Schinzel's hypothesis H
Statement
Suppose are all irreducible polynomials with integer coefficients and with positive leading coefficient, such that the product does not have any fixed divisors, i.e., it cannot be expressed as a proper multiple of an integer-valued polynomial. Schinzel's hypothesis H states that there are infinitely many natural numbers satisfying the condition that are all simultaneously prime.
Related facts and conjectures
Weaker facts
Fact or conjecture | Status | How it fits with Schinzel's hypothesis H |
---|---|---|
Bunyakovsky conjecture | open | We are dealing with only one irreducible polynomial of degree two or higher |
Dirichlet's theorem on primes in arithmetic progressions | proved | We are dealing with one irreducible polynomial of degree one |
Twin prime conjecture | open | We are dealing with the irreducible polynomials and |