The Distribution of Primes — The Road to the Prime Number Theorem
We define the prime-counting function pi(x) and trace the path from Chebyshev's estimates to the prime number theorem pi(x) ~ x / ln x. We discuss Mertens' theorems, state Dirichlet's theorem on primes in arithmetic progressions, and survey open problems including the twin prime conjecture and the Riemann hypothesis.
1 The Prime-Counting Function
The central problem in the study of prime distribution is to determine the asymptotic behavior of as .
2 Chebyshev's Estimates
3 The Prime Number Theorem
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, where denotes the -th prime.
4 Mertens' Theorems
, where is the Meissel–Mertens constant.
, where is the Euler–Mascheroni constant.
5 Dirichlet's Theorem on Arithmetic Progressions
6 Open Problems
Twin prime conjecture: Are there infinitely many primes such that is also prime? Zhang (2013) proved that for infinitely many , and this bound has been improved to by Maynard–Tao.
Riemann hypothesis: If and , then . If true, this would imply .
Goldbach's conjecture: Can every even integer greater than be written as the sum of two primes?
Mathematics "between the lines" — exploring the intuition textbooks leave out, written in LaTeX on Folio.