Brun-Titchmarsh theorem

From HandWiki

The Brun–Titchmarsh theorem in analytic number theory is an upper bound on the distribution on primes in an arithmetic progression. It states that, if π(x;a,q) counts the number of primes p congruent to a modulo q with px, then

π(x;a,q)2x/ϕ(q)log(x/q)

for all q<x. The result is proved by sieve methods. By contrast, Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions gives an asymptotic result, which may be expressed in the form

π(x;a,q)=xϕ(q)log(x)(1+O(1logx))

but this can only be proved to hold for the more restricted range q<(logx)c for constant c: this is the Siegel-Walfisz theorem.

The result is named for Viggo Brun and Edward Charles Titchmarsh.

References