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Singmaster's conjecture in the interior of Pascal's triangle

Singmaster&#39;s conjecture asserts that every natural number greater than one occurs at most a bounded number of times in Pascal&#39;s triangle; that is, for any natural number $t \geq 2$, the number of solutions to the equation $\binom{n}{m} = t$ for natural numbers $1 \leq m < n$ is bounded. In this paper we establish this result in the interior region $\exp(\log^{2/3+\varepsilon} n) \leq m \leq n-\exp(\log^{2/3 + \varepsilon} n)$ for any fixed $\varepsilon > 0$. Indeed, when $t$ is sufficiently large depending on $\varepsilon$, we show that there are at most four solutions (or at most two in either half of Pascal&#39;s triangle) in this region. We also establish analogous results for the equation $(n)_m = t$, where $(n)_m := n(n-1)\ldots(n-m+1)$ denotes the falling factorial.

preprint2021arXivOpen access
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