The PSLQ algorithm

Here is an article about the PSLQ algorithm, with mention of the various people involved, which appeared in the Feb 12 issue of Science News.
At the end of the article you can find references.
 

The following text about the PSLQ algorithm  was pulled out from the following paper:
Applications of Integer Relation Algorithms by Jonathan M. Borwein and Petr Lisonek, Discrete Mathematics (Special issue for FPSAC 1997)

The first integer relation algorithm working reliably on vectors of non-trivial length was discovered by Ferguson and Forcade [26]. After a number of improvements, in 1991 a new algorithm, known as the PSLQ algorithm, was developed by Ferguson [24]. More recently a much simpler formulation of this algorithm was introduced  [25]. The papers [24] and [25] are available on David Bailey's WWW page at

http://science.nas.nasa.gov/Groups/AAA/db.webpage/dbailey.html
Because this algorithm employs a numerically stable matrix reduction procedure, it is free from the numerical difficulties that plague other integer relation algorithms. Furthermore, its stability allows for an efficient implementation with lower run times on average than other algorithms currently in use.

A distinguishing feature of the PSLQ algorithm is that, besides recovering an integer relation (if one exists), it can also produce a negative (non-existence) result of the form ``if a relation exists, then its Euclidean norm is greater than M (an explicit numerical bound)''. One can show, on using a working precision that is only slightly higher than that of the input data, that these bound results obtained from computer runs are reliable. Results of this type, supporting conjectures about transcendence of certain constants, are to be found in [2,4]. (See also Section 2.3 on minimal polynomials.) For example, Bailey and Ferguson [4] used PSLQ to establish, that if Euler's constant $\gamma$ satisfies an integer polynomial of degree 50 or less, then the Euclidean norm of the coefficients must exceed $7\cdot 10^{17}$.

In the context of these exclusion bounds it is important to realize that, even for very ``similar'' numbers, the Euclidean norms of their relations can differ greatly. For example, if x satisfies an integer polynomial of degree d, norm sand k is an integer, then kx satisfies an integer polynomial whose norm may become as high as roughly |k|ds. The lesson here is that, if we can, we should ``normalize'' our input so that the resulting integer relation is of low Euclidean norm.
 

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Agnes Szanto

Last modified: Fri May 5 16:31:58 PDT 2000