- Formula for primes
In
mathematics , a formula for primes is a formula generating theprime number s, exactly and without exception. No easily-computable such formula is known. A great deal is known about what, more precisely, such a "formula" can and cannot be.Prime formulas and polynomial functions
It is known that no non-constant
polynomial function "P"("n") exists that evaluates to aprime number for all integers "n". The proof is simple: Suppose such a polynomial existed. Then "P"(1) would evaluate to a prime "p", so . But for any "k", also, so cannot also be prime (as it would be divisible by "p") unless it were "p" itself, but the only way for all "k" is if the polynomial function is constant.Using more
algebraic number theory , one can show an even stronger result: no non-constantpolynomial function "P"("n") exists that evaluates to aprime number foralmost all integers "n".Euler first noticed (in 1772) that the
quadratic polynomial :"P(n) = n2 + n + 41"is prime for allnon-negative integer s less than 40. The primes for n = 0, 1, 2, 3... are 41, 43, 47, 53, 61, 71... The differences between the terms are 2, 4, 6, 8, 10... For n = 40, it produces a square number, 1681, which is equal to 41×41, the smallestcomposite number for this formula. In fact if 41 divides "n" it divides "P(n)" too. The phenomenon is related to theUlam spiral , which is also implicitly quadratic, and the class number;this polynomial is related to theHeegner number , and there are analogous polynomials for , corresponding to other Heegner numbers.It is known, based on
Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions , that linear polynomial functions produce infinitely many primes as long as "a" and "b" arerelatively prime (though no such function will assume prime values for all values of "n"). Moreover, theGreen-Tao theorem says that for any "k" there exists a pair of "a" and "b" with the property that is prime for any "n" from 0 to "k"−1. However, the best known result of such type is for "k" = 25::6171054912832631 + 81737658082080"n" is prime for all "n" from 0 to 24 harv|Andersen|2008.It is not known whether there exists a univariate polynomial of degree at least 2 that assumes an infinite number of values that are prime.
Formula based on a system of Diophantine equations
A set of
Diophantine equation s in 26 variables can be used to obtain primes. Harvtxt|Jones|Sato|Wada|Wiens|1976 proved that a given number "k" + 2 is primeif and only if the following system of 14 Diophantine equations has a solution in thenatural number s:::::::::::::::
This can be used to produce a prime-generating polynomial. Denote the right-hand sides of the above equations by α1, …, α14. Then :ie::is a polynomial in 26 variables, and the set of prime numbers is identical to the set of positive values taken on by this polynomial as the variables "a", "b", …, "z" range over the nonnegative integers.
A general theorem of Matiyasevich says that if a set is defined by a system of Diophantine equations, it can also be defined by a system of Diophantine equations in only 9 variables. Hence, there is a prime-generating polynomial as above with only 10 variables. However, its degree is large (in the order of 1045). On the other hand, there also exists such a set of equations of degree only 4, but in 58 variables harv|Jones|1982.
Formulas using the floor function
Using the
floor function (defined to be the largest integer less than or equal to thereal number "x"), one can construct several formulas that take only prime numbers as values for all positive integers "n".Mills's formula
The first such formula known was established in
1947 byW. H. Mills , who proved that there exists areal number "A" such that:
is a prime number for all positive integers "n". If the
Riemann hypothesis is true, then the smallest such "A" has a value of around 1.3063... and is known asMills' constant . This formula has no practical value, because very little is known about the constant (not even whether it is rational), and there is no known way of calculating the constant without finding primes in the first place.Floor function formulas based on Wilson's theorem
By using
Wilson's theorem , we may generate several other formulas, given below. These formulas also have little practical value: mostprimality test s are far more efficient.In general, we may define :or, alternatively,:
These definitions are equivalent; π("m") is the number of primes less than or equal to "m". The "n"-th prime number "p""n" can then be written as
:
A formula by C. P. Willans harv|Bowyer|n.d.::"f"("j") is 1 if "j" is prime and 0 otherwise. This can be used to build a formula for π("m") or "p""n".
Another approach using the floor function
Another approach, by Sebastián Martín-Ruiz, does not use factorials and Wilson's theorem, but also heavily employs the floor function harv|Rivera|n.d.: first define:
and then
:
Recurrence relation
Another prime generator is defined by the
recurrence relation :where gcd("x", "y") denotes thegreatest common divisor of "x" and "y". The sequence of differences "a""n" + 1 − "an" starts with 1, 1, 1, 5, 3, 1, 1, 1, 1, 11, 3, 1, 1 OEIS|id=A132199. harvtxt|Rowlands|2008 proved that this sequence contains only ones and prime numbers.Other formulas
The following function yields all the primes, and only primes, for
non-negative integer s "n"::This formula is based on
Wilson's theorem ; the number two is generated many times and all other primes are generated exactly once by this function. (In fact a prime "p" is generated for "n" = ("p" − 1) and 2 otherwise; that is, 2 is generated when "n" + 1 is composite.)ee also
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*A Venugopalan. "Formula for primes, twinprimes, number of primes and number of twinprimes". Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Sciences – Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 92, No 1, September 1983, pp. 49-52. Page [http://www.ias.ac.in/jarch/mathsci/92/00000050.pdf 49] , [http://www.ias.ac.in/jarch/mathsci/92/00000051.pdf 50] , [http://www.ias.ac.in/jarch/mathsci/92/00000052.pdf 51] , [http://www.ias.ac.in/jarch/mathsci/92/00000053.pdf 52] , [http://www.ias.ac.in/jarch/mathsci/93/00000068.pdf errata] .
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