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Prime number theorem

In mathematics, the prime number theorem (PNT) describes the asymptotic distribution of the prime numbers among the positive integers. It formalizes the intuitive idea that primes become less common as they become larger by precisely quantifying the rate at which this occurs. The theorem was proved independently by Jacques Hadamard[1] and Charles Jean de la Vallée Poussin[2] in 1896 using ideas introduced by Bernhard Riemann (in particular, the Riemann zeta function).

The first such distribution found is π(N) ~ N/log(N), where π(N) is the prime-counting function (the number of primes less than or equal to N) and log(N) is the natural logarithm of N. This means that for large enough N, the probability that a random integer not greater than N is prime is very close to 1 / log(N). Consequently, a random integer with at most 2n digits (for large enough n) is about half as likely to be prime as a random integer with at most n digits. For example, among the positive integers of at most 1000 digits, about one in 2300 is prime (log(101000) ≈ 2302.6), whereas among positive integers of at most 2000 digits, about one in 4600 is prime (log(102000) ≈ 4605.2). In other words, the average gap between consecutive prime numbers among the first N integers is roughly log(N).[3]

Statement edit

 
Graph showing ratio of the prime-counting function π(x) to two of its approximations, x / log x and Li(x). As x increases (note x axis is logarithmic), both ratios tend towards 1. The ratio for x / log x converges from above very slowly, while the ratio for Li(x) converges more quickly from below.
 
Log-log plot showing absolute error of x / log x and Li(x), two approximations to the prime-counting function π(x). Unlike the ratio, the difference between π(x) and x / log x increases without bound as x increases. On the other hand, Li(x) − π(x) switches sign infinitely many times.

Let π(x) be the prime-counting function defined to be the number of primes less than or equal to x, for any real number x. For example, π(10) = 4 because there are four prime numbers (2, 3, 5 and 7) less than or equal to 10. The prime number theorem then states that x / log x is a good approximation to π(x) (where log here means the natural logarithm), in the sense that the limit of the quotient of the two functions π(x) and x / log x as x increases without bound is 1:

 

known as the asymptotic law of distribution of prime numbers. Using asymptotic notation this result can be restated as

 

This notation (and the theorem) does not say anything about the limit of the difference of the two functions as x increases without bound. Instead, the theorem states that x / log x approximates π(x) in the sense that the relative error of this approximation approaches 0 as x increases without bound.

The prime number theorem is equivalent to the statement that the nth prime number pn satisfies

 

the asymptotic notation meaning, again, that the relative error of this approximation approaches 0 as n increases without bound. For example, the 2×1017th prime number is 8512677386048191063,[4] and (2×1017)log(2×1017) rounds to 7967418752291744388, a relative error of about 6.4%.

On the other hand, the following asymptotic relations are logically equivalent:[5]

 

As outlined below, the prime number theorem is also equivalent to

 

where ϑ and ψ are the first and the second Chebyshev functions respectively, and to

 [6]

where   is the Mertens function.

History of the proof of the asymptotic law of prime numbers edit

Based on the tables by Anton Felkel and Jurij Vega, Adrien-Marie Legendre conjectured in 1797 or 1798 that π(a) is approximated by the function a / (A log a + B), where A and B are unspecified constants. In the second edition of his book on number theory (1808) he then made a more precise conjecture, with A = 1 and B = −1.08366. Carl Friedrich Gauss considered the same question at age 15 or 16 "in the year 1792 or 1793", according to his own recollection in 1849.[7] In 1838 Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet came up with his own approximating function, the logarithmic integral li(x) (under the slightly different form of a series, which he communicated to Gauss). Both Legendre's and Dirichlet's formulas imply the same conjectured asymptotic equivalence of π(x) and x / log(x) stated above, although it turned out that Dirichlet's approximation is considerably better if one considers the differences instead of quotients.

In two papers from 1848 and 1850, the Russian mathematician Pafnuty Chebyshev attempted to prove the asymptotic law of distribution of prime numbers. His work is notable for the use of the zeta function ζ(s), for real values of the argument "s", as in works of Leonhard Euler, as early as 1737. Chebyshev's papers predated Riemann's celebrated memoir of 1859, and he succeeded in proving a slightly weaker form of the asymptotic law, namely, that if the limit as x goes to infinity of π(x) / (x / log(x)) exists at all, then it is necessarily equal to one.[8] He was able to prove unconditionally that this ratio is bounded above and below by two explicitly given constants near 1, for all sufficiently large x.[9] Although Chebyshev's paper did not prove the Prime Number Theorem, his estimates for π(x) were strong enough for him to prove Bertrand's postulate that there exists a prime number between n and 2n for any integer n ≥ 2.

An important paper concerning the distribution of prime numbers was Riemann's 1859 memoir "On the Number of Primes Less Than a Given Magnitude", the only paper he ever wrote on the subject. Riemann introduced new ideas into the subject, chiefly that the distribution of prime numbers is intimately connected with the zeros of the analytically extended Riemann zeta function of a complex variable. In particular, it is in this paper that the idea to apply methods of complex analysis to the study of the real function π(x) originates. Extending Riemann's ideas, two proofs of the asymptotic law of the distribution of prime numbers were found independently by Jacques Hadamard[1] and Charles Jean de la Vallée Poussin[2] and appeared in the same year (1896). Both proofs used methods from complex analysis, establishing as a main step of the proof that the Riemann zeta function ζ(s) is nonzero for all complex values of the variable s that have the form s = 1 + it with t > 0.[10]

During the 20th century, the theorem of Hadamard and de la Vallée Poussin also became known as the Prime Number Theorem. Several different proofs of it were found, including the "elementary" proofs of Atle Selberg[11] and Paul Erdős[12] (1949). Hadamard's and de la Vallée Poussin's original proofs are long and elaborate; later proofs introduced various simplifications through the use of Tauberian theorems but remained difficult to digest. A short proof was discovered in 1980 by the American mathematician Donald J. Newman.[13][14] Newman's proof is arguably the simplest known proof of the theorem, although it is non-elementary in the sense that it uses Cauchy's integral theorem from complex analysis.

Proof sketch edit

Here is a sketch of the proof referred to in one of Terence Tao's lectures.[15] Like most proofs of the PNT, it starts out by reformulating the problem in terms of a less intuitive, but better-behaved, prime-counting function. The idea is to count the primes (or a related set such as the set of prime powers) with weights to arrive at a function with smoother asymptotic behavior. The most common such generalized counting function is the Chebyshev function ψ(x), defined by

 

This is sometimes written as

 

where Λ(n) is the von Mangoldt function, namely

 

It is now relatively easy to check that the PNT is equivalent to the claim that

 

Indeed, this follows from the easy estimates

 

and (using big O notation) for any ε > 0,

 

The next step is to find a useful representation for ψ(x). Let ζ(s) be the Riemann zeta function. It can be shown that ζ(s) is related to the von Mangoldt function Λ(n), and hence to ψ(x), via the relation

 

A delicate analysis of this equation and related properties of the zeta function, using the Mellin transform and Perron's formula, shows that for non-integer x the equation

 

holds, where the sum is over all zeros (trivial and nontrivial) of the zeta function. This striking formula is one of the so-called explicit formulas of number theory, and is already suggestive of the result we wish to prove, since the term x (claimed to be the correct asymptotic order of ψ(x)) appears on the right-hand side, followed by (presumably) lower-order asymptotic terms.

The next step in the proof involves a study of the zeros of the zeta function. The trivial zeros −2, −4, −6, −8, ... can be handled separately:

 

which vanishes for large x. The nontrivial zeros, namely those on the critical strip 0 ≤ Re(s) ≤ 1, can potentially be of an asymptotic order comparable to the main term x if Re(ρ) = 1, so we need to show that all zeros have real part strictly less than 1.

Non-vanishing on Re(s) = 1 edit

To do this, we take for granted that ζ(s) is meromorphic in the half-plane Re(s) > 0, and is analytic there except for a simple pole at s = 1, and that there is a product formula

 

for Re(s) > 1. This product formula follows from the existence of unique prime factorization of integers, and shows that ζ(s) is never zero in this region, so that its logarithm is defined there and

 

Write s = x + iy ; then

 

Now observe the identity

 

so that

 

for all x > 1. Suppose now that ζ(1 + iy) = 0. Certainly y is not zero, since ζ(s) has a simple pole at s = 1. Suppose that x > 1 and let x tend to 1 from above. Since   has a simple pole at s = 1 and ζ(x + 2iy) stays analytic, the left hand side in the previous inequality tends to 0, a contradiction.

Finally, we can conclude that the PNT is heuristically true. To rigorously complete the proof there are still serious technicalities to overcome, due to the fact that the summation over zeta zeros in the explicit formula for ψ(x) does not converge absolutely but only conditionally and in a "principal value" sense. There are several ways around this problem but many of them require rather delicate complex-analytic estimates. Edwards's book[16] provides the details. Another method is to use Ikehara's Tauberian theorem, though this theorem is itself quite hard to prove. D.J. Newman observed that the full strength of Ikehara's theorem is not needed for the prime number theorem, and one can get away with a special case that is much easier to prove.

Newman's proof of the prime number theorem edit

D. J. Newman gives a quick proof of the prime number theorem (PNT). The proof is "non-elementary" by virtue of relying on complex analysis, but uses only elementary techniques from a first course in the subject: Cauchy's integral formula, Cauchy's integral theorem and estimates of complex integrals. Here is a brief sketch of this proof. See [14] for the complete details.

The proof uses the same preliminaries as in the previous section except instead of the function  , the Chebyshev function  is used, which is obtained by dropping some of the terms from the series for  . It is easy to show that the PNT is equivalent to  . Likewise instead of   the function   is used, which is obtained by dropping some terms in the series for  . The functions   and   differ by a function holomorphic on  . Since, as was shown in the previous section,   has no zeroes on the line   ,   has no singularities on  .

One further piece of information needed in Newman's proof, and which is the key to the estimates in his simple method, is that   is bounded. This is proved using an ingenious and easy method due to Chebyshev.

Integration by parts shows how   and   are related. For  ,

 

Newman's method proves the PNT by showing the integral

 

converges, and therefore the integrand goes to zero as  , which is the PNT. In general, the convergence of the improper integral does not imply that the integrand goes to zero at infinity, since it may oscillate, but since   is increasing, it is easy to show in this case.

To show the convergence of  , for   let

  and   where  

then

 

which is equal to a function holomorphic on the line   .

The convergence of the integral  , and thus the PNT, is proved by showing that  . This involves change of order of limits since it can be written   and therefore classified as a Tauberian theorem.

The difference   is expressed using Cauchy's integral formula and then shown to be small for   large by estimating the integrand. Fix   and   such that   is holomorphic in the region where  , and let   be the boundary of this region. Since 0 is in the interior of the region, Cauchy's integral formula gives

 

where   is the factor introduced by Newman, which does not change the integral since   is entire and  .

To estimate the integral, break the contour   into two parts,   where   and  . Then  where  . Since  , and hence  , is bounded, let   be an upper bound for the absolute value of  . This bound together with the estimate   for   gives that the first integral in absolute value is  . The integrand over   in the second integral is entire, so by Cauchy's integral theorem, the contour   can be modified to a semicircle of radius   in the left half-plane without changing the integral, and the same argument as for the first integral gives the absolute value of the second integral is  . Finally, letting   , the third integral goes to zero since   and hence   goes to zero on the contour. Combining the two estimates and the limit get

 

This holds for any   so  , and the PNT follows.

Prime-counting function in terms of the logarithmic integral edit

In a handwritten note on a reprint of his 1838 paper "Sur l'usage des séries infinies dans la théorie des nombres", which he mailed to Gauss, Dirichlet conjectured (under a slightly different form appealing to a series rather than an integral) that an even better approximation to π(x) is given by the offset logarithmic integral function Li(x), defined by

 

Indeed, this integral is strongly suggestive of the notion that the "density" of primes around t should be 1 / log t. This function is related to the logarithm by the asymptotic expansion

 

So, the prime number theorem can also be written as π(x) ~ Li(x). In fact, in another paper[17] in 1899 de la Vallée Poussin proved that

 

for some positive constant a, where O(...) is the big O notation. This has been improved to

  where  .[18]

In 2016, Trudgian proved an explicit upper bound for the difference between   and  :

 

for  .[19]

The connection between the Riemann zeta function and π(x) is one reason the Riemann hypothesis has considerable importance in number theory: if established, it would yield a far better estimate of the error involved in the prime number theorem than is available today. More specifically, Helge von Koch showed in 1901[20] that if the Riemann hypothesis is true, the error term in the above relation can be improved to

 

(this last estimate is in fact equivalent to the Riemann hypothesis). The constant involved in the big O notation was estimated in 1976 by Lowell Schoenfeld:[21] assuming the Riemann hypothesis,

 

for all x ≥ 2657. He also derived a similar bound for the Chebyshev prime-counting function ψ:

 

for all x ≥ 73.2 . This latter bound has been shown to express a variance to mean power law (when regarded as a random function over the integers) and 1/f noise and to also correspond to the Tweedie compound Poisson distribution. (The Tweedie distributions represent a family of scale invariant distributions that serve as foci of convergence for a generalization of the central limit theorem.[22])

The logarithmic integral li(x) is larger than π(x) for "small" values of x. This is because it is (in some sense) counting not primes, but prime powers, where a power pn of a prime p is counted as 1/n of a prime. This suggests that li(x) should usually be larger than π(x) by roughly   and in particular should always be larger than π(x). However, in 1914, J. E. Littlewood proved that   changes sign infinitely often.[23] The first value of x where π(x) exceeds li(x) is probably around x ~ 10316 ; see the article on Skewes' number for more details. (On the other hand, the offset logarithmic integral Li(x) is smaller than π(x) already for x = 2; indeed, Li(2) = 0, while π(2) = 1.)

Elementary proofs edit

In the first half of the twentieth century, some mathematicians (notably G. H. Hardy) believed that there exists a hierarchy of proof methods in mathematics depending on what sorts of numbers (integers, reals, complex) a proof requires, and that the prime number theorem (PNT) is a "deep" theorem by virtue of requiring complex analysis.[24] This belief was somewhat shaken by a proof of the PNT based on Wiener's tauberian theorem, though this could be set aside if Wiener's theorem were deemed to have a "depth" equivalent to that of complex variable methods.

In March 1948, Atle Selberg established, by "elementary" means, the asymptotic formula

 

where

 

for primes p.[11] By July of that year, Selberg and Paul Erdős[12] had each obtained elementary proofs of the PNT, both using Selberg's asymptotic formula as a starting point.[24][25] These proofs effectively laid to rest the notion that the PNT was "deep" in that sense, and showed that technically "elementary" methods were more powerful than had been believed to be the case. On the history of the elementary proofs of the PNT, including the Erdős–Selberg priority dispute, see an article by Dorian Goldfeld.[24]

There is some debate about the significance of Erdős and Selberg's result. There is no rigorous and widely accepted definition of the notion of elementary proof in number theory, so it is not clear exactly in what sense their proof is "elementary". Although it does not use complex analysis, it is in fact much more technical than the standard proof of PNT. One possible definition of an "elementary" proof is "one that can be carried out in first-order Peano arithmetic." There are number-theoretic statements (for example, the Paris–Harrington theorem) provable using second order but not first-order methods, but such theorems are rare to date. Erdős and Selberg's proof can certainly be formalized in Peano arithmetic, and in 1994, Charalambos Cornaros and Costas Dimitracopoulos proved that their proof can be formalized in a very weak fragment of PA, namely IΔ0 + exp.[26] However, this does not address the question of whether or not the standard proof of PNT can be formalized in PA.

Computer verifications edit

In 2005, Avigad et al. employed the Isabelle theorem prover to devise a computer-verified variant of the Erdős–Selberg proof of the PNT.[27] This was the first machine-verified proof of the PNT. Avigad chose to formalize the Erdős–Selberg proof rather than an analytic one because while Isabelle's library at the time could implement the notions of limit, derivative, and transcendental function, it had almost no theory of integration to speak of.[27]: 19 

In 2009, John Harrison employed HOL Light to formalize a proof employing complex analysis.[28] By developing the necessary analytic machinery, including the Cauchy integral formula, Harrison was able to formalize "a direct, modern and elegant proof instead of the more involved 'elementary' Erdős–Selberg argument".

Prime number theorem for arithmetic progressions edit

Let πd,a(x) denote the number of primes in the arithmetic progression a, a + d, a + 2d, a + 3d, ... that are less than x. Dirichlet and Legendre conjectured, and de la Vallée Poussin proved, that if a and d are coprime, then

 

where φ is Euler's totient function. In other words, the primes are distributed evenly among the residue classes [a] modulo d with gcd(a, d) = 1 . This is stronger than Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions (which only states that there is an infinity of primes in each class) and can be proved using similar methods used by Newman for his proof of the prime number theorem.[29]

The Siegel–Walfisz theorem gives a good estimate for the distribution of primes in residue classes.

Bennett et al. [30] proved the following estimate that has explicit constants A and B (Theorem 1.3): Let d   be an integer and let a be an integer that is coprime to d. Then there are positive constants A and B such that

 

where

 

and

 

Prime number race edit

 
Plot of the function   for n ≤ 30000

Although we have in particular

 

empirically the primes congruent to 3 are more numerous and are nearly always ahead in this "prime number race"; the first reversal occurs at x = 26861.[31]: 1–2  However Littlewood showed in 1914[31]: 2  that there are infinitely many sign changes for the function

 

so the lead in the race switches back and forth infinitely many times. The phenomenon that π4,3(x) is ahead most of the time is called Chebyshev's bias. The prime number race generalizes to other moduli and is the subject of much research; Pál Turán asked whether it is always the case that π(x;a,c) and π(x;b,c) change places when a and b are coprime to c.[32] Granville and Martin give a thorough exposition and survey.[31]

 
Graph of the number of primes ending in 1, 3, 7, and 9 up to n for n < 10,000

Another example is the distribution of the last digit of prime numbers. Except for 2 and 5, all prime numbers end in 1, 3, 7, or 9. Dirichlet's theorem states that asymptotically, 25% of all primes end in each of these four digits. However, empirical evidence shows that the number of primes that end in 3 or 7 less than n tends to be slightly bigger than the number of primes that end in 1 or 9 less than n (a generation of the Chebyshev's bias).[33] This follows that 1 and 9 are quadratic residues modulo 10, and 3 and 7 are quadratic nonresidues modulo 10.

Non-asymptotic bounds on the prime-counting function edit

The prime number theorem is an asymptotic result. It gives an ineffective bound on π(x) as a direct consequence of the definition of the limit: for all ε > 0, there is an S such that for all x > S,

 

However, better bounds on π(x) are known, for instance Pierre Dusart's

 

The first inequality holds for all x ≥ 599 and the second one for x ≥ 355991.[34]

A weaker but sometimes useful bound for x ≥ 55 is[35]

 

In Pierre Dusart's thesis there are stronger versions of this type of inequality that are valid for larger x. Later in 2010, Dusart proved:[36]

 

The proof by de la Vallée Poussin implies the following: For every ε > 0, there is an S such that for all x > S,

 

Approximations for the nth prime number edit

As a consequence of the prime number theorem, one gets an asymptotic expression for the nth prime number, denoted by pn:

 

A better approximation is[37]

 

Again considering the 2×1017th prime number 8512677386048191063, this gives an estimate of 8512681315554715386; the first 5 digits match and relative error is about 0.00005%.

Rosser's theorem states that

 

This can be improved by the following pair of bounds:[35] [38]

 

Table of π(x), x / log x, and li(x) edit

The table compares exact values of π(x) to the two approximations x / log x and li(x). The last column, x / π(x), is the average prime gap below x.

x π(x) π(x) − x/log x π(x)/x / log x li(x) − π(x) x/π(x)
10 4 −0.3 0.921 2.2 2.500
102 25 3.3 1.151 5.1 4.000
103 168 23.0 1.161 10.0 5.952
104 1229 143.0 1.132 17.0 8.137
105 9592 906.0 1.104 38.0 10.425
106 78498 6116.0 1.084 130.0 12.740
107 664579 44158.0 1.071 339.0 15.047
108 5761455 332774.0 1.061 754.0 17.357
109 50847534 2592592.0 1.054 1701.0 19.667
1010 455052511 20758029.0 1.048 3104.0 21.975
1011 4118054813 169923159.0 1.043 11588.0 24.283
1012 37607912018 1416705193.0 1.039 38263.0 26.590
1013 346065536839 11992858452.0 1.034 108971.0 28.896
1014 3204941750802 102838308636.0 1.033 314890.0 31.202
1015 29844570422669 891604962452.0 1.031 1052619.0 33.507
1016 279238341033925 7804289844393.0 1.029 3214632.0 35.812
1017 2623557157654233 68883734693281.0 1.027 7956589.0 38.116
1018 24739954287740860 612483070893536.0 1.025 21949555.0 40.420
1019 234057667276344607 5481624169369960.0 1.024 99877775.0 42.725
1020 2220819602560918840 49347193044659701.0 1.023 222744644.0 45.028
1021 21127269486018731928 446579871578168707.0 1.022 597394254.0 47.332
1022 201467286689315906290 4060704006019620994.0 1.021 1932355208.0 49.636
1023 1925320391606803968923 37083513766578631309.0 1.020 7250186216.0 51.939
1024 18435599767349200867866 339996354713708049069.0 1.019 17146907278.0 54.243
1025 176846309399143769411680 3128516637843038351228.0 1.018 55160980939.0 56.546
OEIS A006880 A057835 A057752

The value for π(1024) was originally computed assuming the Riemann hypothesis;[39] it has since been verified unconditionally.[40]

Analogue for irreducible polynomials over a finite field edit

There is an analogue of the prime number theorem that describes the "distribution" of irreducible polynomials over a finite field; the form it takes is strikingly similar to the case of the classical prime number theorem.

To state it precisely, let F = GF(q) be the finite field with q elements, for some fixed q, and let Nn be the number of monic irreducible polynomials over F whose degree is equal to n. That is, we are looking at polynomials with coefficients chosen from F, which cannot be written as products of polynomials of smaller degree. In this setting, these polynomials play the role of the prime numbers, since all other monic polynomials are built up of products of them. One can then prove that

 

If we make the substitution x = qn, then the right hand side is just

 

which makes the analogy clearer. Since there are precisely qn monic polynomials of degree n (including the reducible ones), this can be rephrased as follows: if a monic polynomial of degree n is selected randomly, then the probability of it being irreducible is about 1/n.

One can even prove an analogue of the Riemann hypothesis, namely that

 

The proofs of these statements are far simpler than in the classical case. It involves a short, combinatorial argument,[41] summarised as follows: every element of the degree n extension of F is a root of some irreducible polynomial whose degree d divides n; by counting these roots in two different ways one establishes that

 

where the sum is over all divisors d of n. Möbius inversion then yields

 

where μ(k) is the Möbius function. (This formula was known to Gauss.) The main term occurs for d = n, and it is not difficult to bound the remaining terms. The "Riemann hypothesis" statement depends on the fact that the largest proper divisor of n can be no larger than n/2.

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Hadamard, Jacques (1896), , Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France, 24, Société Mathématique de France: 199–220, archived from the original on 2012-07-17
  2. ^ a b de la Vallée Poussin, Charles-Jean (1896), "Recherches analytiques sur la théorie des nombres premiers.", Annales de la Société scientifique de Bruxelles, 20 B, 21 B, Imprimeur de l'Académie Royale de Belgique: 183–256, 281–352, 363–397, 351–368
  3. ^ Hoffman, Paul (1998). The Man Who Loved Only Numbers. New York: Hyperion Books. p. 227. ISBN 978-0-7868-8406-3. MR 1666054.
  4. ^ "Prime Curios!: 8512677386048191063". Prime Curios!. University of Tennessee at Martin. 2011-10-09.
  5. ^ M. Apostol, Tom (1976). Introduction to Analytic Number Theory. Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics (1 ed.). Springer. pp. 80–82. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-5579-4. ISBN 978-1-4757-5579-4.
  6. ^ M. Apostol, Tom (1976). Introduction to Analytic Number Theory. Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics (1 ed.). Springer. pp. 92–94. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-5579-4. ISBN 978-1-4757-5579-4.
  7. ^ Gauss, C. F. (1863), Werke, vol. 2 (1st ed.), Göttingen: Teubner, pp. 444–447.
  8. ^ Costa Pereira, N. (August–September 1985). "A Short Proof of Chebyshev's Theorem". American Mathematical Monthly. 92 (7): 494–495. doi:10.2307/2322510. JSTOR 2322510.
  9. ^ Nair, M. (February 1982). "On Chebyshev-Type Inequalities for Primes". American Mathematical Monthly. 89 (2): 126–129. doi:10.2307/2320934. JSTOR 2320934.
  10. ^ Ingham, A. E. (1990). The Distribution of Prime Numbers. Cambridge University Press. pp. 2–5. ISBN 978-0-521-39789-6.
  11. ^ a b Selberg, Atle (1949), "An Elementary Proof of the Prime-Number Theorem", Annals of Mathematics, 50 (2): 305–313, doi:10.2307/1969455, JSTOR 1969455, MR 0029410, S2CID 124153092
  12. ^ a b Erdős, Paul (1949-07-01), "On a new method in elementary number theory which leads to an elementary proof of the prime number theorem" (PDF), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 35 (7), U.S.A.: National Academy of Sciences: 374–384, Bibcode:1949PNAS...35..374E, doi:10.1073/pnas.35.7.374, PMC 1063042, PMID 16588909
  13. ^ Newman, Donald J. (1980). "Simple analytic proof of the prime number theorem". American Mathematical Monthly. 87 (9): 693–696. doi:10.2307/2321853. JSTOR 2321853. MR 0602825.
  14. ^ a b Zagier, Don (1997). "Newman's short proof of the prime number theorem". American Mathematical Monthly. 104 (8): 705–708. doi:10.2307/2975232. JSTOR 2975232. MR 1476753.
  15. ^ Tao, Terence (10 December 2014). "254A, Notes 2: Complex-analytic multiplicative number theory". Terence Tao's blog.
  16. ^ Edwards, Harold M. (2001). Riemann's zeta function. Courier Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-41740-0.
  17. ^ de la Vallée Poussin, Charles-Jean (1899), "Sur la fonction ζ(s) de Riemann et le nombre des nombres premiers inférieurs a une limite donnée.", Mémoires couronnés de l'Académie de Belgique, 59, Imprimeur de l'Académie Royale de Belgique: 1–74
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References edit

  • Granville, Andrew (1995). "Harald Cramér and the distribution of prime numbers" (PDF). Scandinavian Actuarial Journal. 1: 12–28. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.129.6847. doi:10.1080/03461238.1995.10413946.
  • Hardy, G.H.; Littlewood, J.E. (1916). "Contributions to the theory of the Riemann zeta-function and the theory of the distribution of primes". Acta Mathematica. 41: 119–196. doi:10.1007/BF02422942. S2CID 53405990.
  • Hardy, G. H.; Wright, E. M. (2008) [1st ed. 1938], An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers, Revised by D. R. Heath-Brown and J. H. Silverman, with a foreword by Andrew Wiles (6th ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-921985-8
  • Narkiewicz, Władysław (2000), The Development of Prime Number Theory: From Euclid to Hardy and Littlewood, Springer Monographs in Mathematics, Springer-Verlag, doi:10.1007/978-3-662-13157-2, ISBN 978-3-540-66289-1, ISSN 1439-7382

External links edit

  • "Distribution of prime numbers", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
  • .
  • Short video visualizing the Prime Number Theorem.
  • Prime formulas and Prime number theorem at MathWorld.
  • How Many Primes Are There? 2012-10-15 at the Wayback Machine and The Gaps between Primes by Chris Caldwell, University of Tennessee at Martin.
  • Tables of prime-counting functions by Tomás Oliveira e Silva
  • Eberl, Manuel and Paulson, L. C. The Prime Number Theorem (Formal proof development in Isabelle/HOL, Archive of Formal Proofs)
  • The Prime Number Theorem: the "elementary" proof − An exposition of the elementary proof of the Prime Number Theorem of Atle Selberg and Paul Erdős at www.dimostriamogoldbach.it/en/

prime, number, theorem, this, article, uses, technical, mathematical, notation, logarithms, instances, without, subscript, base, should, interpreted, natural, logarithm, commonly, notated, loge, mathematics, prime, number, theorem, describes, asymptotic, distr. This article uses technical mathematical notation for logarithms All instances of log x without a subscript base should be interpreted as a natural logarithm commonly notated as ln x or loge x In mathematics the prime number theorem PNT describes the asymptotic distribution of the prime numbers among the positive integers It formalizes the intuitive idea that primes become less common as they become larger by precisely quantifying the rate at which this occurs The theorem was proved independently by Jacques Hadamard 1 and Charles Jean de la Vallee Poussin 2 in 1896 using ideas introduced by Bernhard Riemann in particular the Riemann zeta function The first such distribution found is p N N log N where p N is the prime counting function the number of primes less than or equal to N and log N is the natural logarithm of N This means that for large enough N the probability that a random integer not greater than N is prime is very close to 1 log N Consequently a random integer with at most 2n digits for large enough n is about half as likely to be prime as a random integer with at most n digits For example among the positive integers of at most 1000 digits about one in 2300 is prime log 101000 2302 6 whereas among positive integers of at most 2000 digits about one in 4600 is prime log 102000 4605 2 In other words the average gap between consecutive prime numbers among the first N integers is roughly log N 3 Contents 1 Statement 2 History of the proof of the asymptotic law of prime numbers 3 Proof sketch 3 1 Non vanishing on Re s 1 4 Newman s proof of the prime number theorem 5 Prime counting function in terms of the logarithmic integral 6 Elementary proofs 7 Computer verifications 8 Prime number theorem for arithmetic progressions 8 1 Prime number race 9 Non asymptotic bounds on the prime counting function 10 Approximations for the nth prime number 11 Table of p x x log x and li x 12 Analogue for irreducible polynomials over a finite field 13 See also 14 Citations 15 References 16 External linksStatement edit nbsp Graph showing ratio of the prime counting function p x to two of its approximations x log x and Li x As x increases note x axis is logarithmic both ratios tend towards 1 The ratio for x log x converges from above very slowly while the ratio for Li x converges more quickly from below nbsp Log log plot showing absolute error of x log x and Li x two approximations to the prime counting function p x Unlike the ratio the difference between p x and x log x increases without bound as x increases On the other hand Li x p x switches sign infinitely many times Let p x be the prime counting function defined to be the number of primes less than or equal to x for any real number x For example p 10 4 because there are four prime numbers 2 3 5 and 7 less than or equal to 10 The prime number theorem then states that x log x is a good approximation to p x where log here means the natural logarithm in the sense that the limit of the quotient of the two functions p x and x log x as x increases without bound is 1 lim x p x x log x 1 displaystyle lim x to infty frac pi x left frac x log x right 1 nbsp known as the asymptotic law of distribution of prime numbers Using asymptotic notation this result can be restated as p x x log x displaystyle pi x sim frac x log x nbsp This notation and the theorem does not say anything about the limit of the difference of the two functions as x increases without bound Instead the theorem states that x log x approximates p x in the sense that the relative error of this approximation approaches 0 as x increases without bound The prime number theorem is equivalent to the statement that the n th prime number pn satisfies p n n log n displaystyle p n sim n log n nbsp the asymptotic notation meaning again that the relative error of this approximation approaches 0 as n increases without bound For example the 2 1017 th prime number is 8512 677 386 048 191 063 4 and 2 1017 log 2 1017 rounds to 7967 418 752 291 744 388 a relative error of about 6 4 On the other hand the following asymptotic relations are logically equivalent 5 lim x p x log x x 1 lim x p x log p x x 1 displaystyle begin aligned lim x rightarrow infty frac pi x log x x amp 1 lim x rightarrow infty frac pi x log pi x x amp 1 end aligned nbsp As outlined below the prime number theorem is also equivalent to lim x ϑ x x lim x ps x x 1 displaystyle lim x to infty frac vartheta x x lim x to infty frac psi x x 1 nbsp where ϑ and ps are the first and the second Chebyshev functions respectively and to lim x M x x 0 displaystyle lim x to infty frac M x x 0 nbsp 6 where M x n x m n displaystyle M x sum n leq x mu n nbsp is the Mertens function History of the proof of the asymptotic law of prime numbers editBased on the tables by Anton Felkel and Jurij Vega Adrien Marie Legendre conjectured in 1797 or 1798 that p a is approximated by the function a A log a B where A and B are unspecified constants In the second edition of his book on number theory 1808 he then made a more precise conjecture with A 1 and B 1 08366 Carl Friedrich Gauss considered the same question at age 15 or 16 in the year 1792 or 1793 according to his own recollection in 1849 7 In 1838 Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet came up with his own approximating function the logarithmic integral li x under the slightly different form of a series which he communicated to Gauss Both Legendre s and Dirichlet s formulas imply the same conjectured asymptotic equivalence of p x and x log x stated above although it turned out that Dirichlet s approximation is considerably better if one considers the differences instead of quotients In two papers from 1848 and 1850 the Russian mathematician Pafnuty Chebyshev attempted to prove the asymptotic law of distribution of prime numbers His work is notable for the use of the zeta function z s for real values of the argument s as in works of Leonhard Euler as early as 1737 Chebyshev s papers predated Riemann s celebrated memoir of 1859 and he succeeded in proving a slightly weaker form of the asymptotic law namely that if the limit as x goes to infinity of p x x log x exists at all then it is necessarily equal to one 8 He was able to prove unconditionally that this ratio is bounded above and below by two explicitly given constants near 1 for all sufficiently large x 9 Although Chebyshev s paper did not prove the Prime Number Theorem his estimates for p x were strong enough for him to prove Bertrand s postulate that there exists a prime number between n and 2n for any integer n 2 An important paper concerning the distribution of prime numbers was Riemann s 1859 memoir On the Number of Primes Less Than a Given Magnitude the only paper he ever wrote on the subject Riemann introduced new ideas into the subject chiefly that the distribution of prime numbers is intimately connected with the zeros of the analytically extended Riemann zeta function of a complex variable In particular it is in this paper that the idea to apply methods of complex analysis to the study of the real function p x originates Extending Riemann s ideas two proofs of the asymptotic law of the distribution of prime numbers were found independently by Jacques Hadamard 1 and Charles Jean de la Vallee Poussin 2 and appeared in the same year 1896 Both proofs used methods from complex analysis establishing as a main step of the proof that the Riemann zeta function z s is nonzero for all complex values of the variable s that have the form s 1 it with t gt 0 10 During the 20th century the theorem of Hadamard and de la Vallee Poussin also became known as the Prime Number Theorem Several different proofs of it were found including the elementary proofs of Atle Selberg 11 and Paul Erdos 12 1949 Hadamard s and de la Vallee Poussin s original proofs are long and elaborate later proofs introduced various simplifications through the use of Tauberian theorems but remained difficult to digest A short proof was discovered in 1980 by the American mathematician Donald J Newman 13 14 Newman s proof is arguably the simplest known proof of the theorem although it is non elementary in the sense that it uses Cauchy s integral theorem from complex analysis Proof sketch editHere is a sketch of the proof referred to in one of Terence Tao s lectures 15 Like most proofs of the PNT it starts out by reformulating the problem in terms of a less intuitive but better behaved prime counting function The idea is to count the primes or a related set such as the set of prime powers with weights to arrive at a function with smoother asymptotic behavior The most common such generalized counting function is the Chebyshev function ps x defined by ps x p is prime p k x log p displaystyle psi x sum stackrel p k leq x p text is prime log p nbsp This is sometimes written as ps x n x L n displaystyle psi x sum n leq x Lambda n nbsp where L n is the von Mangoldt function namely L n log p if n p k for some prime p and integer k 1 0 otherwise displaystyle Lambda n begin cases log p amp text if n p k text for some prime p text and integer k geq 1 0 amp text otherwise end cases nbsp It is now relatively easy to check that the PNT is equivalent to the claim that lim x ps x x 1 displaystyle lim x to infty frac psi x x 1 nbsp Indeed this follows from the easy estimates ps x p is prime p x log p log x log p p is prime p x log x p x log x displaystyle psi x sum stackrel p leq x p text is prime log p left lfloor frac log x log p right rfloor leq sum stackrel p leq x p text is prime log x pi x log x nbsp and using big O notation for any e gt 0 ps x p is prime x 1 e p x log p p is prime x 1 e p x 1 e log x 1 e p x O x 1 e log x displaystyle psi x geq sum stackrel x 1 varepsilon leq p leq x p text is prime log p geq sum stackrel x 1 varepsilon leq p leq x p text is prime 1 varepsilon log x 1 varepsilon left pi x O left x 1 varepsilon right right log x nbsp The next step is to find a useful representation for ps x Let z s be the Riemann zeta function It can be shown that z s is related to the von Mangoldt function L n and hence to ps x via the relation z s z s n 1 L n n s displaystyle frac zeta s zeta s sum n 1 infty Lambda n n s nbsp A delicate analysis of this equation and related properties of the zeta function using the Mellin transform and Perron s formula shows that for non integer x the equation ps x x log 2 p r z r 0 x r r displaystyle psi x x log 2 pi sum limits rho zeta rho 0 frac x rho rho nbsp holds where the sum is over all zeros trivial and nontrivial of the zeta function This striking formula is one of the so called explicit formulas of number theory and is already suggestive of the result we wish to prove since the term x claimed to be the correct asymptotic order of ps x appears on the right hand side followed by presumably lower order asymptotic terms The next step in the proof involves a study of the zeros of the zeta function The trivial zeros 2 4 6 8 can be handled separately n 1 1 2 n x 2 n 1 2 log 1 1 x 2 displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac 1 2n x 2n frac 1 2 log left 1 frac 1 x 2 right nbsp which vanishes for large x The nontrivial zeros namely those on the critical strip 0 Re s 1 can potentially be of an asymptotic order comparable to the main term x if Re r 1 so we need to show that all zeros have real part strictly less than 1 Non vanishing on Re s 1 edit To do this we take for granted that z s is meromorphic in the half plane Re s gt 0 and is analytic there except for a simple pole at s 1 and that there is a product formula z s p 1 1 p s displaystyle zeta s prod p frac 1 1 p s nbsp for Re s gt 1 This product formula follows from the existence of unique prime factorization of integers and shows that z s is never zero in this region so that its logarithm is defined there and log z s p log 1 p s p n p n s n displaystyle log zeta s sum p log left 1 p s right sum p n frac p ns n nbsp Write s x iy then z x i y exp n p cos n y log p n p n x displaystyle big zeta x iy big exp left sum n p frac cos ny log p np nx right nbsp Now observe the identity 3 4 cos ϕ cos 2 ϕ 2 1 cos ϕ 2 0 displaystyle 3 4 cos phi cos 2 phi 2 1 cos phi 2 geq 0 nbsp so that z x 3 z x i y 4 z x 2 i y exp n p 3 4 cos n y log p cos 2 n y log p n p n x 1 displaystyle left zeta x 3 zeta x iy 4 zeta x 2iy right exp left sum n p frac 3 4 cos ny log p cos 2ny log p np nx right geq 1 nbsp for all x gt 1 Suppose now that z 1 iy 0 Certainly y is not zero since z s has a simple pole at s 1 Suppose that x gt 1 and let x tend to 1 from above Since z s displaystyle zeta s nbsp has a simple pole at s 1 and z x 2iy stays analytic the left hand side in the previous inequality tends to 0 a contradiction Finally we can conclude that the PNT is heuristically true To rigorously complete the proof there are still serious technicalities to overcome due to the fact that the summation over zeta zeros in the explicit formula for ps x does not converge absolutely but only conditionally and in a principal value sense There are several ways around this problem but many of them require rather delicate complex analytic estimates Edwards s book 16 provides the details Another method is to use Ikehara s Tauberian theorem though this theorem is itself quite hard to prove D J Newman observed that the full strength of Ikehara s theorem is not needed for the prime number theorem and one can get away with a special case that is much easier to prove Newman s proof of the prime number theorem editD J Newman gives a quick proof of the prime number theorem PNT The proof is non elementary by virtue of relying on complex analysis but uses only elementary techniques from a first course in the subject Cauchy s integral formula Cauchy s integral theorem and estimates of complex integrals Here is a brief sketch of this proof See 14 for the complete details The proof uses the same preliminaries as in the previous section except instead of the function ps textstyle psi nbsp the Chebyshev functionϑ x p x log p textstyle quad vartheta x sum p leq x log p nbsp is used which is obtained by dropping some of the terms from the series for ps textstyle psi nbsp It is easy to show that the PNT is equivalent to lim x ϑ x x 1 displaystyle lim x to infty vartheta x x 1 nbsp Likewise instead of z s z s displaystyle frac zeta s zeta s nbsp the function F s p x log p p s displaystyle Phi s sum p leq x log p p s nbsp is used which is obtained by dropping some terms in the series for z s z s displaystyle frac zeta s zeta s nbsp The functions F s displaystyle Phi s nbsp and z s z s displaystyle zeta s zeta s nbsp differ by a function holomorphic on ℜ s 1 displaystyle Re s 1 nbsp Since as was shown in the previous section z s displaystyle zeta s nbsp has no zeroes on the line ℜ s 1 displaystyle Re s 1 nbsp F s 1 s 1 displaystyle Phi s frac 1 s 1 nbsp has no singularities on ℜ s 1 displaystyle Re s 1 nbsp One further piece of information needed in Newman s proof and which is the key to the estimates in his simple method is that ϑ x x displaystyle vartheta x x nbsp is bounded This is proved using an ingenious and easy method due to Chebyshev Integration by parts shows how ϑ x displaystyle vartheta x nbsp and F s displaystyle Phi s nbsp are related For ℜ s gt 1 displaystyle Re s gt 1 nbsp F s 1 x s d ϑ x s 1 ϑ x x s 1 d x s 0 ϑ e t e s t d t displaystyle Phi s int 1 infty x s d vartheta x s int 1 infty vartheta x x s 1 dx s int 0 infty vartheta e t e st dt nbsp Newman s method proves the PNT by showing the integral I 0 ϑ e t e t 1 d t displaystyle I int 0 infty left frac vartheta e t e t 1 right dt nbsp converges and therefore the integrand goes to zero as t displaystyle t to infty nbsp which is the PNT In general the convergence of the improper integral does not imply that the integrand goes to zero at infinity since it may oscillate but since ϑ displaystyle vartheta nbsp is increasing it is easy to show in this case To show the convergence of I displaystyle I nbsp for ℜ z gt 0 displaystyle Re z gt 0 nbsp let g T z 0 T f t e z t d t displaystyle g T z int 0 T f t e zt dt nbsp and g z 0 f t e z t d t displaystyle g z int 0 infty f t e zt dt nbsp where f t ϑ e t e t 1 displaystyle f t frac vartheta e t e t 1 nbsp then lim T g T z g z F s s 1 s 1 where z s 1 displaystyle lim T to infty g T z g z frac Phi s s frac 1 s 1 quad quad text where quad z s 1 nbsp which is equal to a function holomorphic on the line ℜ z 0 displaystyle Re z 0 nbsp The convergence of the integral I displaystyle I nbsp and thus the PNT is proved by showing that lim T g T 0 g 0 displaystyle lim T to infty g T 0 g 0 nbsp This involves change of order of limits since it can be written lim T lim z 0 g T z lim z 0 lim T g T z textstyle lim T to infty lim z to 0 g T z lim z to 0 lim T to infty g T z nbsp and therefore classified as a Tauberian theorem The difference g 0 g T 0 displaystyle g 0 g T 0 nbsp is expressed using Cauchy s integral formula and then shown to be small for T displaystyle T nbsp large by estimating the integrand Fix R gt 0 displaystyle R gt 0 nbsp and d gt 0 displaystyle delta gt 0 nbsp such that g z displaystyle g z nbsp is holomorphic in the region where z R and ℜ z d displaystyle z leq R text and Re z geq delta nbsp and let C displaystyle C nbsp be the boundary of this region Since 0 is in the interior of the region Cauchy s integral formula gives g 0 g T 0 1 2 p i C g z g T z d z z 1 2 p i C g z g T z F z d z z displaystyle g 0 g T 0 frac 1 2 pi i int C left g z g T z right frac dz z frac 1 2 pi i int C left g z g T z right F z frac dz z nbsp where F z e z T 1 z 2 R 2 displaystyle F z e zT left 1 frac z 2 R 2 right nbsp is the factor introduced by Newman which does not change the integral since F displaystyle F nbsp is entire and F 0 1 displaystyle F 0 1 nbsp To estimate the integral break the contour C displaystyle C nbsp into two parts C C C displaystyle C C C nbsp where C C z ℜ z gt 0 displaystyle C C cap left z vert Re z gt 0 right nbsp and C ℜ z 0 displaystyle C cap left Re z leq 0 right nbsp Then g 0 g T 0 C T H t z d t d z C 0 T H t z d t d z C g z F z d z 2 p i z displaystyle g 0 g T 0 int C int T infty H t z dtdz int C int 0 T H t z dtdz int C g z F z frac dz 2 pi iz nbsp where H t z f t e t z F z 2 p i displaystyle H t z f t e tz F z 2 pi i nbsp Since ϑ x x displaystyle vartheta x x nbsp and hence f t displaystyle f t nbsp is bounded let B displaystyle B nbsp be an upper bound for the absolute value of f t displaystyle f t nbsp This bound together with the estimate F 2 exp T ℜ z ℜ z R displaystyle F leq 2 exp T Re z Re z R nbsp for z R displaystyle z R nbsp gives that the first integral in absolute value is B R displaystyle leq B R nbsp The integrand over C displaystyle C nbsp in the second integral is entire so by Cauchy s integral theorem the contour C displaystyle C nbsp can be modified to a semicircle of radius R displaystyle R nbsp in the left half plane without changing the integral and the same argument as for the first integral gives the absolute value of the second integral is B R displaystyle leq B R nbsp Finally letting T displaystyle T to infty nbsp the third integral goes to zero since e z T displaystyle e zT nbsp and hence F displaystyle F nbsp goes to zero on the contour Combining the two estimates and the limit get lim sup T g 0 g T 0 2 B R displaystyle limsup T to infty g 0 g T 0 leq frac 2B R nbsp This holds for any R displaystyle R nbsp so lim T g T 0 g 0 displaystyle lim T to infty g T 0 g 0 nbsp and the PNT follows Prime counting function in terms of the logarithmic integral editIn a handwritten note on a reprint of his 1838 paper Sur l usage des series infinies dans la theorie des nombres which he mailed to Gauss Dirichlet conjectured under a slightly different form appealing to a series rather than an integral that an even better approximation to p x is given by the offset logarithmic integral function Li x defined by Li x 2 x d t log t li x li 2 displaystyle operatorname Li x int 2 x frac dt log t operatorname li x operatorname li 2 nbsp Indeed this integral is strongly suggestive of the notion that the density of primes around t should be 1 log t This function is related to the logarithm by the asymptotic expansion Li x x log x k 0 k log x k x log x x log x 2 2 x log x 3 displaystyle operatorname Li x sim frac x log x sum k 0 infty frac k log x k frac x log x frac x log x 2 frac 2x log x 3 cdots nbsp So the prime number theorem can also be written as p x Li x In fact in another paper 17 in 1899 de la Vallee Poussin proved that p x Li x O x e a log x as x displaystyle pi x operatorname Li x O left xe a sqrt log x right quad text as x to infty nbsp for some positive constant a where O is the big O notation This has been improved to p x li x O x exp A log x 3 5 log log x 1 5 displaystyle pi x operatorname li x O left x exp left frac A log x frac 3 5 log log x frac 1 5 right right nbsp where A 0 2098 displaystyle A 0 2098 nbsp 18 In 2016 Trudgian proved an explicit upper bound for the difference between p x displaystyle pi x nbsp and li x displaystyle operatorname li x nbsp p x li x 0 2795 x log x 3 4 exp log x 6 455 displaystyle big pi x operatorname li x big leq 0 2795 frac x log x 3 4 exp left sqrt frac log x 6 455 right nbsp for x 229 displaystyle x geq 229 nbsp 19 The connection between the Riemann zeta function and p x is one reason the Riemann hypothesis has considerable importance in number theory if established it would yield a far better estimate of the error involved in the prime number theorem than is available today More specifically Helge von Koch showed in 1901 20 that if the Riemann hypothesis is true the error term in the above relation can be improved to p x Li x O x log x displaystyle pi x operatorname Li x O left sqrt x log x right nbsp this last estimate is in fact equivalent to the Riemann hypothesis The constant involved in the big O notation was estimated in 1976 by Lowell Schoenfeld 21 assuming the Riemann hypothesis p x li x lt x log x 8 p displaystyle big pi x operatorname li x big lt frac sqrt x log x 8 pi nbsp for all x 2657 He also derived a similar bound for the Chebyshev prime counting function ps ps x x lt x log x 2 8 p displaystyle big psi x x big lt frac sqrt x log x 2 8 pi nbsp for all x 73 2 This latter bound has been shown to express a variance to mean power law when regarded as a random function over the integers and 1 f noise and to also correspond to the Tweedie compound Poisson distribution The Tweedie distributions represent a family of scale invariant distributions that serve as foci of convergence for a generalization of the central limit theorem 22 The logarithmic integral li x is larger than p x for small values of x This is because it is in some sense counting not primes but prime powers where a power pn of a prime p is counted as 1 n of a prime This suggests that li x should usually be larger than p x by roughly 1 2 li x displaystyle tfrac 1 2 operatorname li sqrt x nbsp and in particular should always be larger than p x However in 1914 J E Littlewood proved that p x li x displaystyle pi x operatorname li x nbsp changes sign infinitely often 23 The first value of x where p x exceeds li x is probably around x 10316 see the article on Skewes number for more details On the other hand the offset logarithmic integral Li x is smaller than p x already for x 2 indeed Li 2 0 while p 2 1 Elementary proofs editIn the first half of the twentieth century some mathematicians notably G H Hardy believed that there exists a hierarchy of proof methods in mathematics depending on what sorts of numbers integers reals complex a proof requires and that the prime number theorem PNT is a deep theorem by virtue of requiring complex analysis 24 This belief was somewhat shaken by a proof of the PNT based on Wiener s tauberian theorem though this could be set aside if Wiener s theorem were deemed to have a depth equivalent to that of complex variable methods In March 1948 Atle Selberg established by elementary means the asymptotic formula ϑ x log x p x log p ϑ x p 2 x log x O x displaystyle vartheta x log x sum limits p leq x log p vartheta left frac x p right 2x log x O x nbsp where ϑ x p x log p displaystyle vartheta x sum limits p leq x log p nbsp for primes p 11 By July of that year Selberg and Paul Erdos 12 had each obtained elementary proofs of the PNT both using Selberg s asymptotic formula as a starting point 24 25 These proofs effectively laid to rest the notion that the PNT was deep in that sense and showed that technically elementary methods were more powerful than had been believed to be the case On the history of the elementary proofs of the PNT including the Erdos Selberg priority dispute see an article by Dorian Goldfeld 24 There is some debate about the significance of Erdos and Selberg s result There is no rigorous and widely accepted definition of the notion of elementary proof in number theory so it is not clear exactly in what sense their proof is elementary Although it does not use complex analysis it is in fact much more technical than the standard proof of PNT One possible definition of an elementary proof is one that can be carried out in first order Peano arithmetic There are number theoretic statements for example the Paris Harrington theorem provable using second order but not first order methods but such theorems are rare to date Erdos and Selberg s proof can certainly be formalized in Peano arithmetic and in 1994 Charalambos Cornaros and Costas Dimitracopoulos proved that their proof can be formalized in a very weak fragment of PA namely ID0 exp 26 However this does not address the question of whether or not the standard proof of PNT can be formalized in PA Computer verifications editIn 2005 Avigad et al employed the Isabelle theorem prover to devise a computer verified variant of the Erdos Selberg proof of the PNT 27 This was the first machine verified proof of the PNT Avigad chose to formalize the Erdos Selberg proof rather than an analytic one because while Isabelle s library at the time could implement the notions of limit derivative and transcendental function it had almost no theory of integration to speak of 27 19 In 2009 John Harrison employed HOL Light to formalize a proof employing complex analysis 28 By developing the necessary analytic machinery including the Cauchy integral formula Harrison was able to formalize a direct modern and elegant proof instead of the more involved elementary Erdos Selberg argument Prime number theorem for arithmetic progressions editLet pd a x denote the number of primes in the arithmetic progression a a d a 2d a 3d that are less than x Dirichlet and Legendre conjectured and de la Vallee Poussin proved that if a and d are coprime then p d a x Li x f d displaystyle pi d a x sim frac operatorname Li x varphi d nbsp where f is Euler s totient function In other words the primes are distributed evenly among the residue classes a modulo d with gcd a d 1 This is stronger than Dirichlet s theorem on arithmetic progressions which only states that there is an infinity of primes in each class and can be proved using similar methods used by Newman for his proof of the prime number theorem 29 The Siegel Walfisz theorem gives a good estimate for the distribution of primes in residue classes Bennett et al 30 proved the following estimate that has explicit constants A and B Theorem 1 3 Let d 3 displaystyle geq 3 nbsp be an integer and let a be an integer that is coprime to d Then there are positive constants A and B such that p d a x Li x f d lt A x log x 2 for all x B displaystyle left pi d a x frac operatorname Li x varphi d right lt frac A x log x 2 quad text for all quad x geq B nbsp where A 1 840 if 3 d 10 4 and A 1 160 if d gt 10 4 displaystyle A frac 1 840 quad text if quad 3 leq d leq 10 4 quad text and quad A frac 1 160 quad text if quad d gt 10 4 nbsp and B 8 10 9 if 3 d 10 5 and B exp 0 03 d log d 3 if d gt 10 5 displaystyle B 8 cdot 10 9 quad text if quad 3 leq d leq 10 5 quad text and quad B exp 0 03 sqrt d log d 3 quad text if quad d gt 10 5 nbsp Prime number race edit nbsp Plot of the function p x 4 3 p x 4 1 displaystyle pi x 4 3 pi x 4 1 nbsp for n 30000 Although we have in particular p 4 1 x p 4 3 x displaystyle pi 4 1 x sim pi 4 3 x nbsp empirically the primes congruent to 3 are more numerous and are nearly always ahead in this prime number race the first reversal occurs at x 26861 31 1 2 However Littlewood showed in 1914 31 2 that there are infinitely many sign changes for the function p 4 1 x p 4 3 x displaystyle pi 4 1 x pi 4 3 x nbsp so the lead in the race switches back and forth infinitely many times The phenomenon that p4 3 x is ahead most of the time is called Chebyshev s bias The prime number race generalizes to other moduli and is the subject of much research Pal Turan asked whether it is always the case that p x a c and p x b c change places when a and b are coprime to c 32 Granville and Martin give a thorough exposition and survey 31 nbsp Graph of the number of primes ending in 1 3 7 and 9 up to n for n lt 10 000 Another example is the distribution of the last digit of prime numbers Except for 2 and 5 all prime numbers end in 1 3 7 or 9 Dirichlet s theorem states that asymptotically 25 of all primes end in each of these four digits However empirical evidence shows that the number of primes that end in 3 or 7 less than n tends to be slightly bigger than the number of primes that end in 1 or 9 less than n a generation of the Chebyshev s bias 33 This follows that 1 and 9 are quadratic residues modulo 10 and 3 and 7 are quadratic nonresidues modulo 10 Non asymptotic bounds on the prime counting function editThe prime number theorem is an asymptotic result It gives an ineffective bound on p x as a direct consequence of the definition of the limit for all e gt 0 there is an S such that for all x gt S 1 e x log x lt p x lt 1 e x log x displaystyle 1 varepsilon frac x log x lt pi x lt 1 varepsilon frac x log x nbsp However better bounds on p x are known for instance Pierre Dusart s x log x 1 1 log x lt p x lt x log x 1 1 log x 2 51 log x 2 displaystyle frac x log x left 1 frac 1 log x right lt pi x lt frac x log x left 1 frac 1 log x frac 2 51 log x 2 right nbsp The first inequality holds for all x 599 and the second one for x 355991 34 A weaker but sometimes useful bound for x 55 is 35 x log x 2 lt p x lt x log x 4 displaystyle frac x log x 2 lt pi x lt frac x log x 4 nbsp In Pierre Dusart s thesis there are stronger versions of this type of inequality that are valid for larger x Later in 2010 Dusart proved 36 x log x 1 lt p x for x 5393 and p x lt x log x 1 1 for x 60184 displaystyle begin aligned frac x log x 1 amp lt pi x amp amp text for x geq 5393 text and pi x amp lt frac x log x 1 1 amp amp text for x geq 60184 end aligned nbsp The proof by de la Vallee Poussin implies the following For every e gt 0 there is an S such that for all x gt S x log x 1 e lt p x lt x log x 1 e displaystyle frac x log x 1 varepsilon lt pi x lt frac x log x 1 varepsilon nbsp Approximations for the nth prime number editAs a consequence of the prime number theorem one gets an asymptotic expression for the n th prime number denoted by pn p n n log n displaystyle p n sim n log n nbsp A better approximation is 37 p n n log n log log n 1 log log n 2 log n log log n 2 6 log log n 11 2 log n 2 o 1 log n 2 displaystyle frac p n n log n log log n 1 frac log log n 2 log n frac log log n 2 6 log log n 11 2 log n 2 o left frac 1 log n 2 right nbsp Again considering the 2 1017 th prime number 8512 677 386 048 191 063 this gives an estimate of 8512 681 315 554 715 386 the first 5 digits match and relative error is about 0 00005 Rosser s theorem states that p n gt n log n displaystyle p n gt n log n nbsp This can be improved by the following pair of bounds 35 38 log n log log n 1 lt p n n lt log n log log n for n 6 displaystyle log n log log n 1 lt frac p n n lt log n log log n quad text for n geq 6 nbsp Table of p x x log x and li x editThe table compares exact values of p x to the two approximations x log x and li x The last column x p x is the average prime gap below x x p x p x x log x p x x log x li x p x x p x 10 4 0 3 0 921 2 2 2 500 102 25 3 3 1 151 5 1 4 000 103 168 23 0 1 161 10 0 5 952 104 1229 143 0 1 132 17 0 8 137 105 9592 906 0 1 104 38 0 10 425 106 78498 6116 0 1 084 130 0 12 740 107 664579 44158 0 1 071 339 0 15 047 108 5761 455 332774 0 1 061 754 0 17 357 109 50847 534 2592 592 0 1 054 1701 0 19 667 1010 455052 511 20758 029 0 1 048 3104 0 21 975 1011 4118 054 813 169923 159 0 1 043 11588 0 24 283 1012 37607 912 018 1416 705 193 0 1 039 38263 0 26 590 1013 346065 536 839 11992 858 452 0 1 034 108971 0 28 896 1014 3204 941 750 802 102838 308 636 0 1 033 314890 0 31 202 1015 29844 570 422 669 891604 962 452 0 1 031 1052 619 0 33 507 1016 279238 341 033 925 7804 289 844 393 0 1 029 3214 632 0 35 812 1017 2623 557 157 654 233 68883 734 693 281 0 1 027 7956 589 0 38 116 1018 24739 954 287 740 860 612483 070 893 536 0 1 025 21949 555 0 40 420 1019 234057 667 276 344 607 5481 624 169 369 960 0 1 024 99877 775 0 42 725 1020 2220 819 602 560 918 840 49347 193 044 659 701 0 1 023 222744 644 0 45 028 1021 21127 269 486 018 731 928 446579 871 578 168 707 0 1 022 597394 254 0 47 332 1022 201467 286 689 315 906 290 4060 704 006 019 620 994 0 1 021 1932 355 208 0 49 636 1023 1925 320 391 606 803 968 923 37083 513 766 578 631 309 0 1 020 7250 186 216 0 51 939 1024 18435 599 767 349 200 867 866 339996 354 713 708 049 069 0 1 019 17146 907 278 0 54 243 1025 176846 309 399 143 769 411 680 3128 516 637 843 038 351 228 0 1 018 55160 980 939 0 56 546 OEIS A006880 A057835 A057752 The value for p 1024 was originally computed assuming the Riemann hypothesis 39 it has since been verified unconditionally 40 Analogue for irreducible polynomials over a finite field editThere is an analogue of the prime number theorem that describes the distribution of irreducible polynomials over a finite field the form it takes is strikingly similar to the case of the classical prime number theorem To state it precisely let F GF q be the finite field with q elements for some fixed q and let Nn be the number of monic irreducible polynomials over F whose degree is equal to n That is we are looking at polynomials with coefficients chosen from F which cannot be written as products of polynomials of smaller degree In this setting these polynomials play the role of the prime numbers since all other monic polynomials are built up of products of them One can then prove that N n q n n displaystyle N n sim frac q n n nbsp If we make the substitution x qn then the right hand side is just x log q x displaystyle frac x log q x nbsp which makes the analogy clearer Since there are precisely qn monic polynomials of degree n including the reducible ones this can be rephrased as follows if a monic polynomial of degree n is selected randomly then the probability of it being irreducible is about 1 n One can even prove an analogue of the Riemann hypothesis namely that N n q n n O q n 2 n displaystyle N n frac q n n O left frac q frac n 2 n right nbsp The proofs of these statements are far simpler than in the classical case It involves a short combinatorial argument 41 summarised as follows every element of the degree n extension of F is a root of some irreducible polynomial whose degree d divides n by counting these roots in two different ways one establishes that q n d n d N d displaystyle q n sum d mid n dN d nbsp where the sum is over all divisors d of n Mobius inversion then yields N n 1 n d n m n d q d displaystyle N n frac 1 n sum d mid n mu left frac n d right q d nbsp where m k is the Mobius function This formula was known to Gauss The main term occurs for d n and it is not difficult to bound the remaining terms The Riemann hypothesis statement depends on the fact that the largest proper divisor of n can be no larger than n 2 See also editAbstract analytic number theory for information about generalizations of the theorem Landau prime ideal theorem for a generalization to prime ideals in algebraic number fields Riemann hypothesisCitations edit a b Hadamard Jacques 1896 Sur la distribution des zeros de la fonction z s et ses consequences arithmetiques Bulletin de la Societe Mathematique de France 24 Societe Mathematique de France 199 220 archived from the original on 2012 07 17 a b de la Vallee Poussin Charles Jean 1896 Recherches analytiques sur la theorie des nombres premiers Annales de la Societe scientifique de Bruxelles 20 B 21 B Imprimeur de l Academie Royale de Belgique 183 256 281 352 363 397 351 368 Hoffman Paul 1998 The Man Who Loved Only Numbers New York Hyperion Books p 227 ISBN 978 0 7868 8406 3 MR 1666054 Prime Curios 8512677386048191063 Prime Curios University of Tennessee at Martin 2011 10 09 M Apostol Tom 1976 Introduction to Analytic Number Theory Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics 1 ed Springer pp 80 82 doi 10 1007 978 1 4757 5579 4 ISBN 978 1 4757 5579 4 M Apostol Tom 1976 Introduction to Analytic Number Theory Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics 1 ed Springer pp 92 94 doi 10 1007 978 1 4757 5579 4 ISBN 978 1 4757 5579 4 Gauss C F 1863 Werke vol 2 1st ed Gottingen Teubner pp 444 447 Costa Pereira N August September 1985 A Short Proof of Chebyshev s Theorem American Mathematical Monthly 92 7 494 495 doi 10 2307 2322510 JSTOR 2322510 Nair M February 1982 On Chebyshev Type Inequalities for Primes American Mathematical Monthly 89 2 126 129 doi 10 2307 2320934 JSTOR 2320934 Ingham A E 1990 The Distribution of Prime Numbers Cambridge University Press pp 2 5 ISBN 978 0 521 39789 6 a b Selberg Atle 1949 An Elementary Proof of the Prime Number Theorem Annals of Mathematics 50 2 305 313 doi 10 2307 1969455 JSTOR 1969455 MR 0029410 S2CID 124153092 a b Erdos Paul 1949 07 01 On a new method in elementary number theory which leads to an elementary proof of the prime number theorem PDF Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 35 7 U S A National Academy of Sciences 374 384 Bibcode 1949PNAS 35 374E doi 10 1073 pnas 35 7 374 PMC 1063042 PMID 16588909 Newman Donald J 1980 Simple analytic proof of the prime number theorem American Mathematical Monthly 87 9 693 696 doi 10 2307 2321853 JSTOR 2321853 MR 0602825 a b Zagier Don 1997 Newman s short proof of the prime number theorem American Mathematical Monthly 104 8 705 708 doi 10 2307 2975232 JSTOR 2975232 MR 1476753 Tao Terence 10 December 2014 254A Notes 2 Complex analytic multiplicative number theory Terence Tao s blog Edwards Harold M 2001 Riemann s zeta function Courier Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 41740 0 de la Vallee Poussin Charles Jean 1899 Sur la fonction z s de Riemann et le nombre des nombres premiers inferieurs a une limite donnee Memoires couronnes de l Academie de Belgique 59 Imprimeur de l Academie Royale de Belgique 1 74 Kevin Ford 2002 Vinogradov s Integral and Bounds for the Riemann Zeta Function PDF Proc London Math Soc 85 3 565 633 arXiv 1910 08209 doi 10 1112 S0024611502013655 S2CID 121144007 Tim Trudgian February 2016 Updating the error term in the prime number theorem Ramanujan Journal 39 2 225 234 arXiv 1401 2689 doi 10 1007 s11139 014 9656 6 S2CID 11013503 von Koch Helge 1901 Sur la distribution des nombres premiers On the distribution of prime numbers Acta Mathematica in French 24 1 159 182 doi 10 1007 BF02403071 MR 1554926 S2CID 119914826 Schoenfeld Lowell 1976 Sharper Bounds for the Chebyshev Functions ϑ x and ps x II Mathematics of Computation 30 134 337 360 doi 10 2307 2005976 JSTOR 2005976 MR 0457374 Jorgensen Bent Martinez Jose Raul Tsao Min 1994 Asymptotic behaviour of the variance function Scandinavian Journal of Statistics 21 3 223 243 JSTOR 4616314 MR 1292637 Littlewood J E 1914 Sur la distribution des nombres premiers Comptes Rendus 158 1869 1872 JFM 45 0305 01 a b c Goldfeld Dorian 2004 The elementary proof of the prime number theorem an historical perspective PDF In Chudnovsky David Chudnovsky Gregory Nathanson Melvyn eds Number theory New York 2003 New York Springer Verlag pp 179 192 doi 10 1007 978 1 4419 9060 0 10 ISBN 978 0 387 40655 8 MR 2044518 Baas Nils A Skau Christian F 2008 The lord of the numbers Atle Selberg On his life and mathematics PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 45 4 617 649 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 08 01223 8 MR 2434348 Cornaros Charalambos Dimitracopoulos Costas 1994 The prime number theorem and fragments of PA PDF Archive for Mathematical Logic 33 4 265 281 doi 10 1007 BF01270626 MR 1294272 S2CID 29171246 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 21 a b Avigad Jeremy Donnelly Kevin Gray David Raff Paul 2008 A formally verified proof of the prime number theorem ACM Transactions on Computational Logic 9 1 2 arXiv cs 0509025 doi 10 1145 1297658 1297660 MR 2371488 S2CID 7720253 Harrison John 2009 Formalizing an analytic proof of the Prime Number Theorem Journal of Automated Reasoning 43 3 243 261 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 646 9725 doi 10 1007 s10817 009 9145 6 MR 2544285 S2CID 8032103 Soprounov Ivan 1998 A short proof of the Prime Number Theorem for arithmetic progressions Ohio Cleveland State University CiteSeerX 10 1 1 179 460 Bennett Michael A Martin Greg O Bryant Kevin Rechnitzer Andrew 2018 Explicit bounds for primes in arithmetic progressions Illinois J Math 62 1 4 427 532 arXiv 1802 00085 doi 10 1215 ijm 1552442669 S2CID 119647640 a b c Granville Andrew Martin Greg 2006 Prime number races PDF American Mathematical Monthly 113 1 1 33 doi 10 2307 27641834 JSTOR 27641834 MR 2202918 Guy Richard K 2004 Unsolved Problems in Number Theory 3rd ed Springer Verlag A4 ISBN 978 0 387 20860 2 Zbl 1058 11001 Lemke Oliver Robert J Soundararajan Kannan 2016 08 02 Unexpected biases in the distribution of consecutive primes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113 31 E4446 54 arXiv 1603 03720 Bibcode 2016PNAS 113E4446L doi 10 1073 pnas 1605366113 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 4978288 PMID 27418603 Dusart Pierre 26 May 1998 Autour de la fonction qui compte le nombre de nombres premiers departement de Mathematiques Ph D thesis in French Limoges France l Universite de Limoges a b Rosser Barkley 1941 Explicit bounds for some functions of prime numbers American Journal of Mathematics 63 1 211 232 doi 10 2307 2371291 JSTOR 2371291 MR 0003018 Dusart Pierre 2010 Estimates of some functions over primes without R H arXiv 1002 0442 math NT Cesaro Ernesto 1894 Sur une formule empirique de M Pervouchine Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Seances de l Academie des Sciences in French 119 848 849 Dusart Pierre 1999 The k th prime is greater than k log k log log k 1 for k 2 Mathematics of Computation 68 225 411 415 doi 10 1090 S0025 5718 99 01037 6 MR 1620223 Conditional Calculation of p 1024 Chris K Caldwell Archived from the original on 2010 08 04 Retrieved 2010 08 03 Platt David 2015 Computing p x analytically Mathematics of Computation 84 293 1521 1535 arXiv 1203 5712 doi 10 1090 S0025 5718 2014 02884 6 MR 3315519 S2CID 119174627 Chebolu Sunil Minac Jan December 2011 Counting Irreducible Polynomials over Finite Fields Using the Inclusion p Exclusion Principle Mathematics Magazine 84 5 369 371 arXiv 1001 0409 doi 10 4169 math mag 84 5 369 JSTOR 10 4169 math mag 84 5 369 S2CID 115181186 References editGranville Andrew 1995 Harald Cramer and the distribution of prime numbers PDF Scandinavian Actuarial Journal 1 12 28 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 129 6847 doi 10 1080 03461238 1995 10413946 Hardy G H Littlewood J E 1916 Contributions to the theory of the Riemann zeta function and the theory of the distribution of primes Acta Mathematica 41 119 196 doi 10 1007 BF02422942 S2CID 53405990 Hardy G H Wright E M 2008 1st ed 1938 An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers Revised by D R Heath Brown and J H Silverman with a foreword by Andrew Wiles 6th ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 921985 8 Narkiewicz Wladyslaw 2000 The Development of Prime Number Theory From Euclid to Hardy and Littlewood Springer Monographs in Mathematics Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 662 13157 2 ISBN 978 3 540 66289 1 ISSN 1439 7382External links edit Distribution of prime numbers Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Table of Primes by Anton Felkel Short video visualizing the Prime Number Theorem Prime formulas and Prime number theorem at MathWorld How Many Primes Are There Archived 2012 10 15 at the Wayback Machine and The Gaps between Primes by Chris Caldwell University of Tennessee at Martin Tables of prime counting functions by Tomas Oliveira e Silva Eberl Manuel and Paulson L C The Prime Number Theorem Formal proof development in Isabelle HOL Archive of Formal Proofs The Prime Number Theorem the elementary proof An exposition of the elementary proof of the Prime Number Theorem of Atle Selberg and Paul Erdos at www dimostriamogoldbach it en Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prime number theorem amp oldid 1216957723, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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