Revision as of 22:25, 4 February 2009 by Jzage (Talk | contribs)


For this problem, does anyone know what the new conjecture is supposed to be? I thought it might just be that the order of r multiplied by the order of s is NOT the order of rs, but I wasn't sure if there was another conjecture that could be made. --Clwarner 21:14, 3 February 2009 (UTC)


The conjecture I made was that $ \scriptstyle gcd(r,s)=1\ \leftrightarrow\ \mid U(r)\mid*\mid U(s)\mid=\mid U(rs)\mid $.

--Nick Rupley 05:01, 4 February 2009 (UTC)

I made an equivalent conjecture: If r and s are relatively prime, then U(r) * U(s) = U(r*s).

--Yu Suo

I discovered the same conjectur: U(r) * U(s) = U(r*s)

Alumni Liaison

Basic linear algebra uncovers and clarifies very important geometry and algebra.

Dr. Paul Garrett