Brun-Titchmarsh theorem: Difference between revisions

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==References==
==References==
* {{citation|last=Hazewinkel|first=Michiel|title=Encyclopaedia of Mathematics: Supplement 3|date=2002|page=159|isbn=0792347099|url=http://eom.springer.de/b/b110970.htm}}
* {{cite book | author=Michiel Hazewinkel | title=Encyclopaedia of Mathematics: Supplement 3 | date=2002 | pages=159 | isbn=0792347099 | url=http://eom.springer.de/b/b110970.htm}}
* {{citation|last=Hooley|first=Christopher|authorlink=Christopher Hooley|title=Applications of sieve methods to the theory of numbers|publisher=Cambridge University Press|date=1976|isbn=0-521-20915-3|page=10}}
* {{cite journal|author=Hugh L. Montgomery | authorlink=Hugh Montgomery (mathematician) | coauthors=[[Robert Charles Vaughan (mathematician)|Robert C. Vaughan]] | title=The large sieve | journal=Mathematika | volume=20 | date=1973 | pages=119-134}}
* {{citation|last=Montgomery|first=H.L.|authorlink1=Hugh Montgomery (mathematician)|last2=Vaughan|first2=R.C.|title=The large sieve|journal=Mathematika|volume=20|date=1973|page=119-134}}.

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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 counts the number of primes p congruent to a modulo q with px, then

for all . 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

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

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

References