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Math 675, Homework 4, Part 1 (Due Monday, October 26, 2015, in class) (or by 3pm in the box outside EH3086) Problems with a star, if there are any, might be harder. Two stars are not assigned. 29. (Squarefull numbers) Let S = {n ≥ 1 : p|n implies p2 |n}. Let S(x) = #{n ∈ S : n ≤ x}. (a) Show that each n ∈ S can be written in a unique way as n = m3 d2 where m is squarefree. p P (b) Estimate T (x) := n≤x,n∈S nx and use this to deduce that S(x) = O √ x(log x) (c) Use (a) and (b) to show that ζ( 23 ) √ S(x) ∼ x, ζ(3) as x → ∞. Q 30. (Radical of an integer) The radical of an integer n is Rad(n) = p|n p, which is the largest squarefree divisor of n. It is also called the squarefree kernel of n. (a) Use the fact that Rad(n)/n is a multiplicative function of size at most 1 to deduce that X Rad(n) ∼ Cx as x → ∞, n n≤x with constant C given by C := Y 1− p 1 . p(p + 1) (b) Use the result of Problem 29 (c), to show that X Rad(n) n≤x n = Cx + O √ x . (c) Deduce from (b) that 1 Rad(n) = Cx2 + O x3/2 . 2 n≤x X 31. Let ω(n) count the number of prime divisors of n without multiplicity, Ω(n) count number of prime divisors counted with multiplicity, and d(n) the number of divisors of n. (a) Show that there is a constant A such that x X ω(d(n)) = Ax + O . log x n≤x 1 (b) Show that X Ω(d(n)) = x log log x + O x . n≤x (Compare these asymptotics with those of Problem 25.) 32. (Integers with no medium-sized prime factors) Let x be given and for 1 ≤ y ≤ z ≤ x, let Ψ0 (x, y, z) count the number of integers below x which have no prime divisor in the interval y < p ≤ z. (a) For fixed y, z, letting x vary, use the Eratosthenes sieve (inclusion-exclusion) to show that Y 1 1 1− lim Ψ0 (x, y, z) = x→∞ x p y<p≤z (b) Improve this estimate further using Brun’s pure sieve method to show that there is a positive absolute constant c, such that one has, uniformly for 1 ≤ y ≤ z ≤ exp(c log x/(log log x)), the asymptotic estimate Y 1 Ψ0 (x, y, z) ∼ x 1− , as x → ∞. p y<p≤z (c) Show, assuming the prime number theorem, that the estimate of (b) cannot hold √ uniformly in the range 1 ≤ y < z ≤ x. (d) Further improve the range of z allowed in (c) using the Fundamental Lemma of combinatorial sieve theory (handout) as a black box. Note that (d) provides a limit on how far one can get. 33. (Primes of the form n2 +1) It is not known whether there are infinitely many primes of the form n2 + 1. Here we obtain an upper bound on their number. (a) Show that the number ρ(p) of solutions of the equation x2 + 1 ≡ 0 (mod p) has n 1 ρ(p) = 2 0 if p = 2, if p ≡ 1 (mod 4), if p ≡ 3 (mod 4). 2 Q (b) Deduce that the equation x + 1 ≡ 0 mod d) has, for each squarefree d, ρ(d) := p|d ρ(p) solutions. (c) Using the Fundamental Lemma of Combinatorial Sieve Theory (handout) as a black box, show that the number S(x) of primes ≤ x that are of the form n2 + 1 satisfies √ Y 2 (1 − ) S(x) = O x p p≤x p≡1( mod 4) (d) Now assume as known Dirichlet’s theorem, stating that X 1 1 = log log x + O 1 . p 2 p≤x p≡1( mod 4) Apply it to simplify the second term in the estimate in (c) as a function of x. 2