On duplicate representations as 2^x + 3^y for nonnegative integers x and y
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 01:08 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
There are exactly five positive integers that can be written in more than one way as 2^x + 3^y for nonnegative integers x and y.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The paper proves that there are exactly five positive integers that can be written in more than one way as the sum of a nonnegative power of 2 and a nonnegative power of 3. The case in which both exponents are positive is settled by an existing theorem of Bennett. The remaining cases, in which at least one exponent is zero, are resolved by direct and exhaustive checking of the resulting equations.
What carries the argument
The case split between representations that include a zero exponent (handled by elementary exhaustion) and those with both exponents positive (reduced to Bennett's theorem).
If this is right
- The sums 2^x + 3^y produce a sequence whose members are unique except for the five listed exceptions.
- No additional collisions exist when zero exponents are permitted.
- The classification is exhaustive once Bennett's theorem is granted.
- All representations with a zero exponent can be checked directly without further theoretical machinery.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same case-split technique could be tested on sums involving other fixed bases such as 2 and 5.
- The result supplies an explicit finite list that can be used to bound the number of representations in related additive problems.
- It suggests that similar elementary arguments may suffice for other small-exponent Diophantine equations once a strong theorem is available for the positive-exponent subcase.
Load-bearing premise
Bennett's theorem correctly identifies all solutions in which both exponents are at least one.
What would settle it
The discovery of any sixth positive integer equal to 2^a + 3^b and also to 2^c + 3^d for two distinct pairs of nonnegative integers (a,b) and (c,d).
read the original abstract
We prove a conjecture posted in the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, namely that there are exactly five positive integers that can be written in more than one way as the sum of a nonnegative power of 2 and a nonnegative power of 3. The case for both powers being positive follows from a theorem of Bennett. We use elementary methods to prove the case where zero exponents are allowed.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proves that there are exactly five positive integers that admit more than one representation as 2^x + 3^y with x, y nonnegative integers. The case x, y ≥ 1 is dispatched by direct appeal to a theorem of Bennett; the cases with at least one zero exponent are treated by exhaustive elementary enumeration together with explicit bounding arguments.
Significance. The result resolves an OEIS conjecture. The combination of an external theorem for the interior regime with complete, self-contained elementary verification for the boundary cases supplies a clean classification. The manuscript supplies the explicit lists and bounds for the zero-exponent cases, which is a strength.
minor comments (1)
- The abstract states that Bennett's theorem is applied when both powers are positive; a brief parenthetical reminder of the precise statement of Bennett's result (or its reference) would help readers confirm the hypotheses match the regime x, y ≥ 1.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive assessment of the manuscript and for recommending acceptance. The report contains no major comments requiring a point-by-point response.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity identified
full rationale
The derivation splits the problem into (i) x,y ≥ 1, which is dispatched by direct citation of Bennett's external theorem (no author overlap), and (ii) cases with at least one zero exponent, which are settled by explicit elementary enumeration and bounding arguments supplied in the manuscript. No equations, fitted parameters, or self-citations reduce the central claim to its own inputs by construction; the argument is self-contained once the external theorem and the listed case checks are accepted.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Bennett's theorem on sums of positive powers of 2 and 3
discussion (0)
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