|
|
|
Glossary:
Prime Pages:
Top 5000:
|
It is easy to prove that there are infinitely many primes
in the arithmetic sequence 1, 5, 9, 13, 17,...
(an=4n+1), but
only one in the similar sequence 2, 6, 10, 14, 18,...
(an=4n+2). An obvious guess is that there must be infinitely many primes in the sequence a+nb (n=1,2,3...) if
a and b are relatively prime (and only finitely many otherwise). Dirichlet proved this was indeed the case in 1837 by proving the following.
Recall the prime number theorem states that there are asymptotically n/log(n) primes less than n. It has been proven that these sequences contain asymptotically n/(phi(a) log n) primes less than n. A great deal of effort has been spent trying to find a reasonable limit by which the first prime in such a sequence must occur. See Linnik's constant for one approach to finding such a bound.
See Also: LinniksConstant Related pages (outside of this work)
Chris K. Caldwell © 1999-2013 (all rights reserved)
|