Jan 2, 2013

The product of the sums of two squares is…


This may not come as a great surprise to anyone else, but I was mildly pleased to stumble on the fact (?) that if two integers are both the sums of two squares, so is their product:

If
x = a2 + b2
and 
y = c2 + d2

then 
xy =
(a2 + b2)(c2 +d2) =
a2(c2 + d2) + b2(c2 +d2) =
a2c2 + a2d2 + b2c2 + b2d2 =
(a2c2 + b2d2) + (a2d2 + b2c2) =
(a2c2 +2abcd + b2d2) + (a2d2 -2abcd + b2c2) =
(ac + bd)2 + (ad - bc)2
and by a similar procedure we can show that
xy = 
(ac - bd)2 + (ad + bc)2

Thus xy is actually the sum of two pairs of squares, unless ad = bc or ac = bd.

Or so it seems to me.