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Square-free integer

In mathematics, a square-free integer (or squarefree integer) is an integer which is divisible by no square number other than 1. That is, its prime factorization has exactly one factor for each prime that appears in it. For example, 10 = 2 ⋅ 5 is square-free, but 18 = 2 ⋅ 3 ⋅ 3 is not, because 18 is divisible by 9 = 32. The smallest positive square-free numbers are

10 is square-free, as its divisors greater than 1 are 2, 5, and 10, none of which is square (the first few squares being 1, 4, 9, and 16)
Square-free integers up to 120 remain after eliminating multiples of squares of primes up to √120
1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 17, 19, 21, 22, 23, 26, 29, 30, 31, 33, 34, 35, 37, 38, 39, ... (sequence A005117 in the OEIS)

Square-free factorization

Every positive integer   can be factored in a unique way as

 
where the   different from one are square-free integers that are pairwise coprime. This is called the square-free factorization of n.

To construct the square-free factorization, let

 
be the prime factorization of  , where the   are distinct prime numbers. Then the factors of the square-free factorization are defined as
 

An integer is square-free if and only if   for all  . An integer greater than one is the  th power of another integer if and only if   is a divisor of all   such that  

The use of the square-free factorization of integers is limited by the fact that its computation is as difficult as the computation of the prime factorization. More precisely every known algorithm for computing a square-free factorization computes also the prime factorization. This is a notable difference with the case of polynomials for which the same definitions can be given, but, in this case, the square-free factorization is not only easier to compute than the complete factorization, but it is the first step of all standard factorization algorithms.

Square-free factors of integers

The radical of an integer is its largest square-free factor, that is   with notation of the preceding section. An integer is square-free if and only if it is equal to its radical.

Every positive integer   can be represented in a unique way as the product of a powerful number (that is an integer such that is divisible by the square of every prime factor) and a square-free integer, which are coprime. In this factorization, the square-free factor is   and the powerful number is  

The square-free part of   is   which is the largest square-free divisor   of   that is coprime with  . The square-free part of an integer may be smaller than the largest square-free divisor, which is  

Any arbitrary positive integer   can be represented in a unique way as the product of a square and a square-free integer:

 
In this factorization,   is the largest divisor of   such that   is a divisor of  .

In summary, there are three square-free factors that are naturally associated to every integer: the square-free part, the above factor  , and the largest square-free factor. Each is a factor of the next one. All are easily deduced from the prime factorization or the square-free factorization: if

 
are the prime factorization and the square-free factorization of  , where   are distinct prime numbers, then the square-free part is
 
The square-free factor such the quotient is a square is
 
and the largest square-free factor is
 

For example, if   one has   The square-free part is 7, the square-free factor such that the quotient is a square is 3 ⋅ 7 = 21, and the largest square-free factor is 2 ⋅ 3 ⋅ 5 ⋅ 7 = 210.

No algorithm is known for computing any of these square-free factors which is faster than computing the complete prime factorization. In particular, there is no known polynomial-time algorithm for computing the square-free part of an integer, or even for determining whether an integer is square-free.[1] In contrast, polynomial-time algorithms are known for primality testing.[2] This is a major difference between the arithmetic of the integers, and the arithmetic of the univariate polynomials, as polynomial-time algorithms are known for square-free factorization of polynomials (in short, the largest square-free factor of a polynomial is its quotient by the greatest common divisor of the polynomial and its formal derivative).[3]

Equivalent characterizations

A positive integer   is square-free if and only if in the prime factorization of  , no prime factor occurs with an exponent larger than one. Another way of stating the same is that for every prime factor   of  , the prime   does not evenly divide  . Also   is square-free if and only if in every factorization  , the factors   and   are coprime. An immediate result of this definition is that all prime numbers are square-free.

A positive integer   is square-free if and only if all abelian groups of order   are isomorphic, which is the case if and only if any such group is cyclic. This follows from the classification of finitely generated abelian groups.

A integer   is square-free if and only if the factor ring   (see modular arithmetic) is a product of fields. This follows from the Chinese remainder theorem and the fact that a ring of the form   is a field if and only if   is prime.

For every positive integer  , the set of all positive divisors of   becomes a partially ordered set if we use divisibility as the order relation. This partially ordered set is always a distributive lattice. It is a Boolean algebra if and only if   is square-free.

A positive integer   is square-free if and only if  , where   denotes the Möbius function.

Dirichlet series

The absolute value of the Möbius function is the indicator function for the square-free integers – that is, |μ(n)| is equal to 1 if n is square-free, and 0 if it is not. The Dirichlet series of this indicator function is

 

where ζ(s) is the Riemann zeta function. This follows from the Euler product

 

where the products are taken over the prime numbers.

Distribution

Let Q(x) denote the number of square-free integers between 1 and x (OEISA013928 shifting index by 1). For large n, 3/4 of the positive integers less than n are not divisible by 4, 8/9 of these numbers are not divisible by 9, and so on. Because these ratios satisfy the multiplicative property (this follows from Chinese remainder theorem), we obtain the approximation:

 

This argument can be made rigorous for getting the estimate (using big O notation)

 

Sketch of a proof: the above characterization gives

 

observing that the last summand is zero for  , it results that

 

By exploiting the largest known zero-free region of the Riemann zeta function Arnold Walfisz improved the approximation to[4]

 

for some positive constant c.

Under the Riemann hypothesis, the error term can be reduced to[5]

 

Recently (2015) the error term has been further reduced to[6]

 

The asymptotic/natural density of square-free numbers is therefore

 

Therefore over 3/5 of the integers are square-free.

Likewise, if Q(x,n) denotes the number of n-free integers (e.g. 3-free integers being cube-free integers) between 1 and x, one can show[7]

 

Since a multiple of 4 must have a square factor 4=22, it cannot occur that four consecutive integers are all square-free. On the other hand, there exist infinitely many integers n for which 4n +1, 4n +2, 4n +3 are all square-free. Otherwise, observing that 4n and at least one of 4n +1, 4n +2, 4n +3 among four could be non-square-free for sufficiently large n, half of all positive integers minus finitely many must be non-square-free and therefore

  for some constant C,

contrary to the above asymptotic estimate for  .

There exist sequences of consecutive non-square-free integers of arbitrary length. Indeed, if n satisfies a simultaneous congruence

 

for distinct primes  , then each   is divisible by pi 2.[8] On the other hand, the above-mentioned estimate   implies that, for some constant c, there always exists a square-free integer between x and   for positive x. Moreover, an elementary argument allows us to replace   by  [9] The ABC conjecture would allow  .[10]

Table of Q(x), 6/π2x, and R(x)

The table shows how   and   compare at powers of 10.

  , also denoted as  .

       
10 7 6.1 0.9
102 61 60.8 0.2
103 608 607.9 0.1
104 6,083 6,079.3 3.7
105 60,794 60,792.7 1.3
106 607,926 607,927.1 - 1.3
107 6,079,291 6,079,271.0 20.0
108 60,792,694 60,792,710.2 - 16.2
109 607,927,124 607,927,101.9 22.1
1010 6,079,270,942 6,079,271,018.5 - 76.5
1011 60,792,710,280 60,792,710,185.4 94.6
1012 607,927,102,274 607,927,101,854.0 420.0
1013 6,079,271,018,294 6,079,271,018,540.3 - 246.3
1014 60,792,710,185,947 60,792,710,185,402.7 544.3
1015 607,927,101,854,103 607,927,101,854,027.0 76.0

  changes its sign infinitely often as   tends to infinity.[11]

The absolute value of   is astonishingly small compared with  .

Encoding as binary numbers

If we represent a square-free number as the infinite product

 

then we may take those   and use them as bits in a binary number with the encoding

 

The square-free number 42 has factorization 2 × 3 × 7, or as an infinite product 21 · 31 · 50 · 71 · 110 · 130 ··· Thus the number 42 may be encoded as the binary sequence ...001011 or 11 decimal. (The binary digits are reversed from the ordering in the infinite product.)

Since the prime factorization of every number is unique, so also is every binary encoding of the square-free integers.

The converse is also true. Since every positive integer has a unique binary representation it is possible to reverse this encoding so that they may be decoded into a unique square-free integer.

Again, for example, if we begin with the number 42, this time as simply a positive integer, we have its binary representation 101010. This decodes to 20 · 31 · 50 · 71 · 110 · 131 = 3 × 7 × 13 = 273.

Thus binary encoding of squarefree numbers describes a bijection between the nonnegative integers and the set of positive squarefree integers.

(See sequences A019565, A048672 and A064273 in the OEIS.)

Erdős squarefree conjecture

The central binomial coefficient

 

is never squarefree for n > 4. This was proven in 1985 for all sufficiently large integers by András Sárközy,[12] and for all integers > 4 in 1996 by Olivier Ramaré and Andrew Granville.[13]

Squarefree core

Let us call "t-free" a positive integer that has no t-th power in its divisors. In particular, the 2-free integers are the square-free integers.

The multiplicative function   maps every positive integer n to the quotient of n by its largest divisor that is a t-th power. That is,

 

The integer   is t-free, and every t-free integer is mapped to itself by the function  

The Dirichlet generating function of the sequence   is

 .

See also OEISA007913 (t=2), OEISA050985 (t=3) and OEISA053165 (t=4).

Notes

  1. ^ Adleman, Leonard M.; McCurley, Kevin S. (1994). "Open problems in number theoretic complexity, II". In Adleman, Leonard M.; Huang, Ming-Deh A. (eds.). Algorithmic Number Theory, First International Symposium, ANTS-I, Ithaca, NY, USA, May 6–9, 1994, Proceedings. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 877. Springer. pp. 291–322. doi:10.1007/3-540-58691-1_70.
  2. ^ Agrawal, Manindra; Kayal, Neeraj; Saxena, Nitin (1 September 2004). "PRIMES is in P" (PDF). Annals of Mathematics. 160 (2): 781–793. doi:10.4007/annals.2004.160.781. ISSN 0003-486X. MR 2123939. Zbl 1071.11070.
  3. ^ Richards, Chelsea (2009). Algorithms for factoring square-free polynomials over finite fields (PDF) (Master's thesis). Canada: Simon Fraser University.
  4. ^ Walfisz, A. (1963). Weylsche Exponentialsummen in der neueren Zahlentheorie. Berlin: VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften.
  5. ^ Jia, Chao Hua. "The distribution of square-free numbers", Science in China Series A: Mathematics 36:2 (1993), pp. 154–169. Cited in Pappalardi 2003, A Survey on k-freeness; also see Kaneenika Sinha, "Average orders of certain arithmetical functions", Journal of the Ramanujan Mathematical Society 21:3 (2006), pp. 267–277.
  6. ^ Liu, H.-Q. (2016). "On the distribution of squarefree numbers". Journal of Number Theory. 159: 202–222. doi:10.1016/j.jnt.2015.07.013.
  7. ^ Linfoot, E. H.; Evelyn, C. J. A. (1929). "On a Problem in the Additive Theory of Numbers". Mathematische Zeitschrift. 30: 443–448. doi:10.1007/BF01187781. S2CID 120604049.
  8. ^ Parent, D. P. (1984). Exercises in Number Theory. Problem Books in Mathematics. Springer-Verlag New York. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-5194-9. ISBN 978-1-4757-5194-9.
  9. ^ Filaseta, Michael; Trifonov, Ognian (1992). "On gaps between squarefree numbers. II". Journal of the London Mathematical Society. Second Series. 45 (2): 215–221. doi:10.1112/jlms/s2-45.2.215. MR 1171549.
  10. ^ Andrew, Granville (1998). "ABC allows us to count squarefrees". Int. Math. Res. Not. 1998 (19): 991–1009. doi:10.1155/S1073792898000592.
  11. ^ Minoru, Tanaka (1979). "Experiments concerning the distribution of squarefree numbers". Proceedings of the Japan Academy, Series A, Mathematical Sciences. 55 (3). doi:10.3792/pjaa.55.101. S2CID 121862978.
  12. ^ Sárközy, A. (1985). "On divisors of binomial coefficients. I". Journal of Number Theory. 20 (1): 70–80. doi:10.1016/0022-314X(85)90017-4. MR 0777971.
  13. ^ Ramaré, Olivier; Granville, Andrew (1996). "Explicit bounds on exponential sums and the scarcity of squarefree binomial coefficients". Mathematika. 43 (1): 73–107. doi:10.1112/S0025579300011608.

References

square, free, integer, mathematics, square, free, integer, squarefree, integer, integer, which, divisible, square, number, other, than, that, prime, factorization, exactly, factor, each, prime, that, appears, example, square, free, because, divisible, smallest. In mathematics a square free integer or squarefree integer is an integer which is divisible by no square number other than 1 That is its prime factorization has exactly one factor for each prime that appears in it For example 10 2 5 is square free but 18 2 3 3 is not because 18 is divisible by 9 32 The smallest positive square free numbers are10 is square free as its divisors greater than 1 are 2 5 and 10 none of which is square the first few squares being 1 4 9 and 16 Square free integers up to 120 remain after eliminating multiples of squares of primes up to 120 1 2 3 5 6 7 10 11 13 14 15 17 19 21 22 23 26 29 30 31 33 34 35 37 38 39 sequence A005117 in the OEIS Contents 1 Square free factorization 2 Square free factors of integers 3 Equivalent characterizations 4 Dirichlet series 5 Distribution 5 1 Table of Q x 6 p2 x and R x 6 Encoding as binary numbers 7 Erdos squarefree conjecture 8 Squarefree core 9 Notes 10 ReferencesSquare free factorization EditEvery positive integer n displaystyle n can be factored in a unique way asn i 1 k q i i displaystyle n prod i 1 k q i i where the q i displaystyle q i different from one are square free integers that are pairwise coprime This is called the square free factorization of n To construct the square free factorization letn j 1 h p j e j displaystyle n prod j 1 h p j e j be the prime factorization of n displaystyle n where the p j displaystyle p j are distinct prime numbers Then the factors of the square free factorization are defined as q i j e j i p j displaystyle q i prod j e j i p j An integer is square free if and only if q i 1 displaystyle q i 1 for all i gt 1 displaystyle i gt 1 An integer greater than one is the k displaystyle k th power of another integer if and only if k displaystyle k is a divisor of all i displaystyle i such that q i 1 displaystyle q i neq 1 The use of the square free factorization of integers is limited by the fact that its computation is as difficult as the computation of the prime factorization More precisely every known algorithm for computing a square free factorization computes also the prime factorization This is a notable difference with the case of polynomials for which the same definitions can be given but in this case the square free factorization is not only easier to compute than the complete factorization but it is the first step of all standard factorization algorithms Square free factors of integers EditThe radical of an integer is its largest square free factor that is i 1 k q i displaystyle textstyle prod i 1 k q i with notation of the preceding section An integer is square free if and only if it is equal to its radical Every positive integer n displaystyle n can be represented in a unique way as the product of a powerful number that is an integer such that is divisible by the square of every prime factor and a square free integer which are coprime In this factorization the square free factor is q 1 displaystyle q 1 and the powerful number is i 2 k q i i displaystyle textstyle prod i 2 k q i i The square free part of n displaystyle n is q 1 displaystyle q 1 which is the largest square free divisor k displaystyle k of n displaystyle n that is coprime with n k displaystyle n k The square free part of an integer may be smaller than the largest square free divisor which is i 1 k q i displaystyle textstyle prod i 1 k q i Any arbitrary positive integer n displaystyle n can be represented in a unique way as the product of a square and a square free integer n m 2 k displaystyle n m 2 k In this factorization m displaystyle m is the largest divisor of n displaystyle n such that m 2 displaystyle m 2 is a divisor of n displaystyle n In summary there are three square free factors that are naturally associated to every integer the square free part the above factor k displaystyle k and the largest square free factor Each is a factor of the next one All are easily deduced from the prime factorization or the square free factorization ifn i 1 h p i e i i 1 k q i i displaystyle n prod i 1 h p i e i prod i 1 k q i i are the prime factorization and the square free factorization of n displaystyle n where p 1 p h displaystyle p 1 ldots p h are distinct prime numbers then the square free part is e i 1 p i q 1 displaystyle prod e i 1 p i q 1 The square free factor such the quotient is a square is e i odd p i i odd q i displaystyle prod e i text odd p i prod i text odd q i and the largest square free factor is i 1 h p i i 1 k q i displaystyle prod i 1 h p i prod i 1 k q i For example if n 75600 2 4 3 3 5 2 7 displaystyle n 75600 2 4 cdot 3 3 cdot 5 2 cdot 7 one has q 1 7 q 2 5 q 3 3 q 4 2 displaystyle q 1 7 q 2 5 q 3 3 q 4 2 The square free part is 7 the square free factor such that the quotient is a square is 3 7 21 and the largest square free factor is 2 3 5 7 210 No algorithm is known for computing any of these square free factors which is faster than computing the complete prime factorization In particular there is no known polynomial time algorithm for computing the square free part of an integer or even for determining whether an integer is square free 1 In contrast polynomial time algorithms are known for primality testing 2 This is a major difference between the arithmetic of the integers and the arithmetic of the univariate polynomials as polynomial time algorithms are known for square free factorization of polynomials in short the largest square free factor of a polynomial is its quotient by the greatest common divisor of the polynomial and its formal derivative 3 Equivalent characterizations EditA positive integer n displaystyle n is square free if and only if in the prime factorization of n displaystyle n no prime factor occurs with an exponent larger than one Another way of stating the same is that for every prime factor p displaystyle p of n displaystyle n the prime p displaystyle p does not evenly divide n p displaystyle n p Also n displaystyle n is square free if and only if in every factorization n a b displaystyle n ab the factors a displaystyle a and b displaystyle b are coprime An immediate result of this definition is that all prime numbers are square free A positive integer n displaystyle n is square free if and only if all abelian groups of order n displaystyle n are isomorphic which is the case if and only if any such group is cyclic This follows from the classification of finitely generated abelian groups A integer n displaystyle n is square free if and only if the factor ring Z n Z displaystyle mathbb Z n mathbb Z see modular arithmetic is a product of fields This follows from the Chinese remainder theorem and the fact that a ring of the form Z k Z displaystyle mathbb Z k mathbb Z is a field if and only if k displaystyle k is prime For every positive integer n displaystyle n the set of all positive divisors of n displaystyle n becomes a partially ordered set if we use divisibility as the order relation This partially ordered set is always a distributive lattice It is a Boolean algebra if and only if n displaystyle n is square free A positive integer n displaystyle n is square free if and only if m n 0 displaystyle mu n neq 0 where m displaystyle mu denotes the Mobius function Dirichlet series EditThe absolute value of the Mobius function is the indicator function for the square free integers that is m n is equal to 1 if n is square free and 0 if it is not The Dirichlet series of this indicator function is n 1 m n n s z s z 2 s displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac mu n n s frac zeta s zeta 2s where z s is the Riemann zeta function This follows from the Euler product z s z 2 s p 1 p 2 s 1 p s p 1 p s displaystyle frac zeta s zeta 2s prod p frac 1 p 2s 1 p s prod p 1 p s where the products are taken over the prime numbers Distribution EditLet Q x denote the number of square free integers between 1 and x OEIS A013928 shifting index by 1 For large n 3 4 of the positive integers less than n are not divisible by 4 8 9 of these numbers are not divisible by 9 and so on Because these ratios satisfy the multiplicative property this follows from Chinese remainder theorem we obtain the approximation Q x x p prime 1 1 p 2 x p prime 1 1 1 p 2 1 x p prime 1 1 1 p 2 1 p 4 x k 1 1 k 2 x z 2 6 x p 2 displaystyle begin aligned Q x amp approx x prod p text prime left 1 frac 1 p 2 right x prod p text prime frac 1 1 frac 1 p 2 1 amp approx x prod p text prime frac 1 1 frac 1 p 2 frac 1 p 4 cdots frac x sum k 1 infty frac 1 k 2 frac x zeta 2 frac 6x pi 2 end aligned This argument can be made rigorous for getting the estimate using big O notation Q x 6 x p 2 O x displaystyle Q x frac 6x pi 2 O left sqrt x right Sketch of a proof the above characterization gives Q x n x d 2 n m d d x m d n x d 2 n 1 d x m d x d 2 displaystyle Q x sum n leq x sum d 2 mid n mu d sum d leq x mu d sum n leq x d 2 mid n 1 sum d leq x mu d left lfloor frac x d 2 right rfloor observing that the last summand is zero for d gt x displaystyle d gt sqrt x it results that Q x d x m d x d 2 d x x m d d 2 O d x 1 x d x m d d 2 O x x d m d d 2 O x d gt x 1 d 2 x x z 2 O x displaystyle begin aligned Q x amp sum d leq sqrt x mu d left lfloor frac x d 2 right rfloor sum d leq sqrt x frac x mu d d 2 O left sum d leq sqrt x 1 right x sum d leq sqrt x frac mu d d 2 O sqrt x amp x sum d frac mu d d 2 O left x sum d gt sqrt x frac 1 d 2 sqrt x right frac x zeta 2 O sqrt x end aligned By exploiting the largest known zero free region of the Riemann zeta function Arnold Walfisz improved the approximation to 4 Q x 6 x p 2 O x 1 2 exp c log x 3 5 log log x 1 5 displaystyle Q x frac 6x pi 2 O left x 1 2 exp left c frac log x 3 5 log log x 1 5 right right for some positive constant c Under the Riemann hypothesis the error term can be reduced to 5 Q x x z 2 O x 17 54 e 6 p 2 x O x 17 54 e displaystyle Q x frac x zeta 2 O left x 17 54 varepsilon right frac 6 pi 2 x O left x 17 54 varepsilon right Recently 2015 the error term has been further reduced to 6 Q x 6 p 2 x O x 11 35 e displaystyle Q x frac 6 pi 2 x O left x 11 35 varepsilon right The asymptotic natural density of square free numbers is therefore lim x Q x x 6 p 2 0 6079 displaystyle lim x to infty frac Q x x frac 6 pi 2 approx 0 6079 Therefore over 3 5 of the integers are square free Likewise if Q x n denotes the number of n free integers e g 3 free integers being cube free integers between 1 and x one can show 7 Q x n x k 1 1 k n O x n x z n O x n displaystyle Q x n frac x sum k 1 infty frac 1 k n O left sqrt n x right frac x zeta n O left sqrt n x right Since a multiple of 4 must have a square factor 4 22 it cannot occur that four consecutive integers are all square free On the other hand there exist infinitely many integers n for which 4n 1 4n 2 4n 3 are all square free Otherwise observing that 4n and at least one of 4n 1 4n 2 4n 3 among four could be non square free for sufficiently large n half of all positive integers minus finitely many must be non square free and therefore Q x x 2 C displaystyle Q x leq frac x 2 C for some constant C contrary to the above asymptotic estimate for Q x displaystyle Q x There exist sequences of consecutive non square free integers of arbitrary length Indeed if n satisfies a simultaneous congruence n i mod p i 2 i 1 2 l displaystyle n equiv i pmod p i 2 qquad i 1 2 ldots l for distinct primes p 1 p 2 p l displaystyle p 1 p 2 ldots p l then each n i displaystyle n i is divisible by pi2 8 On the other hand the above mentioned estimate Q x 6 x p 2 O x displaystyle Q x 6x pi 2 O left sqrt x right implies that for some constant c there always exists a square free integer between x and x c x displaystyle x c sqrt x for positive x Moreover an elementary argument allows us to replace x c x displaystyle x c sqrt x by x c x 1 5 log x displaystyle x cx 1 5 log x 9 The ABC conjecture would allow x x o 1 displaystyle x x o 1 10 Table of Q x 6 p2 x and R x Edit The table shows how Q x displaystyle Q x and 6 p 2 x displaystyle frac 6 pi 2 x compare at powers of 10 R x Q x 6 p 2 x displaystyle R x Q x frac 6 pi 2 x also denoted as D x displaystyle Delta x x displaystyle x Q x displaystyle Q x 6 p 2 x displaystyle frac 6 pi 2 x R x displaystyle R x 10 7 6 1 0 9102 61 60 8 0 2103 608 607 9 0 1104 6 083 6 079 3 3 7105 60 794 60 792 7 1 3106 607 926 607 927 1 1 3107 6 079 291 6 079 271 0 20 0108 60 792 694 60 792 710 2 16 2109 607 927 124 607 927 101 9 22 11010 6 079 270 942 6 079 271 018 5 76 51011 60 792 710 280 60 792 710 185 4 94 61012 607 927 102 274 607 927 101 854 0 420 01013 6 079 271 018 294 6 079 271 018 540 3 246 31014 60 792 710 185 947 60 792 710 185 402 7 544 31015 607 927 101 854 103 607 927 101 854 027 0 76 0R x displaystyle R x changes its sign infinitely often as x displaystyle x tends to infinity 11 The absolute value of R x displaystyle R x is astonishingly small compared with x displaystyle x Encoding as binary numbers EditIf we represent a square free number as the infinite product n 0 p n 1 a n a n 0 1 and p n is the n th prime displaystyle prod n 0 infty p n 1 a n a n in lbrace 0 1 rbrace text and p n text is the n text th prime then we may take those a n displaystyle a n and use them as bits in a binary number with the encoding n 0 a n 2 n displaystyle sum n 0 infty a n cdot 2 n The square free number 42 has factorization 2 3 7 or as an infinite product 21 31 50 71 110 130 Thus the number 42 may be encoded as the binary sequence 001011 or 11 decimal The binary digits are reversed from the ordering in the infinite product Since the prime factorization of every number is unique so also is every binary encoding of the square free integers The converse is also true Since every positive integer has a unique binary representation it is possible to reverse this encoding so that they may be decoded into a unique square free integer Again for example if we begin with the number 42 this time as simply a positive integer we have its binary representation 101010 This decodes to 20 31 50 71 110 131 3 7 13 273 Thus binary encoding of squarefree numbers describes a bijection between the nonnegative integers and the set of positive squarefree integers See sequences A019565 A048672 and A064273 in the OEIS Erdos squarefree conjecture EditThe central binomial coefficient 2 n n displaystyle 2n choose n is never squarefree for n gt 4 This was proven in 1985 for all sufficiently large integers by Andras Sarkozy 12 and for all integers gt 4 in 1996 by Olivier Ramare and Andrew Granville 13 Squarefree core EditLet us call t free a positive integer that has no t th power in its divisors In particular the 2 free integers are the square free integers The multiplicative function c o r e t n displaystyle mathrm core t n maps every positive integer n to the quotient of n by its largest divisor that is a t th power That is c o r e t p e p e mod t displaystyle mathrm core t p e p e bmod t The integer c o r e t n displaystyle mathrm core t n is t free and every t free integer is mapped to itself by the function c o r e t displaystyle mathrm core t The Dirichlet generating function of the sequence c o r e t n n N displaystyle left mathrm core t n right n in mathbb N is n 1 c o r e t n n s z t s z s 1 z t s t displaystyle sum n geq 1 frac mathrm core t n n s frac zeta ts zeta s 1 zeta ts t See also OEIS A007913 t 2 OEIS A050985 t 3 and OEIS A053165 t 4 Notes Edit Adleman Leonard M McCurley Kevin S 1994 Open problems in number theoretic complexity II In Adleman Leonard M Huang Ming Deh A eds Algorithmic Number Theory First International Symposium ANTS I Ithaca NY USA May 6 9 1994 Proceedings Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 877 Springer pp 291 322 doi 10 1007 3 540 58691 1 70 Agrawal Manindra Kayal Neeraj Saxena Nitin 1 September 2004 PRIMES is in P PDF Annals of Mathematics 160 2 781 793 doi 10 4007 annals 2004 160 781 ISSN 0003 486X MR 2123939 Zbl 1071 11070 Richards Chelsea 2009 Algorithms for factoring square free polynomials over finite fields PDF Master s thesis Canada Simon Fraser University Walfisz A 1963 Weylsche Exponentialsummen in der neueren Zahlentheorie Berlin VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften Jia Chao Hua The distribution of square free numbers Science in China Series A Mathematics 36 2 1993 pp 154 169 Cited in Pappalardi 2003 A Survey on k freeness also see Kaneenika Sinha Average orders of certain arithmetical functions Journal of the Ramanujan Mathematical Society 21 3 2006 pp 267 277 Liu H Q 2016 On the distribution of squarefree numbers Journal of Number Theory 159 202 222 doi 10 1016 j jnt 2015 07 013 Linfoot E H Evelyn C J A 1929 On a Problem in the Additive Theory of Numbers Mathematische Zeitschrift 30 443 448 doi 10 1007 BF01187781 S2CID 120604049 Parent D P 1984 Exercises in Number Theory Problem Books in Mathematics Springer Verlag New York doi 10 1007 978 1 4757 5194 9 ISBN 978 1 4757 5194 9 Filaseta Michael Trifonov Ognian 1992 On gaps between squarefree numbers II Journal of the London Mathematical Society Second Series 45 2 215 221 doi 10 1112 jlms s2 45 2 215 MR 1171549 Andrew Granville 1998 ABC allows us to count squarefrees Int Math Res Not 1998 19 991 1009 doi 10 1155 S1073792898000592 Minoru Tanaka 1979 Experiments concerning the distribution of squarefree numbers Proceedings of the Japan Academy Series A Mathematical Sciences 55 3 doi 10 3792 pjaa 55 101 S2CID 121862978 Sarkozy A 1985 On divisors of binomial coefficients I Journal of Number Theory 20 1 70 80 doi 10 1016 0022 314X 85 90017 4 MR 0777971 Ramare Olivier Granville Andrew 1996 Explicit bounds on exponential sums and the scarcity of squarefree binomial coefficients Mathematika 43 1 73 107 doi 10 1112 S0025579300011608 References EditShapiro Harold N 1983 Introduction to the theory of numbers Oxford University Press Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 46669 9 Granville Andrew Ramare Olivier 1996 Explicit bounds on exponential sums and the scarcity of squarefree binomial coefficients Mathematika 43 73 107 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 55 8 doi 10 1112 S0025579300011608 MR 1401709 Zbl 0868 11009 Guy Richard K 2004 Unsolved problems in number theory 3rd ed Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 20860 2 Zbl 1058 11001 OEIS Wiki Retrieved 24 September 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Square free integer amp oldid 1136270059 Cube free integer, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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