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Möbius function

The Möbius function μ(n) is a multiplicative function in number theory introduced by the German mathematician August Ferdinand Möbius (also transliterated Moebius) in 1832.[i][ii][2] It is ubiquitous in elementary and analytic number theory and most often appears as part of its namesake the Möbius inversion formula. Following work of Gian-Carlo Rota in the 1960s, generalizations of the Möbius function were introduced into combinatorics, and are similarly denoted μ(x).

Möbius function
Named afterAugust Ferdinand Möbius
Publication year1832
Author of publicationAugust Ferdinand Möbius
No. of known termsinfinite
First terms1, −1, −1, 0, −1, 1, −1, 0, 0, 1
OEIS index
  • A008683
  • Möbius (or Moebius) function mu(n). mu(1) = 1; mu(n) = (-1)^k if n is the product of k different primes; otherwise mu(n) = 0.

Definition

For any positive integer n, define μ(n) as the sum of the primitive nth roots of unity. It has values in {−1, 0, 1} depending on the factorization of n into prime factors:

  • μ(n) = +1 if n is a square-free positive integer with an even number of prime factors.
  • μ(n) = −1 if n is a square-free positive integer with an odd number of prime factors.
  • μ(n) = 0 if n has a squared prime factor.

The Möbius function can alternatively be represented as

 

where δ is the Kronecker delta, λ(n) is the Liouville function, ω(n) is the number of distinct prime divisors of n, and Ω(n) is the number of prime factors of n, counted with multiplicity.

Values

The values of μ(n) for the first 50 positive numbers are

n 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
μ(n) 1 −1 −1 0 −1 1 −1 0 0 1
n 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
μ(n) −1 0 −1 1 1 0 −1 0 −1 0
n 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
μ(n) 1 1 −1 0 0 1 0 0 −1 −1
n 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
μ(n) −1 0 1 1 1 0 −1 1 1 0
n 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
μ(n) −1 −1 −1 0 0 1 −1 0 0 0


The first 50 values of the function are plotted below:

 

Larger values can be checked in:

  • Wolframalpha
  • the b-file of OEIS

Applications

Mathematical series

The Dirichlet series that generates the Möbius function is the (multiplicative) inverse of the Riemann zeta function; if s is a complex number with real part larger than 1 we have

 

This may be seen from its Euler product

 

Also:

  •  
  •  
  •   where   - Euler's constant.

The Lambert series for the Möbius function is:

 

which converges for |q| < 1. For prime α ≥ 2, we also have

 

Algebraic number theory

Gauss[1] proved that for a prime number p the sum of its primitive roots is congruent to μ(p − 1) (mod p).

If Fq denotes the finite field of order q (where q is necessarily a prime power), then the number N of monic irreducible polynomials of degree n over Fq is given by:[3]

 


Physics

The Möbius function also arises in the primon gas or free Riemann gas model of supersymmetry. In this theory, the fundamental particles or "primons" have energies log p. Under second quantization, multiparticle excitations are considered; these are given by log n for any natural number n. This follows from the fact that the factorization of the natural numbers into primes is unique.

In the free Riemann gas, any natural number can occur, if the primons are taken as bosons. If they are taken as fermions, then the Pauli exclusion principle excludes squares. The operator (−1)F that distinguishes fermions and bosons is then none other than the Möbius function μ(n).

The free Riemann gas has a number of other interesting connections to number theory, including the fact that the partition function is the Riemann zeta function. This idea underlies Alain Connes's attempted proof of the Riemann hypothesis.[4]


Properties

The Möbius function is multiplicative (i.e., μ(ab) = μ(a) μ(b)) whenever a and b are coprime.

The sum of the Möbius function over all positive divisors of n (including n itself and 1) is zero except when n = 1:

 

The equality above leads to the important Möbius inversion formula and is the main reason why μ is of relevance in the theory of multiplicative and arithmetic functions.

Other applications of μ(n) in combinatorics are connected with the use of the Pólya enumeration theorem in combinatorial groups and combinatorial enumerations.

There is a formula[5] for calculating the Möbius function without directly knowing the factorization of its argument:

 

i.e. μ(n) is the sum of the primitive n-th roots of unity. (However, the computational complexity of this definition is at least the same as that of the Euler product definition.)

Other identities satisfied by the Möbius function include

 

and

 .

The first of these is a classical result while the second was published in 2020.[6][7] Similar identities hold for the Mertens function.


Proof of the formula for Σd|n μ(d)

Using

 

the formula

 

can be seen as a consequence of the fact that the nth roots of unity sum to 0, since each nth root of unity is a primitive dth root of unity for exactly one divisor d of n.

However it is also possible to prove this identity from first principles. First note that it is trivially true when n = 1. Suppose then that n > 1. Then there is a bijection between the factors d of n for which μ(d) ≠ 0 and the subsets of the set of all prime factors of n. The asserted result follows from the fact that every non-empty finite set has an equal number of odd- and even-cardinality subsets.

This last fact can be shown easily by induction on the cardinality |S| of a non-empty finite set S. First, if |S| = 1, there is exactly one odd-cardinality subset of S, namely S itself, and exactly one even-cardinality subset, namely . Next, if |S| > 1, then divide the subsets of S into two subclasses depending on whether they contain or not some fixed element x in S. There is an obvious bijection between these two subclasses, pairing those subsets that have the same complement relative to the subset {x}. Also, one of these two subclasses consists of all the subsets of the set S \ {x}, and therefore, by the induction hypothesis, has an equal number of odd- and even-cardinality subsets. These subsets in turn correspond bijectively to the even- and odd-cardinality {x}-containing subsets of S. The inductive step follows directly from these two bijections.

A related result is that the binomial coefficients exhibit alternating entries of odd and even power which sum symmetrically.


Average order

The mean value (in the sense of average orders) of the Möbius function is zero. This statement is, in fact, equivalent to the prime number theorem.[8]

μ(n) sections

μ(n) = 0 if and only if n is divisible by the square of a prime. The first numbers with this property are

4, 8, 9, 12, 16, 18, 20, 24, 25, 27, 28, 32, 36, 40, 44, 45, 48, 49, 50, 52, 54, 56, 60, 63, ... (sequence A013929 in the OEIS).

If n is prime, then μ(n) = −1, but the converse is not true. The first non prime n for which μ(n) = −1 is 30 = 2 × 3 × 5. The first such numbers with three distinct prime factors (sphenic numbers) are

30, 42, 66, 70, 78, 102, 105, 110, 114, 130, 138, 154, 165, 170, 174, 182, 186, 190, 195, 222, ... (sequence A007304 in the OEIS).

and the first such numbers with 5 distinct prime factors are

2310, 2730, 3570, 3990, 4290, 4830, 5610, 6006, 6090, 6270, 6510, 6630, 7410, 7590, 7770, 7854, 8610, 8778, 8970, 9030, 9282, 9570, 9690, ... (sequence A046387 in the OEIS).


Mertens function

In number theory another arithmetic function closely related to the Möbius function is the Mertens function, defined by

 

for every natural number n. This function is closely linked with the positions of zeroes of the Riemann zeta function. See the article on the Mertens conjecture for more information about the connection between M(n) and the Riemann hypothesis.

From the formula

 

it follows that the Mertens function is given by:

 

where Fn is the Farey sequence of order n.

This formula is used in the proof of the Franel–Landau theorem.[9]

Generalizations

Incidence algebras

In combinatorics, every locally finite partially ordered set (poset) is assigned an incidence algebra. One distinguished member of this algebra is that poset's "Möbius function". The classical Möbius function treated in this article is essentially equal to the Möbius function of the set of all positive integers partially ordered by divisibility. See the article on incidence algebras for the precise definition and several examples of these general Möbius functions.

Popovici's function

Constantin Popovici[10] defined a generalised Möbius function μk = μ ∗ ... ∗ μ to be the k-fold Dirichlet convolution of the Möbius function with itself. It is thus again a multiplicative function with

 

where the binomial coefficient is taken to be zero if a > k. The definition may be extended to complex k by reading the binomial as a polynomial in k.[11]

Implementations

  • WOLFRAM MATHEMATICA has function MoebiusMu
  • Maxima CAS has function moebius (n)
  • geeksforgeeks has C++, Python3, Java, C#, PHP, Javascript implementations
  • Rosetta Code
  • Sage Moebius function

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Hardy & Wright, Notes on ch. XVI: "... μ(n) occurs implicitly in the works of Euler as early as 1748, but Möbius, in 1832, was the first to investigate its properties systematically". (Hardy & Wright 1980, Notes on ch. XVI)
  2. ^ In the Disquisitiones Arithmeticae (1801) Carl Friedrich Gauss showed that the sum of the primitive roots (mod p) is μ(p − 1), (see #Properties and applications) but he didn't make further use of the function. In particular, he didn't use Möbius inversion in the Disquisitiones.[1] The Disquisitiones Arithmeticae has been translated from Latin into English and German. The German edition includes all of his papers on number theory: all the proofs of quadratic reciprocity, the determination of the sign of the Gauss sum, the investigations into biquadratic reciprocity, and unpublished notes.

Citations

  1. ^ a b Gauss 1986, Art. 81.
  2. ^ Möbius 1832, pp. 105–123.
  3. ^ Jacobson 2009, §4.13.
  4. ^ Bost & Connes 1995, pp. 411–457.
  5. ^ Hardy & Wright 1980, (16.6.4), p. 239.
  6. ^ Apostol 1976.
  7. ^ Kline 2020.
  8. ^ Apostol 1976, §3.9.
  9. ^ Edwards 1974, Ch. 12.2.
  10. ^ Popovici 1963, pp. 493–499.
  11. ^ Sándor & Crstici 2004, p. 107.

Sources

  • Apostol, Tom M. (1976), Introduction to analytic number theory, Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics, New York; Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-90163-3, MR 0434929, Zbl 0335.10001
  • Bost, J.-B.; Connes, Alain (1995), "Hecke Algebras, Type III factors and phase transitions with spontaneous symmetry breaking in number theory", Selecta Mathematica, New Series, 1 (3): 411–457, doi:10.1007/BF01589495, S2CID 116418599
  • Deléglise, Marc; Rivat, Joël (1996), "Computing the summation of the Möbius function", Experimental Mathematics, 5 (4): 291–295, doi:10.1080/10586458.1996.10504594
  • Edwards, Harold (1974), Riemann's Zeta Function, Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-41740-9
  • Gauss, Carl Friedrich (1965), Untersuchungen uber hohere Arithmetik (Disquisitiones Arithemeticae & other papers on number theory), H. Maser (German translator) (2nd ed.), New York: Chelsea, ISBN 0-8284-0191-8
  • Gauss, Carl Friedrich (1986), Disquisitiones Arithemeticae, Arthur A. Clarke (English translator) (corrected 2nd ed.), New York: Springer, ISBN 0-387-96254-9
  • Hardy, G. H.; Wright, E. M. (1980) [First edition published 1938], An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers (5th ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-853171-5 – via Internet Archive
  • Kline, Jeffery (2020), "Unital Sums of the Möbius and Mertens Functions" (PDF), Journal of Integer Sequences, 23 (8): 1–17
  • Jacobson, Nathan (2009) [First published 1985], Basic algebra I (2nd ed.), Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-47189-1
  • Klimov, N. I. (2001) [1994], "Möbius function", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Möbius, A. F. (1832), "Über eine besondere Art von Umkehrung der Reihen", Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik, 9: 105–123
  • Pegg, Ed, Jr (2003), "The Möbius function (and squarefree numbers)", Ed Pegg's Math Games
  • Popovici, Constantin P. (1963), "A generalization of the Möbius function", Studii şi Cercetări Matematice, 14: 493–499, MR 0181602
  • Sándor, Jozsef; Crstici, Borislav (2004), Handbook of number theory II, Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic, ISBN 1-4020-2546-7, Zbl 1079.11001
  • Sándor, József; Mitrinović, Dragoslav S.; Crstici, Borislav, eds. (2006), Handbook of number theory I, Dordrecht: Springer-Verlag, pp. 187–226, ISBN 1-4020-4215-9, Zbl 1151.11300

External links

möbius, function, this, article, about, number, theoretic, combinatorial, incidence, algebra, rational, functions, defined, complex, numbers, möbius, transformation, multiplicative, function, number, theory, introduced, german, mathematician, august, ferdinand. This article is about the number theoretic Mobius function For the combinatorial Mobius function see incidence algebra For the rational functions defined on the complex numbers see Mobius transformation The Mobius function m n is a multiplicative function in number theory introduced by the German mathematician August Ferdinand Mobius also transliterated Moebius in 1832 i ii 2 It is ubiquitous in elementary and analytic number theory and most often appears as part of its namesake the Mobius inversion formula Following work of Gian Carlo Rota in the 1960s generalizations of the Mobius function were introduced into combinatorics and are similarly denoted m x Mobius functionNamed afterAugust Ferdinand MobiusPublication year1832Author of publicationAugust Ferdinand MobiusNo of known termsinfiniteFirst terms1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1OEIS indexA008683Mobius or Moebius function mu n mu 1 1 mu n 1 k if n is the product of k different primes otherwise mu n 0 Contents 1 Definition 2 Values 3 Applications 3 1 Mathematical series 3 2 Algebraic number theory 3 3 Physics 4 Properties 4 1 Proof of the formula for Sd n m d 4 2 Average order 4 3 m n sections 5 Mertens function 6 Generalizations 6 1 Incidence algebras 6 2 Popovici s function 7 Implementations 8 See also 9 Notes 9 1 Citations 10 Sources 11 External linksDefinition EditFor any positive integer n define m n as the sum of the primitive n th roots of unity It has values in 1 0 1 depending on the factorization of n into prime factors m n 1 if n is a square free positive integer with an even number of prime factors m n 1 if n is a square free positive integer with an odd number of prime factors m n 0 if n has a squared prime factor The Mobius function can alternatively be represented as m n d w n W n l n displaystyle mu n delta omega n Omega n lambda n where d is the Kronecker delta l n is the Liouville function w n is the number of distinct prime divisors of n and W n is the number of prime factors of n counted with multiplicity Values EditThe values of m n for the first 50 positive numbers are n 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10m n 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1n 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20m n 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0n 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30m n 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1n 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40m n 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0n 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50m n 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0The first 50 values of the function are plotted below Larger values can be checked in Wolframalpha the b file of OEISApplications EditMathematical series Edit The Dirichlet series that generates the Mobius function is the multiplicative inverse of the Riemann zeta function if s is a complex number with real part larger than 1 we have n 1 m n n s 1 z s displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac mu n n s frac 1 zeta s This may be seen from its Euler product 1 z s p prime 1 1 p s 1 1 2 s 1 1 3 s 1 1 5 s displaystyle frac 1 zeta s prod p text prime left 1 frac 1 p s right left 1 frac 1 2 s right left 1 frac 1 3 s right left 1 frac 1 5 s right cdots Also n 1 m n n s z s z 2 s displaystyle sum limits n 1 infty frac mu n n s frac zeta s zeta 2s n 1 m n ln n n 1 displaystyle sum limits n 1 infty frac mu n ln n n 1 n 1 m n ln 2 n n 2 g displaystyle sum limits n 1 infty frac mu n ln 2 n n 2 gamma where g displaystyle gamma Euler s constant The Lambert series for the Mobius function is n 1 m n q n 1 q n q displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac mu n q n 1 q n q which converges for q lt 1 For prime a 2 we also have n 1 m a n q n q n 1 n 0 q a n q lt 1 displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac mu alpha n q n q n 1 sum n geq 0 q alpha n q lt 1 Algebraic number theory Edit Gauss 1 proved that for a prime number p the sum of its primitive roots is congruent to m p 1 mod p If Fq denotes the finite field of order q where q is necessarily a prime power then the number N of monic irreducible polynomials of degree n over Fq is given by 3 N q n 1 n d n m d q n d displaystyle N q n frac 1 n sum d mid n mu d q frac n d Physics Edit The Mobius function also arises in the primon gas or free Riemann gas model of supersymmetry In this theory the fundamental particles or primons have energies log p Under second quantization multiparticle excitations are considered these are given by log n for any natural number n This follows from the fact that the factorization of the natural numbers into primes is unique In the free Riemann gas any natural number can occur if the primons are taken as bosons If they are taken as fermions then the Pauli exclusion principle excludes squares The operator 1 F that distinguishes fermions and bosons is then none other than the Mobius function m n The free Riemann gas has a number of other interesting connections to number theory including the fact that the partition function is the Riemann zeta function This idea underlies Alain Connes s attempted proof of the Riemann hypothesis 4 Properties EditThe Mobius function is multiplicative i e m ab m a m b whenever a and b are coprime The sum of the Mobius function over all positive divisors of n including n itself and 1 is zero except when n 1 d n m d 1 if n 1 0 if n gt 1 displaystyle sum d mid n mu d begin cases 1 amp text if n 1 0 amp text if n gt 1 end cases The equality above leads to the important Mobius inversion formula and is the main reason why m is of relevance in the theory of multiplicative and arithmetic functions Other applications of m n in combinatorics are connected with the use of the Polya enumeration theorem in combinatorial groups and combinatorial enumerations There is a formula 5 for calculating the Mobius function without directly knowing the factorization of its argument m n gcd k n 1 1 k n e 2 p i k n displaystyle mu n sum stackrel 1 leq k leq n gcd k n 1 e 2 pi i frac k n i e m n is the sum of the primitive n th roots of unity However the computational complexity of this definition is at least the same as that of the Euler product definition Other identities satisfied by the Mobius function include k n n k m k 1 displaystyle sum k leq n left lfloor frac n k right rfloor mu k 1 and j k n cos p j k 1 2 m k 1 displaystyle sum jk leq n cos left frac pi jk 1 2 right mu k 1 The first of these is a classical result while the second was published in 2020 6 7 Similar identities hold for the Mertens function Proof of the formula for Sd n m d Edit Using m n gcd k n 1 1 k n e 2 p i k n displaystyle mu n sum stackrel 1 leq k leq n gcd k n 1 e 2 pi i frac k n the formula d n m d 1 if n 1 0 if n gt 1 displaystyle sum d mid n mu d begin cases 1 amp text if n 1 0 amp text if n gt 1 end cases can be seen as a consequence of the fact that the n th roots of unity sum to 0 since each n th root of unity is a primitive d th root of unity for exactly one divisor d of n However it is also possible to prove this identity from first principles First note that it is trivially true when n 1 Suppose then that n gt 1 Then there is a bijection between the factors d of n for which m d 0 and the subsets of the set of all prime factors of n The asserted result follows from the fact that every non empty finite set has an equal number of odd and even cardinality subsets This last fact can be shown easily by induction on the cardinality S of a non empty finite set S First if S 1 there is exactly one odd cardinality subset of S namely S itself and exactly one even cardinality subset namely Next if S gt 1 then divide the subsets of S into two subclasses depending on whether they contain or not some fixed element x in S There is an obvious bijection between these two subclasses pairing those subsets that have the same complement relative to the subset x Also one of these two subclasses consists of all the subsets of the set S x and therefore by the induction hypothesis has an equal number of odd and even cardinality subsets These subsets in turn correspond bijectively to the even and odd cardinality x containing subsets of S The inductive step follows directly from these two bijections A related result is that the binomial coefficients exhibit alternating entries of odd and even power which sum symmetrically Average order Edit The mean value in the sense of average orders of the Mobius function is zero This statement is in fact equivalent to the prime number theorem 8 m n sections Edit m n 0 if and only if n is divisible by the square of a prime The first numbers with this property are 4 8 9 12 16 18 20 24 25 27 28 32 36 40 44 45 48 49 50 52 54 56 60 63 sequence A013929 in the OEIS If n is prime then m n 1 but the converse is not true The first non prime n for which m n 1 is 30 2 3 5 The first such numbers with three distinct prime factors sphenic numbers are 30 42 66 70 78 102 105 110 114 130 138 154 165 170 174 182 186 190 195 222 sequence A007304 in the OEIS and the first such numbers with 5 distinct prime factors are 2310 2730 3570 3990 4290 4830 5610 6006 6090 6270 6510 6630 7410 7590 7770 7854 8610 8778 8970 9030 9282 9570 9690 sequence A046387 in the OEIS Mertens function EditIn number theory another arithmetic function closely related to the Mobius function is the Mertens function defined by M n k 1 n m k displaystyle M n sum k 1 n mu k for every natural number n This function is closely linked with the positions of zeroes of the Riemann zeta function See the article on the Mertens conjecture for more information about the connection between M n and the Riemann hypothesis From the formula m n gcd k n 1 1 k n e 2 p i k n displaystyle mu n sum stackrel 1 leq k leq n gcd k n 1 e 2 pi i frac k n it follows that the Mertens function is given by M n 1 a F n e 2 p i a displaystyle M n 1 sum a in mathcal F n e 2 pi ia where F n is the Farey sequence of order n This formula is used in the proof of the Franel Landau theorem 9 Generalizations EditIncidence algebras Edit In combinatorics every locally finite partially ordered set poset is assigned an incidence algebra One distinguished member of this algebra is that poset s Mobius function The classical Mobius function treated in this article is essentially equal to the Mobius function of the set of all positive integers partially ordered by divisibility See the article on incidence algebras for the precise definition and several examples of these general Mobius functions Popovici s function Edit Constantin Popovici 10 defined a generalised Mobius function mk m m to be the k fold Dirichlet convolution of the Mobius function with itself It is thus again a multiplicative function with m k p a 1 a k a displaystyle mu k left p a right 1 a binom k a where the binomial coefficient is taken to be zero if a gt k The definition may be extended to complex k by reading the binomial as a polynomial in k 11 Implementations EditWOLFRAM MATHEMATICA has function MoebiusMu Maxima CAS has function moebius n geeksforgeeks has C Python3 Java C PHP Javascript implementations Rosetta Code Sage Moebius functionSee also EditLiouville function Mertens function Ramanujan s sum Sphenic numberNotes Edit Hardy amp Wright Notes on ch XVI m n occurs implicitly in the works of Euler as early as 1748 but Mobius in 1832 was the first to investigate its properties systematically Hardy amp Wright 1980 Notes on ch XVI In the Disquisitiones Arithmeticae 1801 Carl Friedrich Gauss showed that the sum of the primitive roots mod p is m p 1 see Properties and applications but he didn t make further use of the function In particular he didn t use Mobius inversion in the Disquisitiones 1 The Disquisitiones Arithmeticae has been translated from Latin into English and German The German edition includes all of his papers on number theory all the proofs of quadratic reciprocity the determination of the sign of the Gauss sum the investigations into biquadratic reciprocity and unpublished notes Citations Edit a b Gauss 1986 Art 81 Mobius 1832 pp 105 123 Jacobson 2009 4 13 Bost amp Connes 1995 pp 411 457 Hardy amp Wright 1980 16 6 4 p 239 Apostol 1976 Kline 2020 Apostol 1976 3 9 Edwards 1974 Ch 12 2 Popovici 1963 pp 493 499 Sandor amp Crstici 2004 p 107 Sources EditApostol Tom M 1976 Introduction to analytic number theory Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics New York Heidelberg Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90163 3 MR 0434929 Zbl 0335 10001 Bost J B Connes Alain 1995 Hecke Algebras Type III factors and phase transitions with spontaneous symmetry breaking in number theory Selecta Mathematica New Series 1 3 411 457 doi 10 1007 BF01589495 S2CID 116418599 Deleglise Marc Rivat Joel 1996 Computing the summation of the Mobius function Experimental Mathematics 5 4 291 295 doi 10 1080 10586458 1996 10504594 Edwards Harold 1974 Riemann s Zeta Function Mineola New York Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 41740 9 Gauss Carl Friedrich 1965 Untersuchungen uber hohere Arithmetik Disquisitiones Arithemeticae amp other papers on number theory H Maser German translator 2nd ed New York Chelsea ISBN 0 8284 0191 8 Gauss Carl Friedrich 1986 Disquisitiones Arithemeticae Arthur A Clarke English translator corrected 2nd ed New York Springer ISBN 0 387 96254 9 Hardy G H Wright E M 1980 First edition published 1938 An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers 5th ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 853171 5 via Internet Archive Kline Jeffery 2020 Unital Sums of the Mobius and Mertens Functions PDF Journal of Integer Sequences 23 8 1 17 Jacobson Nathan 2009 First published 1985 Basic algebra I 2nd ed Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 47189 1 Klimov N I 2001 1994 Mobius function Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Mobius A F 1832 Uber eine besondere Art von Umkehrung der Reihen Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 9 105 123 Pegg Ed Jr 2003 The Mobius function and squarefree numbers Ed Pegg s Math Games Popovici Constantin P 1963 A generalization of the Mobius function Studii si Cercetări Matematice 14 493 499 MR 0181602 Sandor Jozsef Crstici Borislav 2004 Handbook of number theory II Dordrecht Kluwer Academic ISBN 1 4020 2546 7 Zbl 1079 11001 Sandor Jozsef Mitrinovic Dragoslav S Crstici Borislav eds 2006 Handbook of number theory I Dordrecht Springer Verlag pp 187 226 ISBN 1 4020 4215 9 Zbl 1151 11300External links EditWeisstein Eric W Mobius function MathWorld Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mobius function amp oldid 1127945768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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