Bertrand's postulate
In number theory, Bertrand's postulate is the theorem that for any integer, there exists at least one prime number with
A less restrictive formulation is: for every, there is always at least one prime such that
Another formulation, where is the -th prime, is: for
This statement was first conjectured in 1845 by Joseph Bertrand. Bertrand himself verified his statement for all integers.
His conjecture was completely proved by Chebyshev in 1852 and so the postulate is also called the Bertrand–Chebyshev theorem or Chebyshev's theorem. Chebyshev's theorem can also be stated as a relationship with, the prime-counting function :
Prime number theorem
The prime number theorem implies that the number of primes up to, denoted, is roughly, so if we replace ' with then we see the number of primes up to ' is asymptotically twice the number of primes up to '. Therefore, the number of primes between ' and is roughly when ' is large, and so in particular there are many more primes in this interval than are guaranteed by Bertrand's postulate. So Bertrand's postulate is comparatively weaker than the PNT. But the PNT is a deep theorem, while Bertrand's Postulate can be stated more memorably and proved more easily, and also makes precise claims about what happens for small values of '.The similar and still unsolved Legendre's conjecture asks whether for every ', there is a prime ' such that. Again we expect that there will be not just one but many primes between and, but in this case the PNT does not help: the number of primes up to is asymptotic to while the number of primes up to is asymptotic to, which is asymptotic to the estimate on primes up to. So, unlike the previous case of ' and, we do not get a proof of Legendre's conjecture for large '. Error estimates on the PNT are not sufficient to prove the existence of even one prime in this interval. In greater detail, the PNT allows to estimate the boundaries for all, there exists an ' such that for :
The ratio between the lower bound and the upper bound of is
Note that since when, for all x > 0, and for a fixed ', there exists an ' such that the ratio above is less than 1 for all '. Thus, it does not ensure that there exists a prime between ' and '. More generally, these simple bounds are not enough to prove that there exists a prime between ' and ' for any positive integer .
Generalizations
In 1919, Ramanujan used properties of the Gamma function to give a simpler proof than Chebyshev. His short paper included a generalization of the postulate, from which would later arise the concept of Ramanujan primes. Further generalizations of Ramanujan primes have also been discovered; for instance, there is a proof thatwith ' the '-th prime and the '-th Ramanujan prime.
Other generalizations of Bertrand's postulate have been obtained using elementary methods. In 1973, Denis Hanson proved that there exists a prime between and.
In 2006, apparently unaware of Hanson's result, M. El Bachraoui proposed a proof that there exists a prime between and '. El Bachraoui's proof is an extension of Erdős's arguments for the primes between and. Shevelev, Greathouse, and Moses discuss related results for similar intervals.
Bertrand’s postulate over the Gaussian integers is an extension of the idea of the distribution of primes, but in this case on the complex plane. Thus, as Gaussian primes extend over the plane and not only along a line, and doubling a complex number is not simply multiplying by 2 but doubling its norm, different definitions lead to different results, some are still conjectures, some proven.
Sylvester's theorem
Bertrand's postulate was proposed for applications to permutation groups. Sylvester generalized the weaker statement with the statement: the product of ' consecutive integers greater than ' is divisible by a prime greater than '. Bertrand's postulate follows from this by taking ', and considering the ' numbers ', where '. According to Sylvester's generalization, one of these numbers has a prime factor greater than '. Since all these numbers are less than ', the number with a prime factor greater than ' has only one prime factor, and thus is a prime. Note that ' is not prime, and thus indeed we now know there exists a prime ' with .Erdős's theorems
In 1932, Erdős also published a simpler proof using binomial coefficients and the Chebyshev function, defined as:where p ≤ x runs over primes. See proof of Bertrand's postulate for the details.
Erdős proved in 1934 that for any positive integer ', there is a natural number ' such that for all ', there are at least ' primes between ' and '. An equivalent statement had been proved in 1919 by Ramanujan.
Better results
It follows from the prime number theorem that for any real there is a such that for all there is a prime such that. It can be shown, for instance, thatwhich implies that goes to infinity.
Non-asymptotic bounds have also been proved. In 1952, Jitsuro Nagura proved that for there is always a prime between and.
In 1976, Lowell Schoenfeld showed that for, there is always a prime in the open interval.
In his 1998 doctoral thesis, Pierre Dusart improved the above result, showing that for,
and in particular for, there exists a prime in the interval.
In 2010 Pierre Dusart proved that for there is at least one prime in the interval.
In 2016, Pierre Dusart improved his result from 2010, showing that if, there is at least one prime in the interval. He also shows that for, there is at least one prime in the interval.
Baker, Harman and Pintz proved that there is a prime in the interval for all sufficiently large.
Dudek proved that for all, there is at least one prime between and.
Dudek also proved that the Riemann hypothesis implies that for all there is a prime satisfying
Consequences
- The sequence of primes, along with 1, is a complete sequence; any positive integer can be written as a sum of primes using each at most once.
- The only harmonic number that is an integer is the number 1.