The average order of an arithmetic function (Q767150): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 11:02, 30 July 2024
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English | The average order of an arithmetic function |
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The average order of an arithmetic function (English)
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1956
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Let \(F(n)\) denote the number of all prime divisors of \(n\), distinct or not. The author proves that \[ \sum_{_{\substack{ n\leq x\\ 2\nmid n}}} 2^{F(n)}= c_2x\log x-c_5 x+O(x^\varepsilon), \] where \(c_2\) and \(c_5\) are constants and \(c<0.84\). In the proof he uses the property that \(\zeta(s)=O\left(| t|^{1/2(L-1)+\varepsilon}\right)\) holds uniformly for \(\sigma\geq 1-l/2(L-1)\) and any \(\varepsilon>0\), where \(l\) is an integer \(\geq 3\) and \(L=2^{l-1}\). For nonintegral value \(l\) (as the author uses \(l=3.54\ldots\)), the previous result needs a proof.
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average order
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arithmetic function
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