Mills' constant
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In number theory, Mills' constant is defined as the smallest positive real number A; such that the integer part of the double exponential function
is a prime number, for all positive integers n. This constant is named after W. H. Mills who proved in 1947 the existence of A based on results of Guido Hoheisel and Albert Ingham on the prime gaps. Its value is unknown, but if the Riemann hypothesis is true it is approximately
- (Sloane's A051021).
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[edit] Mills primes
The primes generated by Mills' constant are known as Mills primes; if the Riemann hypothesis is true, the sequence begins
If a(i) denotes the ith prime in this sequence, then a(i) can be calculated as the smallest prime number larger than a(i −1)3. In order to ensure that rounding A3n, for n = 1, 2, 3, ..., produces this sequence of primes, it must be the case that a(i) < (a(i −1) + 1)3. The Hoheisel-Ingham results guarantee that there exists a prime between any two sufficiently large cubic numbers, which is sufficient to prove this inequality if we start from a sufficiently large first prime a(1). The Riemann hypothesis implies that there exists a prime between any two consecutive cubes, allowing the sufficiently large condition to be removed, and allowing the sequence of Mills' primes to begin at a(1) = 2.
The currently largest known Mills prime (under the Riemann hypothesis) is
which is 20,562 digits long.
[edit] Numerical calculation
By calculating the sequence of Mills primes, one can approximate Mills' constant as
Caldwell & Cheng (2005) used this method to compute almost seven thousand base 10 digits of Mills' constant under the assumption that the Riemann hypothesis is true. There is no closed-form formula known for Mills' constant, and it is not even known whether this number is rational (Finch 2003).
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Caldwell, Chris K. & Cheng, Yuanyou (2005), “Determining Mills' Constant and a Note on Honaker's Problem”, Journal of Integer Sequences 8 (05.4.1), <http://www.cs.uwaterloo.ca/journals/JIS/VOL8/Caldwell/caldwell78.html>.
- Finch, Steven R. (2003), “Mills' Constant”, Mathematical Constants, Cambridge University Press, pp. 130–133, ISBN 0521818052.
- Mills, W. H. (1947), “A prime-representing function”, Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 53: 604, DOI 10.1090/S0002-9904-1947-08849-2.
[edit] External links
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