Normal order of an arithmetic function: Difference between revisions

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==Examples==
==Examples==
* The [[Hardy–Ramanujan theorem]]: the normal order of ω(''n''), the number of distinct [[prime factor]]s of ''n'', is log(log(''n''));
* The [[Hardy–Ramanujan theorem]]: the normal order of ω(''n''), the number of distinct [[prime factor]]s of ''n'', is log(log(''n''));
* The normal order of log(''d''(''n'')), where ''d''(''n'') is the number of divisors of ''n'', is log(2) log log(''n'').  
* The normal order of log(''d''(''n'')), where ''d''(''n'') is the [[number of divisors function|number of divisors]] of ''n'', is log(2) log log(''n'').


==See also==
==See also==

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In mathematics, in the field of number theory, the normal order of an arithmetic function is some simpler or better-understood function which "usually" takes the same or closely approximate values.

Let f be a function on the natural numbers. We say that the normal order of f is g if for every ε > 0, the inequalities

hold for almost all n: that is, if the proportion of nx for which this does not hold tends to 0 as x tends to infinity.

It is conventional to assume that the approximating function g is continuous and monotone.

Examples

See also

References

  • G.H. Hardy; S. Ramanujan (1917). "The normal number of prime factors of a number". Quart. J. Math. 48: 76–92.