n2^n-1$ or, more generally, $ns^n-1$ with some $s\ge 2$ . Our argument does not extend to Woodall numbers so we leave the topic of exploring the analogous Diophantine equation (1.1) with Cullen numbers replaced by Woodall numbers to the interested reader.