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In mathematics, the prime-counting function is the function counting the number of prime numbers less than or equal to some real number x.[1][2] It is denoted by
[edit] HistoryOf great interest in number theory is the growth rate of the prime-counting function.[3][4] It was conjectured in the end of the 18th century by Gauss and by Legendre to be approximately in the sense that This statement is the prime number theorem. An equivalent statement is where li is the logarithmic integral function. The prime number theorem was first proved in 1896 by Jacques Hadamard and by Charles de la Vallée Poussin independently, using properties of the Riemann zeta function introduced by Riemann in 1859. More precise estimates of where the O is big O notation. Proofs of the prime number theorem not using the zeta function or complex analysis were found around 1948 by Atle Selberg and by Paul Erdős (for the most part independently).[5] Another conjecture about the growth rate for prime series involving the prime number theorem is [edit] Table of π(x), x / ln x, and li(x)The table shows how the three functions π(x), x / ln x and li(x) compare at powers of 10. See also [3],[6], [7] and [8].
In the On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, the π(x) column is sequence A006880, π(x) - x / ln x is sequence A057835, and li(x) − π(x) is sequence A057752. The value for π(1023) is by T. Oliveira e Silva.[6] [edit] Algorithms for evaluating π(x)A simple way to find π(x), if x is not too large, is to use the sieve of Eratosthenes to produce the primes less than or equal to x and then to count them. A more elaborate way of finding π(x) is due to Legendre: given x, if p1, p2, …, pk are distinct prime numbers, then the number of integers less than or equal to x which are divisible by no pi is (where when the numbers In a series of articles published between 1870 and 1885, Ernst Meissel described (and used) a practical combinatorial way of evaluating π(x). Let p1, p2, …, pn be the first n primes and denote by Φ(m,n) the number of natural numbers not greater than m which are divisible by no pi. Then Given a natural number m, if Using this approach, Meissel computed π(x), for x equal to 5×105, 106, 107, and 108. In 1959, Derrick Henry Lehmer extended and simplified Meissel's method. Define, for real m and for natural numbers n, and k, Pk(m,n) as the number of numbers not greater than m with exactly k prime factors, all greater than pn. Furthermore, set P0(m,n) = 1. Then where the sum actually has only finitely many nonzero terms. Let y denote an integer such that
The computation of P2(m,n) can be obtained this way: On the other hand, the computation of Φ(m,n) can be done using the following rules: Using his method and an IBM 701, Lehmer was able to compute Further improvements to this method were made by Lagarias, Miller, Odlyzko, Deléglise and Rivat [9]. The Chinese mathematician Hwang Cheng, in a conference about prime number functions at the University of Bordeaux[10], used the following identities: and setting x = et, Laplace-transforming both sides and applying a geometric sum on enΘ got the expression [edit] Other prime-counting functionsOther prime-counting functions are also used because they are more convenient to work with. One is Riemann's prime-counting function, usually denoted as Π0(x) or J0(x). This has jumps of 1/n for prime powers pn, with it taking a value half-way between the two sides at discontinuities. That added detail is because then it may be defined by an inverse Mellin transform. Formally, we may define Π0(x) by where p is a prime. We may also write where Λ(n) is the von Mangoldt function and Möbius inversion formula then gives Knowing the relationship between log of the Riemann zeta function and the von Mangoldt function Λ, and using the Perron formula we have The Chebyshev function weights primes or prime powers pn by ln(p): [edit] Formulas for prime-counting functionsThese come in two kinds, arithmetic formulas and analytic formulas. The latter are what allow us to prove the prime number theorem. They stem from the work of Riemann and von Mangoldt, and are generally known as explicit formulas [11]. We have the following expression for ψ: where Here ρ are the zeros of the Riemann zeta function in the critical strip, where the real part of ρ is between zero and one. The formula is valid for values of x greater than one, which is the region of interest. The sum over the roots is conditionally convergent, and should be taken in order of increasing absolute value of the imaginary part. Note that the same sum over the trivial roots gives the last subtrahend in the formula. For Again, the formula is valid for x > 1, while ρ are the nontrivial zeros of the zeta function ordered according to their absolute value, and, again, the latter integral, taken with minus sign, is just the same sum, but over the trivial zeros. The first term li(x) is the usual logarithmic integral function; the expression li(xρ) in the second term should be considered as Ei(ρ ln x), where Ei is the analytic continuation of the exponential integral function from positive reals to the complex plane with branch cut along the negative reals. Thus, Möbius inversion formula gives us valid for x > 1, where is so-called Riemann's R-function [12]. The latter series for it is known as Gram series [13] and converges for all positive x. The sum over non-trivial zeta zeros in the formula for as the best estimator of The amplitude of the "noisy" part is heuristically about An extensive table of the values of Δ(x) is available [7]. [edit] InequalitiesHere are some useful inequalities for π(x).
Here are some inequalities for the nth prime, pn.[citation needed]
The left inequality holds for n ≥ 1 and the right inequality holds for n ≥ 6. An approximation for the nth prime number is [edit] The Riemann hypothesisThe Riemann hypothesis is equivalent to a much tighter bound on the error in the estimate for π(x), and hence to a more regular distribution of prime numbers, Specifically,[15] [edit] References
[edit] External links
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