Practical number
In number theory, a practical number or panarithmic number[1] is a positive integer n such that all smaller positive integers can be represented as sums of distinct divisors of n. For example, 12 is a practical number because all the numbers from 1 to 11 can be expressed as sums of its divisors 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6: as well as these divisors themselves, we have 5 = 3 + 2, 7 = 6 + 1, 8 = 6 + 2, 9 = 6 + 3, 10 = 6 + 3 + 1, and 11 = 6 + 3 + 2.
The sequence of practical numbers (sequence A005153 in the OEIS) begins
- 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, 18, 20, 24, 28, 30, 32, 36, 40, 42, 48, 54, 56, 60, 64, 66, 72, 78, 80, 84, 88, 90, 96, 100, 104, 108, 112, 120, 126, 128, 132, 140, 144, 150....
Practical numbers were used by Fibonacci in his Liber Abaci (1202) in connection with the problem of representing rational numbers as Egyptian fractions. Fibonacci does not formally define practical numbers, but he gives a table of Egyptian fraction expansions for fractions with practical denominators.[2]
The name "practical number" is due to Srinivasan (1948). He noted that "the subdivisions of money, weights, and measures involve numbers like 4, 12, 16, 20 and 28 which are usually supposed to be so inconvenient as to deserve replacement by powers of 10." He rediscovered the number theoretical property of such numbers and was the first to attempt a classification of these numbers that was completed by Stewart (1954) and Sierpiński (1955). This characterization makes it possible to determine whether a number is practical by examining its prime factorization. Every even perfect number and every power of two is also a practical number.
Practical numbers have also been shown to be analogous with prime numbers in many of their properties.[3]
Characterization of practical numbers
The original characterisation by Srinivasan (1948) stated that a practical number cannot be a deficient number, that is one of which the sum of all divisors (including 1 and itself) is less than twice the number unless the deficiency is one. If the ordered set of all divisors of the practical number is with and , then Srinivasan's statement can be expressed by the inequality
- .
In other words the ordered sequence of all divisors of a practical number has to be a complete sub-sequence.
This partial characterization was extended and completed by Stewart (1954) and Sierpiński (1955) who showed that it is straightforward to determine whether a number is practical from its prime factorization. A positive integer greater than one with prime factorization (with the primes in sorted order ) is practical if and only if each of its prime factors is small enough for to have a representation as a sum of smaller divisors. For this to be true, the first prime must equal 2 and, for every i from 2 to k, each successive prime must obey the inequality
where denotes the sum of the divisors of x. For example, 2 × 32 × 29 × 823 = 429606 is practical, because the inequality above holds for each of its prime factors: 3 ≤ σ(2) + 1 = 4, 29 ≤ σ(2 × 32) + 1 = 40, and 823 ≤ σ(2 × 32 × 29) + 1 = 1171.
The condition stated above is necessary and sufficient for a number to be practical. In one direction, this condition is necessary in order to be able to represent as a sum of divisors of n, because if the inequality failed to be true then even adding together all the smaller divisors would give a sum too small to reach . In the other direction, the condition is sufficient, as can be shown by induction. More strongly, if the factorization of n satisfies the condition above, then any can be represented as a sum of divisors of n, by the following sequence of steps:[4]
- Let , and let .
- Since and can be shown by induction to be practical, we can find a representation of q as a sum of divisors of .
- Since , and since can be shown by induction to be practical, we can find a representation of r as a sum of divisors of .
- The divisors representing r, together with times each of the divisors representing q, together form a representation of m as a sum of divisors of n.
Properties
- The only odd practical number is 1, because if n > 2 is an odd number, then 2 cannot be expressed as the sum of distinct divisors of n. More strongly, Srinivasan (1948) observes that other than 1 and 2, every practical number is divisible by 4 or 6 (or both).
- The product of two practical numbers is also a practical number.[5] More strongly the least common multiple of any two practical numbers is also a practical number. Equivalently, the set of all practical numbers is closed under multiplication.
- From the above characterization by Stewart and Sierpiński it can be seen that if n is a practical number and d is one of its divisors then n*d must also be a practical number.
- In the set of all practical numbers there is a primitive set of practical numbers. A primitive practical number is either practical and squarefree or practical and when divided by any of its prime factors whose factorization exponent is greater than 1 is no longer practical. The sequence of primitive practical numbers (sequence A267124 in the OEIS) begins
- 1, 2, 6, 20, 28, 30, 42, 66, 78, 88, 104, 140, 204, 210, 220, 228, 260, 272, 276, 304, 306, 308, 330, 340, 342, 348, 364, 368, 380, 390, 414, 460 ...
Relation to other classes of numbers
Several other notable sets of integers consist only of practical numbers:
- From the above properties with n a practical number and d one of its divisors (that is, d | n) then n*d must also be a practical number therefore six times every power of 3 must be a practical number as well as six times every power of 2.
- Every power of two is a practical number.[6] Powers of two trivially satisfy the characterization of practical numbers in terms of their prime factorizations: the only prime in their factorizations, p1, equals two as required.
- Every even perfect number is also a practical number.[6] This follows from Leonhard Euler's result that an even perfect number must have the form 2n − 1(2n − 1). The odd part of this factorization equals the sum of the divisors of the even part, so every odd prime factor of such a number must be at most the sum of the divisors of the even part of the number. Therefore, this number must satisfy the characterization of practical numbers.
- Every primorial (the product of the first i primes, for some i) is practical.[6] For the first two primorials, two and six, this is clear. Each successive primorial is formed by multiplying a prime number pi by a smaller primorial that is divisible by both two and the next smaller prime, pi − 1. By Bertrand's postulate, pi < 2pi − 1, so each successive prime factor in the primorial is less than one of the divisors of the previous primorial. By induction, it follows that every primorial satisfies the characterization of practical numbers. Because a primorial is, by definition, squarefree it is also a primitive practical number.
- Generalizing the primorials, any number that is the product of nonzero powers of the first k primes must also be practical. This includes Ramanujan's highly composite numbers (numbers with more divisors than any smaller positive integer) as well as the factorial numbers.[6]
Practical numbers and Egyptian fractions
If n is practical, then any rational number of the form m/n may be represented as a sum ∑di/n where each di is a distinct divisor of n. Each term in this sum simplifies to a unit fraction, so such a sum provides a representation of m/n as an Egyptian fraction. For instance,
Fibonacci, in his 1202 book Liber Abaci[2] lists several methods for finding Egyptian fraction representations of a rational number. Of these, the first is to test whether the number is itself already a unit fraction, but the second is to search for a representation of the numerator as a sum of divisors of the denominator, as described above. This method is only guaranteed to succeed for denominators that are practical. Fibonacci provides tables of these representations for fractions having as denominators the practical numbers 6, 8, 12, 20, 24, 60, and 100.
Vose (1985) showed that every number x/y has an Egyptian fraction representation with terms. The proof involves finding a sequence of practical numbers ni with the property that every number less than ni may be written as a sum of distinct divisors of ni. Then, i is chosen so that ni − 1 < y ≤ ni, and xni is divided by y giving quotient q and remainder r. It follows from these choices that . Expanding both numerators on the right hand side of this formula into sums of divisors of ni results in the desired Egyptian fraction representation. Tenenbaum & Yokota (1990) use a similar technique involving a different sequence of practical numbers to show that every number x/y has an Egyptian fraction representation in which the largest denominator is .
According to a September 2015 conjecture by Zhi-Wei Sun,[7] every positive rational number has an Egyptian fraction representation in which every denominator is a practical number. There is a proof for the conjecture on David Eppstein's blog.[8]
Analogies with prime numbers
One reason for interest in practical numbers is that many of their properties are similar to properties of the prime numbers. Indeed, theorems analogous to Goldbach's conjecture and the twin prime conjecture are known for practical numbers: every positive even integer is the sum of two practical numbers, and there exist infinitely many triples of practical numbers x − 2, x, x + 2.[9] Melfi also showed that there are infinitely many practical Fibonacci numbers (sequence A124105 in the OEIS); the analogous question of the existence of infinitely many Fibonacci primes is open. Hausman & Shapiro (1984) showed that there always exists a practical number in the interval [x2,(x + 1)2] for any positive real x, a result analogous to Legendre's conjecture for primes.
Let p(x) count how many practical numbers are at most x. Margenstern (1991) conjectured that p(x) is asymptotic to cx/log x for some constant c, a formula which resembles the prime number theorem, strengthening the earlier claim of Erdős & Loxton (1979) that the practical numbers have density zero in the integers. Saias (1997) proved that for suitable constants c1 and c2:
Finally Weingartner (2015) proved Margenstern's conjecture showing that
for and some constant .
Notes
- ↑ Margenstern (1991) cites Robinson (1979) and Heyworth (1980) for the name "panarithmic numbers".
- 1 2 Sigler (2002).
- ↑ Hausman & Shapiro (1984); Margenstern (1991); Melfi (1996); Saias (1997).
- ↑ Stewart (1954); Sierpiński (1955).
- ↑ Margenstern (1991).
- 1 2 3 4 Srinivasan (1948).
- ↑ A Conjecture on Unit Fractions Involving Primes
- ↑ 0xDE: Egyptian fractions with practical denominators
- ↑ Melfi (1996).
References
- Erdős, Paul; Loxton, J. H. (1979), "Some problems in partitio numerorum", Journal of the Australian Mathematical Society (Series A), 27 (03): 319–331, doi:10.1017/S144678870001243X.
- Heyworth, M. R. (1980), "More on panarithmic numbers", New Zealand Math. Mag., 17 (1): 24–28. As cited by Margenstern (1991).
- Hausman, Miriam; Shapiro, Harold N. (1984), "On practical numbers", Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics, 37 (5): 705–713, MR 0752596, doi:10.1002/cpa.3160370507.
- Margenstern, Maurice (1984), "Résultats et conjectures sur les nombres pratiques", C. R. Acad. Sci. Sér. I, 299 (18): 895–898. As cited by Margenstern (1991).
- Margenstern, Maurice (1991), "Les nombres pratiques: théorie, observations et conjectures", Journal of Number Theory, 37 (1): 1–36, MR 1089787, doi:10.1016/S0022-314X(05)80022-8.
- Melfi, Giuseppe (1996), "On two conjectures about practical numbers", Journal of Number Theory, 56 (1): 205–210, MR 1370203, doi:10.1006/jnth.1996.0012.
- Mitrinović, Dragoslav S.; Sándor, József; Crstici, Borislav (1996), "III.50 Practical numbers", Handbook of number theory, Volume 1, Mathematics and its Applications, 351, Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 118–119, ISBN 978-0-7923-3823-9.
- Robinson, D. F. (1979), "Egyptian fractions via Greek number theory", New Zealand Math. Mag., 16 (2): 47–52. As cited by Margenstern (1991) and Mitrinović, Sándor & Crstici (1996).
- Saias, Eric (1997), "Entiers à diviseurs denses, I", Journal of Number Theory, 62 (1): 163–191, MR 1430008, doi:10.1006/jnth.1997.2057.
- Sigler, Laurence E. (trans.) (2002), Fibonacci's Liber Abaci, Springer-Verlag, pp. 119–121, ISBN 0-387-95419-8.
- Sierpiński, Wacław (1955), "Sur une propriété des nombres naturels", Annali di Matematica Pura ed Applicata, 39 (1): 69–74, doi:10.1007/BF02410762.
- Srinivasan, A. K. (1948), "Practical numbers" (PDF), Current Science, 17: 179–180, MR 0027799.
- Stewart, B. M. (1954), "Sums of distinct divisors", American Journal of Mathematics, The Johns Hopkins University Press, 76 (4): 779–785, JSTOR 2372651, MR 0064800, doi:10.2307/2372651.
- Tenenbaum, G.; Yokota, H. (1990), "Length and denominators of Egyptian fractions", Journal of Number Theory, 35 (2): 150–156, MR 1057319, doi:10.1016/0022-314X(90)90109-5.
- Vose, M. (1985), "Egyptian fractions", Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society, 17 (1): 21, MR 0766441, doi:10.1112/blms/17.1.21.
- Weingartner, A. (2015), "Practical numbers and the distribution of divisors", The Quarterly Journal of Mathematics, 66 (2): 743–758, doi:10.1093/qmath/hav006.
External links
- Tables of practical numbers compiled by Giuseppe Melfi.
- Practical Number at PlanetMath.org.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Practical Number". MathWorld.