The circle method has its genesis in a paper of Hardy and Ramanujan (see
[Hardy 1])in 1918concernedwiththepartitionfunction andtheproblemofrep-
resenting numbers as sums ofsquares. Later, in a series of papers
beginning in 1920entitled "some problems of'partitio numerorum''', Hardy
and Littlewood (see [Hardy 1]) created and developed systematically a
new analytic method, the circle method in additive number theory. The
most famous problems in ad- ditive number theory, namely Waring's
problem and Goldbach's problem, are treated in their papers. The circle
method is also called the Hardy-Littlewood method. Waring's problem may
be described as follows: For every integer k 2 2, there is a number s=
s( k) such that every positive integer N is representable as (1) where
Xi arenon-negative integers. This assertion wasfirst proved by Hilbert
[1] in 1909. Using their powerful circle method, Hardy and Littlewood
obtained a deeper result on Waring's problem. They established an
asymptotic formula for rs(N), the number of representations of N in the
form (1), namely k 1 provided that 8 2 (k - 2)2 - +5. Here