It is known from the general theory of Gauss sums that : |G(\chi)| = \sqrt p. \, In fact the prime decomposition of
G(
χ) in the cyclotomic field it naturally lies in is known, giving a stronger form. What Kummer was concerned with was the
argument : \theta_p \, of
G(
χ). Unlike the quadratic case, where the square of the Gauss sum is known and the precise square root was determined by Gauss, here the cube of
G(
χ) lies in the
Eisenstein integers, but its argument is determined by that of the Eisenstein prime dividing
p, which splits in that field. Kummer made a statistical conjecture about
θp and its distribution modulo 2π (in other words, on the argument of the Kummer sum on the unit circle). For that to make sense, one has to choose between the two possible χ: there is a distinguished choice, in fact, based on the
cubic residue symbol. Kummer used available numerical data for
p up to 500 (this is described in the 1892 book
Theory of Numbers by
George B. Mathews). There was, however, a 'law of small numbers' operating, meaning that Kummer's original conjecture, of a lack of uniform distribution, suffered from a small-number bias. In 1952
John von Neumann and
Herman Goldstine extended Kummer's computations, on
ENIAC. The calculations were programmed and coded by Hedvig Selberg but her work was only acknowledged at the end of the paper, similarly as with
Mary Tsingou on the
Fermi–Pasta–Ulam–Tsingou problem (formerly the Fermi–Pasta–Ulam problem). In the twentieth century, progress was finally made on this question, which had been left untouched for over 100 years. Building on work of
Tomio Kubota,
S. J. Patterson and
Roger Heath-Brown in 1978 disproved Kummer conjecture and proved a modified form of Kummer conjecture. In fact they showed that there was equidistribution of the θ
p. This work involved
automorphic forms for the
metaplectic group, and
Vaughan's lemma in
analytic number theory. In 2000 further refinements were attained by Heath-Brown. ==Cassels' conjecture==