Buchstab function

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Graph of the Buchstab function ω(u) from u = 1 to u = 4.

The Buchstab function (or Buchstab's function) is the unique continuous function ω:1>0 defined by the delay differential equation

ω(u)=1u,1u2,
ddu(uω(u))=ω(u1),u2.

In the second equation, the derivative at u = 2 should be taken as u approaches 2 from the right. It is named after Alexander Buchstab, who wrote about it in 1937.

Asymptotics

The Buchstab function approaches eγ0.561 rapidly as u, where γ is the Euler–Mascheroni constant. In fact,

|ω(u)eγ|ρ(u1)u,u1,

where ρ is the Dickman function.[1] Also, ω(u)eγ oscillates in a regular way, alternating between extrema and zeroes; the extrema alternate between positive maxima and negative minima. The interval between consecutive extrema approaches 1 as u approaches infinity, as does the interval between consecutive zeroes.[2]

Applications

The Buchstab function is used to count rough numbers. If Φ(xy) is the number of positive integers less than or equal to x with no prime factor less than y, then for any fixed u > 1,

Φ(x,x1/u)ω(u)xlogx1/u,x.

Notes

  1. (5.13), Jurkat and Richert 1965. In this paper the argument of ρ has been shifted by 1 from the usual definition.
  2. p. 131, Cheer and Goldston 1990.

References