Problems involving arithmetic progressions
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Problems involving arithmetic progressions are of interest in number theory,[1] combinatorics, and computer science, both from theoretical and applied points of view.
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[edit] Largest progression-free subsets
Find the cardinality (denoted by Ak(m)) of the largest subset of [0,1,...,m-1] which contains no progression of k distinct terms. The elements of the forbidden progressions are not required to be consecutive.
For example, A4(10) = 8, because [0,1,2,4,5,7,8,9] has no arithmetic progressions of length 4, while all 9-element subsets of [0,1,...9] have one. Paul Erdos set a $1000 prize for a question related to this number, collected by Szemeredi for what has become known as Szemerédi's theorem.
[edit] Arithmetic progressions from prime numbers
Szemerédi's theorem states that a set of natural numbers of non-zero upper asymptotic density contains finite arithmetic progressions, of any arbitrary length k.
Erdős made a more general conjecture from which it would follow that
- The sequence of primes numbers contains arithmetic progressions of any length.
This result was proven by Ben Green and Terence Tao in 2004 and is now known as the Green-Tao theorem.
See also Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions.
As of 2008, the longest known arithmetic progression of primes has length 25: [3]
- 6171054912832631 + 366384·23#·n, for n = 0 to 24. (23# = 223092870)
As of 2007, the longest known arithmetic progression of consecutive primes has length 10. It was found in 1998 [4][5] The progression starts with a 93-digit number
- 100 99697 24697 14247 63778 66555 87969 84032 95093 24689
- 19004 18036 03417 75890 43417 03348 88215 90672 29719
and has the period of 210.
[edit] Primes in arithmetic progressions
The prime number theorem for arithmetic progressions deals with the asymptotic distribution of prime numbers in an arithmetic progression.
[edit] Covering by and partitioning into arithmetic progressions
- Find minimal ln such that any set of n residues modulo p can be covered by an arithmetic progression of the length ln.[6]
- For a given set S of integers find the minimal number of arithmitic progressions that cover S
- For a given set S of integers find the minimal number of nonoverlapping arithmitic progressions that cover S
- Find the number of ways to partition [1,..n] into arithmetic progressions.[7]
- Find the number of ways to partition [1,..n] into arithmetic progressions of length at least 2with the same period.[8]
- See also Covering system
[edit] References
- ^ Samuel S. Wagstaff, Jr. (1979). "Some Questions About Arithmetic Progressions". The American Mathematical Monthly 86 (7): 579–582. doi: .
- ^ "Prime Arithmetic Progression", a MathWorld articlearticle
- ^ Jens Kruse Andersen, Primes in Arithmetic Progression Records. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ H. Dubner; T. Forbes; N. Lygeros; M. Mizony; H. Nelson; P. Zimmermann, "[Ten consecutive primes in arithmetic progression"], Math. Comp. 71 (2002), 1323-1328.
- ^ the Nine and Ten Primes Project
- ^ Vsevolod F. Lev (2000). "Simultaneous approximations and covering by arithmetic progressions". Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series A 92: 103. doi: .
- ^ A053732, The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences
- ^ A072255, The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences