Dickman-de Bruijn function

Dickman-de Bruijn function

In analytic number theory, Dickman's function is a special function used to estimate the proportion of smooth numbers up to a given bound.

Dickman's function is named after actuary Karl Dickman, who defined it in his only mathematical publication. [K. Dickman, "On the frequency of numbers containing prime factors of a certain relative magnitude", "Arkiv för Matematik, Astronomi och Fysik" 22A:10 (1930), pp. 1–14.] Its properties were later studied by the Dutch mathematician Nicolaas Govert de Bruijn; [N.G. de Bruijn, " [http://alexandria.tue.nl/repository/freearticles/597499.pdf On the number of positive integers ≤ "x" and free of prime factors > "y"] ", "Indagationes Mathematicae" 13 (1951), pp. 50-60.] [N.G. de Bruijn, [http://alexandria.tue.nl/repository/freearticles/597534.pdf On the number of positive integers ≤ "x" and free of prime factors > "y", II"] , "Indagationes Mathematicae" 28 (1966), pp. 239–247] , so some sourcesfact|date=August 2008 call it the Dickman-de Bruijn function.

Definition

The Dickman-de Bruijn function ho(u) is a continuous function that satisfies the delay differential equation:u ho'(u) + ho(u-1) = 0,with initial conditions ho(u) = 1 for 0 ≤ u ≤ 1. Dickman showed heuristically that:Psi(x, x^{1/a})sim x ho(a),where Psi(x,y) is the number of "y"-smooth integers below "x".

V. Ramaswami of Andhra University later gave a rigorous proof that Psi(x,x^{1/a}) was asymptotic to ho(a), [V. Ramaswami, " [http://www.ams.org/bull/1949-55-12/S0002-9904-1949-09337-0/S0002-9904-1949-09337-0.pdf On the number of positive integers less than x and free of prime divisors greater than x^c] ". "Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society" 55 (1949), pp. 1122–1127.] along with the error bound:Psi(x,x^{1/a})=x ho(a)+mathcal{O}(x/log x)in big O notation.

Applications

The main purpose of the Dickman-de Bruijn function is to estimate the frequency of smooth numbers at a given size. This can be used to optimize various number-theoretical algorithms, and can be useful of its own right.

It can be shown using log ho that [A. Hildebrand and G. Tenenbaum, " [http://archive.numdam.org/article/JTNB_1993__5_2_411_0.pdf Integers without large prime factors] ", "Journal de théorie des nombres de Bordeaux", 5:2 (1993), pp. 411-484.] :Psi(x,y)=xu^{O(-u)}which is related to the estimate ho(u)approx u^{-u} below.

The Golomb–Dickman constant has an alternate definition in terms of the Dickman-de Bruijn function.

Estimation

A first approximation might be ho(u)approx u^{-u}., A better estimate is: ho(u)simfrac{1}{xisqrt{2pi xcdotexp(-xxi+operatorname{Ei}(xi))where Ei is the exponential integral and ξ is the positive root of:e^xi-1=xxi.,

A simple upper bound is ho(x)le1/x!.

Computation

For each interval [n-1, n] with "n" an integer, there is an analytic function ho_n such that ho_n(u)= ho(u). For 0 ≤ u ≤ 1, ho(u) = 1. For 1 ≤ u ≤ 2, ho(u) = 1-log u. For 2 ≤ u ≤ 3,: ho(u) = 1-(1-log(u-1))log(u) + operatorname{Li}_2(1 - u) + frac{pi^2}{12}.with Li2 the dilogarithm. Other ho_n can be calculated using infinite series.Eric Bach and René Peralta, " [http://cr.yp.to/bib/1996/bach-semismooth.pdf Asymptotic Semismoothness Probabilities] ". "Mathematics of Computation" 65:216 (1996), pp. 1701–1715.]

An alternate method is computing lower and upper bounds with the trapezoidal rule;J. van de Lune and E. Wattel, "On the Numerical Solution of a Differential-Difference Equation Arising in Analytic Number Theory". "Mathematics of Computation" 23:106 (1969), pp. 417–421.] a mesh of progressively finer sizes allows for arbitrary accuracy. For high precision calculations (hundreds of digits), a recursive series expansion about the midpoints of the intervals is superior. [George Marsaglia, Arif Zaman, and John C. W. Marsaglia, "Numerical Solution of Some Classical Differential-Difference Equations". "Mathematics of Computation" 53:187 (1989), pp. 191–201.]

Extension

Bach and Peralta define a two-dimensional analog sigma(u,v) of ho(u). This function is used to estimate a function Psi(x,y,z) similar to de Bruijn's, but counting the number of "y"-smooth integers with at most one prime factor greater than "z". Then:Psi(x,x^{1/a},x^{1/b})sim xsigma(b,a).,

References

External links

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