Smooth numbers #
We define the set Nat.smoothNumbers n
consisting of the positive natural numbers all of
whose prime factors are strictly less than n
.
We also define the finite set Nat.primesBelow n
to be the set of prime numbers less than n
.
The main definition Nat.equivProdNatSmoothNumbers
establishes the bijection between
ℕ × (smoothNumbers p)
and smoothNumbers (p+1)
given by sending (e, n)
to p^e * n
.
Here p
is a prime number.
Additionally, we define Nat.smoothNumbersUpTo N n
as the Finset
of n
-smooth numbers
up to and including N
, and similarly Nat.roughNumbersUpTo
for its complement in {1, ..., N}
,
and we provide some API, in particular bounds for their cardinalities; see
Nat.smoothNumbersUpTo_card_le
and Nat.roughNumbersUpTo_card_le
.
primesBelow n
is the set of primes less than n
as a finset.
Equations
- Nat.primesBelow n = Finset.filter (fun (p : ℕ) => Nat.Prime p) (Finset.range n)
Instances For
smoothNumbers n
is the set of n
-smooth positive natural numbers, i.e., the
positive natural numbers all of whose prime factors are less than n
.
Equations
- Nat.smoothNumbers n = {m : ℕ | m ≠ 0 ∧ ∀ p ∈ Nat.factors m, p < n}
Instances For
Membership in Nat.smoothNumbers n
is decidable.
Equations
- Nat.instDecidablePredNatMemSetInstMembershipSetSmoothNumbers n = inferInstanceAs (DecidablePred fun (x : ℕ) => x ∈ {m : ℕ | m ≠ 0 ∧ ∀ p ∈ Nat.factors m, p < n})
A number that divides an n
-smooth number is itself n
-smooth.
The product of the prime factors of n
that are less than N
is an N
-smooth number.
The sets of N
-smooth and of (N+1)
-smooth numbers are the same when N
is not prime.
See Nat.equivProdNatSmoothNumbers
for when N
is prime.
The non-zero non-N
-smooth numbers are ≥ N
.
If p
is positive and n
is p
-smooth, then every product p^e * n
is (p+1)
-smooth.
If p
is a prime and n
is p
-smooth, then p
and n
are coprime.
If f : ℕ → F
is multiplicative on coprime arguments, p
is a prime and m
is p
-smooth,
then f (p^e * m) = f (p^e) * f m
.
We establish the bijection from ℕ × smoothNumbers p
to smoothNumbers (p+1)
given by (e, n) ↦ p^e * n
when p
is a prime. See Nat.smoothNumbers_succ
for
when p
is not prime.
Equations
- One or more equations did not get rendered due to their size.
Instances For
The k
-smooth numbers up to and including N
as a Finset
Equations
- Nat.smoothNumbersUpTo N k = Finset.filter (fun (x : ℕ) => x ∈ Nat.smoothNumbers k) (Finset.range (Nat.succ N))
Instances For
The positive non-k
-smooth (so "k
-rough") numbers up to and including N
as a Finset
Equations
- Nat.roughNumbersUpTo N k = Finset.filter (fun (n : ℕ) => n ≠ 0 ∧ n ∉ Nat.smoothNumbers k) (Finset.range (Nat.succ N))
Instances For
A k
-smooth number can be written as a square times a product of distinct primes < k
.
The set of k
-smooth numbers ≤ N
is contained in the set of numbers of the form m^2 * P
,
where m ≤ √N
and P
is a product of distinct primes < k
.
The cardinality of the set of k
-smooth numbers ≤ N
is bounded by 2^π(k-1) * √N
.
The set of k
-rough numbers ≤ N
can be written as the union of the sets of multiples ≤ N
of primes k ≤ p ≤ N
.
The cardinality of the set of k
-rough numbers ≤ N
is bounded by the sum of ⌊N/p⌋
over the primes k ≤ p ≤ N
.