In analytic number theory the Friedlander–Iwaniec theorem states that there are infinitely many prime numbers of the form . The first few such primes are
- 2, 5, 17, 37, 41, 97, 101, 137, 181, 197, 241, 257, 277, 281, 337, 401, 457, 577, 617, 641, 661, 677, 757, 769, 821, 857, 881, 977, … (sequence A028916 in the OEIS).
The difficulty in this statement lies in the very sparse nature of this sequence: the number of integers of the form less than is roughly of the order .
History
editThe theorem was proved in 1997 by John Friedlander and Henryk Iwaniec.[1] Iwaniec was awarded the 2001 Ostrowski Prize in part for his contributions to this work.[2]
Refinements
editThe theorem was refined by D.R. Heath-Brown and Xiannan Li in 2017.[3] In particular, they proved that the polynomial represents infinitely many primes when the variable is also required to be prime. Namely, if is the prime numbers less than in the form then
where
Special case
editWhen b = 1, the Friedlander–Iwaniec primes have the form , forming the set
- 2, 5, 17, 37, 101, 197, 257, 401, 577, 677, 1297, 1601, 2917, 3137, 4357, 5477, 7057, 8101, 8837, 12101, 13457, 14401, 15377, … (sequence A002496 in the OEIS).
It is conjectured (one of Landau's problems) that this set is infinite. However, this is not implied by the Friedlander–Iwaniec theorem.
References
edit- ^ Friedlander, John; Iwaniec, Henryk (1997), "Using a parity-sensitive sieve to count prime values of a polynomial", PNAS, 94 (4): 1054–1058, doi:10.1073/pnas.94.4.1054, PMC 19742, PMID 11038598.
- ^ "Iwaniec, Sarnak, and Taylor Receive Ostrowski Prize"
- ^ Heath-Brown, D.R.; Li, Xiannan (2017), "Prime values of ", Inventiones Mathematicae, 208: 441–499, doi:10.1007/s00222-016-0694-0.
Further reading
edit- Cipra, Barry Arthur (1998), "Sieving Prime Numbers From Thin Ore", Science, 279 (5347): 31, doi:10.1126/science.279.5347.31, S2CID 118322959.