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arxiv: 2604.19437 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-21 · 🧮 math.NT · math.DS

Representations of binary quadratic forms by quaternary quadratic forms

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 01:35 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.NT math.DS
keywords quadratic formsrepresentationslocal-global principleergodic methodsmeasure classificationbinary quadratic formsquaternary quadratic formsdeterminant method
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The pith

A local-global principle holds for primitive representations of binary quadratic forms by quaternary quadratic forms.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper shows that a binary quadratic form is primitively represented by some quaternary quadratic form over the integers precisely when it is represented over the reals and over every p-adic field. This is proved by establishing density of certain homogeneous sets under diagonalizable group actions, then reducing via the Siegel mass formula to a point-counting problem on an affine variety solved by determinant estimates. A reader cares because the result replaces an infinite family of local checks with a finite criterion and gives an effective way to decide representability questions that arise in the arithmetic of quadratic forms. The argument adapts Linnik's ergodic method to this setting by importing a rigidity theorem for rank-two diagonal actions on products of SL_2 quotients.

Core claim

We prove a local-global principle for primitive representations of binary quadratic forms by quaternary quadratic forms. The proof proceeds by a variant of Linnik's ergodic method that establishes density for the associated homogeneous toral sets. The key step applies a measure classification theorem for rank-two diagonalizable group actions on quotients of products of SL_2; combined with the Siegel mass formula, this reduces the density statement to a counting problem on a fixed affine variety, which is resolved by the Bombieri-Pila determinant method.

What carries the argument

A variant of Linnik's ergodic method that uses measure classification for rank-two diagonalizable group actions to produce density of homogeneous toral sets, followed by reduction via the Siegel mass formula to a Bombieri-Pila counting problem on an affine variety.

If this is right

  • Whenever local representation conditions hold everywhere, a global primitive representation exists.
  • The associated homogeneous toral sets are dense in their ambient homogeneous spaces.
  • The number of representations can be estimated by counting integral points on the auxiliary affine variety.
  • The same density-plus-mass-formula strategy applies to other representation problems whose homogeneous spaces admit rank-two diagonal actions.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The method may adapt to representations involving forms of mixed signature or to higher-genus analogues where similar toral sets appear.
  • Effective bounds on the smallest representing quaternary form could follow from quantitative versions of the determinant estimates.
  • The result supplies a dynamical criterion that might be compared with class-number formulas or theta-series identities for the same representation numbers.

Load-bearing premise

The measure classification result for the relevant diagonalizable group actions applies directly to the homogeneous sets defined by the quadratic-form representation problem, and the Siegel mass formula converts the density question into a counting problem without further geometric obstructions.

What would settle it

An explicit binary quadratic form that is represented by some quaternary quadratic form over the reals and over every p-adic field yet fails to be primitively represented over the integers.

read the original abstract

We prove a local-global principle for primitive representations of binary quadratic forms by quaternary quadratic forms. Our method is a variant of Linnik's ergodic method showing density for certain homogenous toral sets. The central ingredient is a measure classification result of Einsiedler and Lindenstrauss for actions of rank two diagonalizable groups on quotients of products of $\mathrm{SL}_2$. This rigidity result together with an application of the Siegel mass formula reduces the density problem to a counting problem on a certain affine variety. We solve that counting problem using the determinant method of Bombieri-Pila and Heath-Brown.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper proves a local-global principle for primitive representations of binary quadratic forms by quaternary quadratic forms. It employs a variant of Linnik's ergodic method: the representation problem is embedded into a homogeneous space whose toral subsets are invariant under a rank-2 diagonalizable subgroup of a product of SL(2) groups; the Einsiedler-Lindenstrauss measure classification yields equidistribution (hence density), the Siegel mass formula reduces the density statement to a counting problem on an affine variety, and the Bombieri-Pila/Heath-Brown determinant method solves the counting problem.

Significance. If the local-global principle holds, the result supplies a new ergodic-theoretic instance of such principles for quadratic forms, extending Linnik-type methods to the binary-to-quaternary setting. The explicit reduction via Siegel mass to a Bombieri-Pila counting problem, together with the use of a rigidity theorem for rank-2 tori on products of SL(2) quotients, offers a reusable template for related representation questions where classical Hasse-principle obstructions are subtle.

major comments (2)
  1. [§4] §4 (homogeneous toral sets): the identification of the adelic orthogonal-group toral sets arising from primitive representations with the exact quotients treated by the Einsiedler-Lindenstrauss classification theorem is not verified in detail; it must be shown that these sets carry no extra invariants, admit no cuspidal contributions, and that the acting group is precisely the rank-2 diagonalizable torus without additional constraints from the orthogonal group.
  2. [§5] §5 (Siegel mass formula reduction): the passage from equidistribution to the counting problem on the affine variety assumes that the mass formula produces a positive main term free of additional local-global obstructions specific to primitive representations; an explicit check that the local densities are uniformly positive and that the error terms do not cancel the main term is required for the density statement to follow.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Introduction] The notation for the adelic points and the precise definition of the homogeneous space in the introduction should be cross-referenced to the later sections to avoid ambiguity for readers unfamiliar with the orthogonal-group setup.
  2. A short table summarizing the local conditions (discriminant, level, etc.) that appear in the local-global statement would improve readability.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their careful reading and constructive comments on our manuscript. Their observations identify areas where additional verification and explicit checks will strengthen the exposition. We address each major comment below and will revise the paper to incorporate the necessary details.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§4] §4 (homogeneous toral sets): the identification of the adelic orthogonal-group toral sets arising from primitive representations with the exact quotients treated by the Einsiedler-Lindenstrauss classification theorem is not verified in detail; it must be shown that these sets carry no extra invariants, admit no cuspidal contributions, and that the acting group is precisely the rank-2 diagonalizable torus without additional constraints from the orthogonal group.

    Authors: We agree that the identification in §4 requires more explicit verification. The manuscript sketches the embedding of the adelic orthogonal group into the product of SL(2) groups via the natural action on binary quadratic forms, but does not fully compute stabilizers or rule out extra invariants and cuspidal contributions. In the revised version we will expand §4 with a dedicated subsection that (i) constructs the precise adelic toral sets arising from primitive representations, (ii) verifies that the stabilizer is exactly the rank-2 diagonalizable torus with no additional orthogonal-group constraints, and (iii) confirms the absence of cuspidal contributions by direct computation of the relevant adelic quotients. This will justify the direct application of the Einsiedler-Lindenstrauss theorem. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [§5] §5 (Siegel mass formula reduction): the passage from equidistribution to the counting problem on the affine variety assumes that the mass formula produces a positive main term free of additional local-global obstructions specific to primitive representations; an explicit check that the local densities are uniformly positive and that the error terms do not cancel the main term is required for the density statement to follow.

    Authors: The referee correctly notes that the density conclusion in §5 depends on the Siegel mass formula producing a strictly positive main term. While the local-global principle for the representations suggests no hidden obstructions, the manuscript does not supply an explicit verification that the local densities remain uniformly positive for primitive representations. In the revision we will add to §5 an explicit computation of the local densities at all places, showing they are bounded below by a positive constant depending only on the dimension and the level, together with a comparison showing that the equidistribution error is o(1) relative to this main term. This will confirm that the main term dominates and the density statement follows. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity; external theorems applied to representation problem

full rationale

The derivation invokes the Einsiedler-Lindenstrauss measure classification for rank-2 diagonalizable actions on products of SL(2) quotients, the Siegel mass formula, and the Bombieri-Pila determinant method as independent external inputs. These are not derived inside the paper, not obtained from self-citations that reduce the target statement, and not fitted parameters renamed as predictions. The local-global principle follows from applying these tools to the specific toral sets and affine counting problem arising from binary-to-quaternary representations, without any self-definitional loop or construction that makes the output equivalent to the inputs.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The proof rests on standard background theorems from ergodic theory and analytic number theory rather than new axioms or fitted parameters introduced in the paper.

axioms (2)
  • standard math Measure classification theorem for actions of rank-two diagonalizable groups on quotients of products of SL_2 (Einsiedler-Lindenstrauss)
    Invoked as the central rigidity ingredient for density of homogeneous toral sets.
  • standard math Siegel mass formula for quadratic forms
    Used to reduce the density problem to a counting problem on an affine variety.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5391 in / 1328 out tokens · 37768 ms · 2026-05-10T01:35:23.744646+00:00 · methodology

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