Arithmetic Functions and Integer Products

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Every positive integer m has a product representation of the form where v, k and the ni are positive integers, and each Ei = ± I. A value can be given for v which is uniform in the m. A representation can be computed so that no ni exceeds a certain fixed power of 2m, and the number k of terms needed does not exceed a fixed power of log 2m. Consider next the collection of finite probability spaces whose associated measures assume only rational values. Let hex) be a real-valued function which measures the information in an event, depending only upon the probability x with which that event occurs. Assuming hex) to be non­ negative, and to satisfy certain standard properties, it must have the form -A(x log x + (I - x) 10g(I -x». Except for a renormalization this is the well-known function of Shannon. What do these results have in common? They both apply the theory of arithmetic functions. The two widest classes of arithmetic functions are the real-valued additive and the complex-valued multiplicative functions. Beginning in the thirties of this century, the work of Erdos, Kac, Kubilius, Turan and others gave a discipline to the study of the general value distribution of arithmetic func­ tions by the introduction of ideas, methods and results from the theory of Probability. I gave an account of the resulting extensive and still developing branch of Number Theory in volumes 239/240 of this series, under the title Probabilistic Number Theory.

Author(s): P. D. T. A. Elliott (auth.)
Series: Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften 272
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York
Year: 1985

Language: English
Pages: 461
Tags: Number Theory

Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Introduction....Pages 1-17
Front Matter....Pages 19-21
Variants of Well-Known Arithmetic Inequalities....Pages 23-36
A Diophantine Equation....Pages 37-52
A First Upper Bound....Pages 53-77
Intermezzo: The Group Q */Γ....Pages 78-80
Some Duality....Pages 81-95
Front Matter....Pages 97-100
Lemmas Involving Prime Numbers....Pages 101-120
Additive Functions on Arithmetic Progressions with Large Moduli....Pages 121-154
The Loop....Pages 155-175
Front Matter....Pages 177-181
The Approximate Functional Equation....Pages 183-203
Additive Arithmetic Functions on Differences....Pages 204-243
Some Historical Remarks....Pages 244-249
From L 2 to L ∞ ....Pages 250-258
A Problem of Kátai....Pages 259-263
Inequalities in L ∞ ....Pages 264-276
Integers as Products....Pages 277-290
The Second Intermezzo....Pages 291-296
Product Representations by Values of Rational Functions....Pages 297-308
Simultaneous Product Representations by Values of Rational Functions....Pages 309-328
Simultaneous Product Representations with a i x + b i ....Pages 329-342
Front Matter....Pages 177-181
Information and Arithmetic....Pages 343-355
Central Limit Theorem for Differences....Pages 356-371
Density Theorems....Pages 372-393
Problems....Pages 394-421
Progress in Probabilistic Number Theory....Pages 423-448
Back Matter....Pages 449-463