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| ==Summatory function and average value== | | ==Related arithmetic functions== |
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| ===Summatory function=== | | ===Summatory functions=== |
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| The summatory function of the Euler phi-function is termed the [[totient summatory function]]. | | The sum of the values of the totient function for all natural numbers up to a given number is termed the [[totient summary function]]. |
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| ==Relation with other arithmetic functions==
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| ===Similar functions=== | | ===Similar functions=== |
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| * [[Universal exponent]] (also called Carmichael function) is the [[groupprops:exponent of a group|exponent]] of the multiplicative group modulo <math>n</math>. The universal exponent of <math>n</math>, usually denoted <math>\lambda(n)</math>, divides <math>\varphi(n)</math>.
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| * [[Dedekind psi-function]] is similar tothe Euler phi-function, and is defined as:
| | ! Name of arithmetic function !! Description !! Mathematical relation with Euler totient function |
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| <math>\psi(n) = n \prod_{p|n} \left( 1 + \frac{1}{p}\right)</math>. | | | [[Universal exponent]] (also called Carmichael function)|| The [[groupprops:exponent of a group|exponent]] of the multiplicative group modulo <math>n</math>. Denoted <math>\lambda(n)</math>|| <math>\lambda(n)</math> divides <math>\varphi(n)</math>. This is related to the group-theoretic fact that [[groupprops:exponent divides order|exponent divides order]]. |
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| | | [[Dedekind psi-function]] || Defined as <math>\psi(n) = n \prod_{p|n} \left( 1 + \frac{1}{p}\right)</math> || Structural similarity in definition. Also, <math>\psi(n) \ge \varphi(n)</math> for all <math>n</math>, with equality occurring iff <math>n = 1</math>. |
| ===Relations expressed in terms of Dirichlet products=== | | ===Relations expressed in terms of Dirichlet products=== |
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| * <math>\varphi * U = E</math>: In other words, the [[Dirichlet product]] of the Euler phi-function and the [[all ones function]] is the [[identity function]]:
| | Below are some [[Dirichlet product]]s of importance. |
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| <math>\sum_{d|n} \varphi(d) = n</math>.
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| * <math>\varphi = E * \mu</math>: This is obtained by applying the [[Mobius inversion formula]] to the previous identity. The Euler phi-function is thus the [[Dirichlet product]] of the [[identity function]] and the [[Mobius function]]:
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| <math>\sum_{d|n} d\mu(n/d) = \varphi(n)</math>.
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| * <math>\varphi * \sigma_0 = \sigma</math>: In other words, the [[Dirichlet product]] of the Euler phi-function and the [[divisor count function]] equals the divisor sum function:
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| <math>\sum_{d|n} \varphi(d) \sigma_0(n/d) = \sigma(n)</math>. | | {| class="sortable" border="1" |
| | ! Statement !! Function !! Value of the Dirichlet product <math>\varphi *</math> the function !! Description !! Statement in ordinary notation !! Proof !! Corollaries |
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| | | <math>\varphi * U = E</math>|| <math>U</math> || the function that sends every natural number to 1 || <math>E</math> || the function that sends every natural number to itself || <math>\sum_{d|n} \varphi(d) = n</math> || Direct combinatorial argument: each summand is the number of elements in <math>\{ 1, \dots, n \}</math> whose gcd with <math>n</math> with <math>n/d</math>. || <math>\varphi = E * \mu</math>, where <math>\mu</math> is the [[Mobius function]]. This follows from the fact that <math>\mu = U^{-1}</math>.<br>Also, <math>\varphi * \sigma_1 = E * E</math>, follows from this and <math>\sigma_1 = E * U</math>. |
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| | | <math>\varphi * \sigma_0 = \sigma_1</math> || <math>\sigma_0<math> || the [[divisor count function]] <math>\sigma = \sigma_1</math> || the [[divisor sum function]] || <math>\sum_{d|n} \varphi(d) \sigma_0(n/d) = \sigma(n)</math> || Proof: We have <math>\sigma_0 = U * U</math> and <math>\sigma_1 = E * U</math> by definition. Multiply both sides of the former by <math>\varphi</math> and use associativity to get <math>\varphi * \sigma_0 = (\varphi * U) * U</math>. Use the preceding identity to get <math>\varphi * \sigma_0 = E * U</math>, so <math>\varphi * \sigma_0 = \sigma_1</math>. |
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| * <math>\sigma * \varphi = E * E</math>.
| | The table of relationships can be conceptualized as follows, where the cell entries are the products of their row and column headers: |
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| | {| class="sortable" border="1" |
| | ! !! <math>\mu = U^{-1}</math> ([[Mobius function]]) !! <math>I</math> (Kronecker delta with 1, identity for Dirichlet product) !! <math>U</math> ([[all ones function]]) !! <math>\sigma_0 = U^2</math> ([[divisor count function]]) |
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| | | <math>E</math> (identity map, sends everything to itself) || <math>\varphi</math> || <math>E</math> || <math>\sigma_1</math> || no name |
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| ===Inequalities=== | | ===Inequalities=== |
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This article defines an arithmetic function or number-theoretic function: a function from the natural numbers to a ring (usually, the ring of integers, rational numbers, real numbers, or complex numbers).
View a complete list of arithmetic functions
Definition
Let
be a natural number. The Euler phi-function or Euler totient function of
, denoted
, is defined as following:
- It is the order of the multiplicative group modulo
, i.e., the multiplicative group of the ring of integers modulo
.
- It is the number of elements in
that are relatively prime to
.
In terms of prime factorization
Suppose we have the following prime factorization of
:
.
Then, we have:
.
In other words:
.
Properties
Property |
Satisfied? |
Statement with symbols
|
multiplicative function |
Yes |
If and are relatively prime natural numbers, then .
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completely multiplicative function |
No |
It is not true for arbitrary natural numbers and that . For instance, if , then whereas is 2.
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divisibility-preserving function |
Yes |
If and are natural numbers such that divides , then divides .
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Behavior
High and low points (relatively speaking)
- Primes are high points: We also have
for
. Equality occurs if and only if
is a prime number.
- Primorials are low points: Roughly, the numbers occurring as primorials (products of the first few primes) have the lowest value of
relative to
, compared with other similarly sized numbers.
Measures of difference
We use the infinitude of primes for arguing about limit superiors. The limits discussed are in the limit as
. Note that the last quotient is undefined for
.
Measure |
Limit superior |
Explanation |
Limit inferior |
Explanation
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-1 |
maximum value of -1 occurs at primes |
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Consider the sequence of powers 2. , so .
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1 |
At each prime , value is . Limit is 1 as  |
0 |
Consider the sequence of primorials. The corresponding values of are products of the values for the first few primes . The limit of these is the infinite product over all prime . This diverges because the infinite sum of the reciprocals of the primes diverges.
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1 |
For each prime , the limit is ,which approaches 1. |
1 |
We can show that for every , there exists such that for all .
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Related arithmetic functions
Summatory functions
The sum of the values of the totient function for all natural numbers up to a given number is termed the totient summary function.
Similar functions
Name of arithmetic function |
Description |
Mathematical relation with Euler totient function
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Universal exponent (also called Carmichael function) |
The exponent of the multiplicative group modulo . Denoted  |
divides . This is related to the group-theoretic fact that exponent divides order.
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Dedekind psi-function |
Defined as  |
Structural similarity in definition. Also, for all , with equality occurring iff .
Relations expressed in terms of Dirichlet products
Below are some Dirichlet products of importance.
Statement |
Function |
Value of the Dirichlet product the function |
Description |
Statement in ordinary notation |
Proof |
Corollaries
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the function that sends every natural number to 1 |
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the function that sends every natural number to itself |
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Direct combinatorial argument: each summand is the number of elements in whose gcd with with . |
, where is the Mobius function. This follows from the fact that . Also, , follows from this and .
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![{\displaystyle \sigma _{0}<math>||the[[divisorcountfunction]]<math>\sigma =\sigma _{1}}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/bab0691c70a8e2017ec7879b50f9b438ccc69ed0) |
the divisor sum function |
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Proof: We have and by definition. Multiply both sides of the former by and use associativity to get . Use the preceding identity to get , so .
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The table of relationships can be conceptualized as follows, where the cell entries are the products of their row and column headers:
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(Mobius function) |
(Kronecker delta with 1, identity for Dirichlet product) |
(all ones function) |
(divisor count function)
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(identity map, sends everything to itself) |
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no name
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Inequalities
: Here, is the prime-counting function, and counts the number of primes less than or equal to , while is the prime divisor count function of .
: Here, is the divisor count function, counting the total number of divisors of .
Relation with properties of numbers
- Prime number: A natural number
such that .
- Polygonal number: A natural number
such that is a power of , or equivalently, such that the regular -gon is constructible using straightedge and compass.
Dirichlet series
Further information: Formula for Dirichlet series of Euler phi-function
The Dirichlet series for the Euler phi-function is given by:
.
Using the Dirichlet product identity and the fact that Dirichlet series of Dirichlet product equals product of Dirichlet series, we get:
.
This simplifies to:
.
This identity holds not just for the formal Dirichlet series, but also for their analytic continuations, and is valid universally for the meromorphic functions.
Algebraic significance
The Euler phi-function of is important in the following ways:
- It is the number of generators of the cyclic group of order
.
- It is the order of the multiplicative group of the ring of integers modulo
(in fact, this multiplicative group is precisely the set of generators of the additive group).
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