primorial
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Blend of prime + factorial. Coined by American engineer and mathematician Harvey Dubner.
Noun
[edit]primorial (plural primorials)
- (number theory) Any number belonging to the integer sequence whose nth element is the product of the first n primes.
- Synonym: primorial number
- 2017, Kevin Broughan, Equivalents of the Riemann Hypothesis: Volume 1, Arithmetic Equivalents, Cambridge University Press, page 97:
- For example, up to , every positive integer which is a multiple of a primorial and is less than the following primorial satisfies the given inequality. There has also been little discussion on which primorials qualify in the different situations when RH fails.
- (number theory) A unary operation, denoted by the postfix symbol # and defined on the nonnegative integers, which maps 0 to 1, 1 to 1, and each subsequent number to the product of all primes less than or equal to it; the value mapped to by said operation for a given input.
- The primorial of is .
- 2020, Rong Pan, Qinheping Hu, Rishabh Singh, Loris D'Antoni, Solving Problem Sketches with Large Integer Values, Peter Müller (editor), Programming Languages and Systems: 29th European Symposium, Proceedings, Springer, LNCS 12075, page 587,
- The following number theory result relates the primorial to the Chebyshev function.
- The following number theory result relates the primorial to the Chebyshev function.
Usage notes
[edit]The primorial operation may be defined as:
- ,
where denotes the prime-counting function, which gives the number of primes .
It can also be defined recursively:
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]product of primes
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Further reading
[edit]- Sequence A002110 of the On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences
- Chebyshev function on Wikipedia.Wikipedia (Particularly, first Chebyshev function.)
- Sparsely totient number on Wikipedia.Wikipedia