Carmichael number: Difference between revisions
imported>Jitse Niesen (move references and external links to subpage, idiom, spelling) |
imported>Richard Pinch (added distribution, references; deleted comment on Euler psp see talk) |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
*Every Carmichael number is square-free and has at least three different prime factors | *Every Carmichael number is square-free and has at least three different prime factors | ||
*For every Carmichael number ''c'' it holds that <math>c-1</math> is divisible by <math>p_n - 1</math> for every one of its prime factors <math>p_n</math>. | *For every Carmichael number ''c'' it holds that <math>c-1</math> is divisible by <math>p_n - 1</math> for every one of its prime factors <math>p_n</math>. | ||
*Every | *Every absolute [[Euler pseudoprime]] is a Carmichael number. | ||
== Chernick's Carmichael numbers == | == Chernick's Carmichael numbers == | ||
Line 16: | Line 15: | ||
This way to construct Carmichael numbers could expand to <math>M_k(n)=(6n+1)(12n+1)\prod_{i=1}^{k-2}(9\cdot 2^in+1)</math> with the restriction, that for <math>(36\cdot 2^jm + 1)</math> the variable <math>m\ </math> is divisible by <math>2^j\ </math> | This way to construct Carmichael numbers could expand to <math>M_k(n)=(6n+1)(12n+1)\prod_{i=1}^{k-2}(9\cdot 2^in+1)</math> with the restriction, that for <math>(36\cdot 2^jm + 1)</math> the variable <math>m\ </math> is divisible by <math>2^j\ </math> | ||
==Distribution of Carmichael numbers== | |||
Let ''C''(''X'') denote the number of Carmichael numbers less than or equal to ''X''. Then | |||
:<math>X^{2/7} < C(X) < \exp(\log X \log\log\log X / \log\log X . </math> | |||
The upper bound is due to Erdos (1956)<ref>Paul Erdős, "On pseudoprimes and Carmichael numbers", ''Publ. Math. Debrecen'' '''4''' (1956) 201-206.</ref> and the lower bound is due to Alford, Granville and Pomerance (1994)<ref>W. R. Alford, A. Granville, and C. Pomerance. "There are Infinitely Many Carmichael Numbers", ''Annals of Mathematics'' '''139''' (1994) 703-722</ref> | |||
==References and notes== | ==References and notes== | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Revision as of 14:53, 23 October 2008
A Carmichael number is a composite number named after the mathematician Robert Daniel Carmichael. A Carmichael number divides for every integer . A Carmichael number c also satisfies the congruence , if . The first few Carmichael numbers are 561, 1105, 1729, 2465, 2821, 6601 and 8911. In 1994 Pomerance, Alford and Granville proved that there exist infinitely many Carmichael numbers.
Properties
- Every Carmichael number is square-free and has at least three different prime factors
- For every Carmichael number c it holds that is divisible by for every one of its prime factors .
- Every absolute Euler pseudoprime is a Carmichael number.
Chernick's Carmichael numbers
J. Chernick found in 1939 a way to construct Carmichael numbers[1]. If, for a natural number n, the three numbers , and are prime numbers, the product is a Carmichael number. Equivalent to this is that if , and are prime numbers, then the product is a Carmichael number.
To construct Carmichael numbers with , you could only use numbers which ends with 0, 1, 5 or 6.
This way to construct Carmichael numbers could expand to with the restriction, that for the variable is divisible by
Distribution of Carmichael numbers
Let C(X) denote the number of Carmichael numbers less than or equal to X. Then
The upper bound is due to Erdos (1956)[2] and the lower bound is due to Alford, Granville and Pomerance (1994)[3]
References and notes
- ↑ (2003-11-22) Generic Carmichael Numbers
- ↑ Paul Erdős, "On pseudoprimes and Carmichael numbers", Publ. Math. Debrecen 4 (1956) 201-206.
- ↑ W. R. Alford, A. Granville, and C. Pomerance. "There are Infinitely Many Carmichael Numbers", Annals of Mathematics 139 (1994) 703-722