536 research outputs found

    The hexagonal versus the square lattice

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    We establish Schmutz Schaller's conjecture that the hexagonal lattice is `better' than the square lattice. Schmutz Schaller (Bulletin of the AMS 35 (1998), p. 201), motivated by considerations from hyperbolic geometry, conjectured that in dimensions 2 to 8 the best known lattice sphere packings have `maximal lengths' and goes on to write: "In dimension 2 the conjecture means in particular that the hexagonal lattice is `better' than the square lattice. More precisely, let 0<h_1<h_2<... be the positive integers, listed in ascending order, which can be written as h_i=x^2+3y^2 for integers x and y. Let 0<q_1<q_2<... be the positive integers, listed in ascending order, which can be written as q_i=x^2+y^2 for integers x and y. Then the conjecture is that q_i<=h_i for i=1,2,3,..." Our proof requires computational prime number theory in combination with methods from a preprint of the first author (to appear in Math. Comp.), arXiv:math.NT/0112100.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, 2 table

    Average prime-pair counting formula

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    Taking r>0r>0, let π2r(x)\pi_{2r}(x) denote the number of prime pairs (p, p+2r)(p,\,p+2r) with p≤xp\le x. The prime-pair conjecture of Hardy and Littlewood (1923) asserts that π2r(x)∼2C2r li2(x)\pi_{2r}(x)\sim 2C_{2r}\,{\rm li}_2(x) with an explicit constant C2r>0C_{2r}>0. There seems to be no good conjecture for the remainders \om_{2r}(x)=\pi_{2r(x)-2C_{2r}\,{\rm li}_2(x) that corresponds to Riemann's formula for π(x)−li(x)\pi(x)-{\rm li}(x). However, there is a heuristic approximate formula for averages of the remainders \om_{2r}(x) which is supported by numerical results

    On some conjectural inequalities and their consequences

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    We discuss some conjectural inequalities involving the sums sig_n(s) := 1^s + 2^s + ... + n^s. Two of our Conjectures assert that both a(s):=sig_(n+1)(s)/sig_n(s) and a(s)*sig_(n+1)(s)/sig_(n+2)(s) are strictly log-convex in s on all of the real axis. We will also present a common generalization of these two Conjectures. Various applications are described, to existing theorems as well as to some other unproven conjecture

    On a conjecture of Erdös (II)

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    Computational number theory at CWI in 1970--1994

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    The limits of Buchstab's iteration sieve

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    AbstractAn analysis is presented leading to explicit equations for the limits of the Buchstab iteration sieve. Moreover, the limits are computed for some values of the relevant parameter κ
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