Andrica's conjecture

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(a) The function An for the first 100 primes.
(b) The function An for the first 200 primes.
(c) The function An for the first 500 primes.
Graphical proof for Andrica's conjecture for the first (a)100, (b)200 and (c)500 prime numbers. It is conjectured that the function An is always less than 1.

Andrica's conjecture (named after Dorin Andrica) is a conjecture regarding the gaps between prime numbers.[1]

The conjecture states that the inequality

pn+1pn<1

holds for all n, where pn is the nth prime number. If gn=pn+1pn denotes the nth prime gap, then Andrica's conjecture can also be rewritten as

gn<2pn+1.

Empirical evidence

Imran Ghory has used data on the largest prime gaps to confirm the conjecture for n up to 1.3002 × 1016.[2] Using a table of maximal gaps and the above gap inequality, the confirmation value can be extended exhaustively to 4 × 1018.

The discrete function An=pn+1pn is plotted in the figures opposite. The high-water marks for An occur for n = 1, 2, and 4, with A4 ≈ 0.670873..., with no larger value among the first 105 primes. Since the Andrica function decreases asymptotically as n increases, a prime gap of ever increasing size is needed to make the difference large as n becomes large. It therefore seems highly likely the conjecture is true, although this has not yet been proven.

Generalizations

Value of x in the generalized Andrica's conjecture for the first 100 primes, with the conjectured value of xmin labeled.

As a generalization of Andrica's conjecture, the following equation has been considered:

pn+1xpnx=1,

where pn is the nth prime and x can be any positive number.

The largest possible solution for x is easily seen to occur for n=1, when xmax = 1. The smallest solution for x is conjectured to be xmin ≈ 0.567148... (sequence A038458 in the OEIS) which occurs for n = 30.

This conjecture has also been stated as an inequality, the generalized Andrica conjecture:

pn+1xpnx<1 for x<xmin.

See also

References and notes

  1. Andrica, D. (1986). "Note on a conjecture in prime number theory". Studia Univ. Babes–Bolyai Math. 31 (4): 44–48. ISSN 0252-1938. 
  2. Prime Numbers: The Most Mysterious Figures in Math, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2005, p. 13.