A curious equality of integrals involving the prime counting function?












9












$begingroup$


This post discusses the integral,
$$I(k)=int_0^kpi(x)pi(k-x)dx$$



where $pi(x)$ is the prime-counting function. For example,
$$I(13)=int_0^{13}pi(x)pi(13-x)dx = 73$$



Using WolframAlpha, the first 50 values for $k=1,2,3,dots$ are,



$$I(k) = 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 4, 8, 14, 22, 32, 45, 58, 73, 90, 110, 132, 158, 184, 214, 246, 282, 320, 363, 406, 455, 506, 562, 618, 678, 738, 804, 872, 944, 1018, 1099, 1180, 1269, 1358, 1450, 1544, 1644, 1744, 1852, 1962, 2078, 2196, 2321, 2446, 2581, 2718,dots$$



While trying to find if the above sequence obeyed a pattern, I noticed a rather unexpected relationship:






Q: For all $n>0$, is it true,
$$I(6n+4) - 2,I(6n+5) + I(6n+6) overset{color{red}?}= 0$$




Example, for $n=1,2$, then
$$I(10)-2I(11)+I(12)=32-2*45+58 = 0$$
$$I(16)-2I(17)+I(18)=132-2*158+184= 0$$
and so on.










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Note your proposed equation doesn't hold for $n = 0$ as $I(4) = 0$, $I(5) = 1$ and $I(6) = 4$.
    $endgroup$
    – John Omielan
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    @JohnOmielan: A typo. I meant all $n>0$. I will correct it.
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    I have checked to confirm what you're asking is true for $n$ up to $18$. However, I have my doubts it'll always work, partially because it doesn't work for $n = 0$. Also, a similar type condition is that $I(6n) - 2I(6n + 1) + I(6n + 2) = 2$, which holds for $1 le n le 5$, but at $n = 6$, the LHS becomes $0$ instead. If I get a chance, I will investigate your equation to see if I can figure out why it's true for at least the first $18$ values and, more importantly, will it always stay true. Regardless, though, it's an excellent observation you've made, even if it doesn't always hold.
    $endgroup$
    – John Omielan
    49 mins ago












  • $begingroup$
    I checked your result up to $n=533$ (for $n geq 534$, I have problems. Would you be interested by a huge table of $I(k)$ (I was able to generate it up to $k=540$). This is a very interesting problem.
    $endgroup$
    – Claude Leibovici
    30 mins ago












  • $begingroup$
    @ClaudeLeibovici: Thanks for checking, Claude! However, that table would be too huge for MSE. :)
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    28 mins ago
















9












$begingroup$


This post discusses the integral,
$$I(k)=int_0^kpi(x)pi(k-x)dx$$



where $pi(x)$ is the prime-counting function. For example,
$$I(13)=int_0^{13}pi(x)pi(13-x)dx = 73$$



Using WolframAlpha, the first 50 values for $k=1,2,3,dots$ are,



$$I(k) = 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 4, 8, 14, 22, 32, 45, 58, 73, 90, 110, 132, 158, 184, 214, 246, 282, 320, 363, 406, 455, 506, 562, 618, 678, 738, 804, 872, 944, 1018, 1099, 1180, 1269, 1358, 1450, 1544, 1644, 1744, 1852, 1962, 2078, 2196, 2321, 2446, 2581, 2718,dots$$



While trying to find if the above sequence obeyed a pattern, I noticed a rather unexpected relationship:






Q: For all $n>0$, is it true,
$$I(6n+4) - 2,I(6n+5) + I(6n+6) overset{color{red}?}= 0$$




Example, for $n=1,2$, then
$$I(10)-2I(11)+I(12)=32-2*45+58 = 0$$
$$I(16)-2I(17)+I(18)=132-2*158+184= 0$$
and so on.










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Note your proposed equation doesn't hold for $n = 0$ as $I(4) = 0$, $I(5) = 1$ and $I(6) = 4$.
    $endgroup$
    – John Omielan
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    @JohnOmielan: A typo. I meant all $n>0$. I will correct it.
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    I have checked to confirm what you're asking is true for $n$ up to $18$. However, I have my doubts it'll always work, partially because it doesn't work for $n = 0$. Also, a similar type condition is that $I(6n) - 2I(6n + 1) + I(6n + 2) = 2$, which holds for $1 le n le 5$, but at $n = 6$, the LHS becomes $0$ instead. If I get a chance, I will investigate your equation to see if I can figure out why it's true for at least the first $18$ values and, more importantly, will it always stay true. Regardless, though, it's an excellent observation you've made, even if it doesn't always hold.
    $endgroup$
    – John Omielan
    49 mins ago












  • $begingroup$
    I checked your result up to $n=533$ (for $n geq 534$, I have problems. Would you be interested by a huge table of $I(k)$ (I was able to generate it up to $k=540$). This is a very interesting problem.
    $endgroup$
    – Claude Leibovici
    30 mins ago












  • $begingroup$
    @ClaudeLeibovici: Thanks for checking, Claude! However, that table would be too huge for MSE. :)
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    28 mins ago














9












9








9


5



$begingroup$


This post discusses the integral,
$$I(k)=int_0^kpi(x)pi(k-x)dx$$



where $pi(x)$ is the prime-counting function. For example,
$$I(13)=int_0^{13}pi(x)pi(13-x)dx = 73$$



Using WolframAlpha, the first 50 values for $k=1,2,3,dots$ are,



$$I(k) = 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 4, 8, 14, 22, 32, 45, 58, 73, 90, 110, 132, 158, 184, 214, 246, 282, 320, 363, 406, 455, 506, 562, 618, 678, 738, 804, 872, 944, 1018, 1099, 1180, 1269, 1358, 1450, 1544, 1644, 1744, 1852, 1962, 2078, 2196, 2321, 2446, 2581, 2718,dots$$



While trying to find if the above sequence obeyed a pattern, I noticed a rather unexpected relationship:






Q: For all $n>0$, is it true,
$$I(6n+4) - 2,I(6n+5) + I(6n+6) overset{color{red}?}= 0$$




Example, for $n=1,2$, then
$$I(10)-2I(11)+I(12)=32-2*45+58 = 0$$
$$I(16)-2I(17)+I(18)=132-2*158+184= 0$$
and so on.










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$




This post discusses the integral,
$$I(k)=int_0^kpi(x)pi(k-x)dx$$



where $pi(x)$ is the prime-counting function. For example,
$$I(13)=int_0^{13}pi(x)pi(13-x)dx = 73$$



Using WolframAlpha, the first 50 values for $k=1,2,3,dots$ are,



$$I(k) = 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 4, 8, 14, 22, 32, 45, 58, 73, 90, 110, 132, 158, 184, 214, 246, 282, 320, 363, 406, 455, 506, 562, 618, 678, 738, 804, 872, 944, 1018, 1099, 1180, 1269, 1358, 1450, 1544, 1644, 1744, 1852, 1962, 2078, 2196, 2321, 2446, 2581, 2718,dots$$



While trying to find if the above sequence obeyed a pattern, I noticed a rather unexpected relationship:






Q: For all $n>0$, is it true,
$$I(6n+4) - 2,I(6n+5) + I(6n+6) overset{color{red}?}= 0$$




Example, for $n=1,2$, then
$$I(10)-2I(11)+I(12)=32-2*45+58 = 0$$
$$I(16)-2I(17)+I(18)=132-2*158+184= 0$$
and so on.







integration definite-integrals prime-numbers






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited 14 mins ago







Tito Piezas III

















asked 1 hour ago









Tito Piezas IIITito Piezas III

27.4k366174




27.4k366174












  • $begingroup$
    Note your proposed equation doesn't hold for $n = 0$ as $I(4) = 0$, $I(5) = 1$ and $I(6) = 4$.
    $endgroup$
    – John Omielan
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    @JohnOmielan: A typo. I meant all $n>0$. I will correct it.
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    I have checked to confirm what you're asking is true for $n$ up to $18$. However, I have my doubts it'll always work, partially because it doesn't work for $n = 0$. Also, a similar type condition is that $I(6n) - 2I(6n + 1) + I(6n + 2) = 2$, which holds for $1 le n le 5$, but at $n = 6$, the LHS becomes $0$ instead. If I get a chance, I will investigate your equation to see if I can figure out why it's true for at least the first $18$ values and, more importantly, will it always stay true. Regardless, though, it's an excellent observation you've made, even if it doesn't always hold.
    $endgroup$
    – John Omielan
    49 mins ago












  • $begingroup$
    I checked your result up to $n=533$ (for $n geq 534$, I have problems. Would you be interested by a huge table of $I(k)$ (I was able to generate it up to $k=540$). This is a very interesting problem.
    $endgroup$
    – Claude Leibovici
    30 mins ago












  • $begingroup$
    @ClaudeLeibovici: Thanks for checking, Claude! However, that table would be too huge for MSE. :)
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    28 mins ago


















  • $begingroup$
    Note your proposed equation doesn't hold for $n = 0$ as $I(4) = 0$, $I(5) = 1$ and $I(6) = 4$.
    $endgroup$
    – John Omielan
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    @JohnOmielan: A typo. I meant all $n>0$. I will correct it.
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    I have checked to confirm what you're asking is true for $n$ up to $18$. However, I have my doubts it'll always work, partially because it doesn't work for $n = 0$. Also, a similar type condition is that $I(6n) - 2I(6n + 1) + I(6n + 2) = 2$, which holds for $1 le n le 5$, but at $n = 6$, the LHS becomes $0$ instead. If I get a chance, I will investigate your equation to see if I can figure out why it's true for at least the first $18$ values and, more importantly, will it always stay true. Regardless, though, it's an excellent observation you've made, even if it doesn't always hold.
    $endgroup$
    – John Omielan
    49 mins ago












  • $begingroup$
    I checked your result up to $n=533$ (for $n geq 534$, I have problems. Would you be interested by a huge table of $I(k)$ (I was able to generate it up to $k=540$). This is a very interesting problem.
    $endgroup$
    – Claude Leibovici
    30 mins ago












  • $begingroup$
    @ClaudeLeibovici: Thanks for checking, Claude! However, that table would be too huge for MSE. :)
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    28 mins ago
















$begingroup$
Note your proposed equation doesn't hold for $n = 0$ as $I(4) = 0$, $I(5) = 1$ and $I(6) = 4$.
$endgroup$
– John Omielan
1 hour ago




$begingroup$
Note your proposed equation doesn't hold for $n = 0$ as $I(4) = 0$, $I(5) = 1$ and $I(6) = 4$.
$endgroup$
– John Omielan
1 hour ago












$begingroup$
@JohnOmielan: A typo. I meant all $n>0$. I will correct it.
$endgroup$
– Tito Piezas III
1 hour ago




$begingroup$
@JohnOmielan: A typo. I meant all $n>0$. I will correct it.
$endgroup$
– Tito Piezas III
1 hour ago












$begingroup$
I have checked to confirm what you're asking is true for $n$ up to $18$. However, I have my doubts it'll always work, partially because it doesn't work for $n = 0$. Also, a similar type condition is that $I(6n) - 2I(6n + 1) + I(6n + 2) = 2$, which holds for $1 le n le 5$, but at $n = 6$, the LHS becomes $0$ instead. If I get a chance, I will investigate your equation to see if I can figure out why it's true for at least the first $18$ values and, more importantly, will it always stay true. Regardless, though, it's an excellent observation you've made, even if it doesn't always hold.
$endgroup$
– John Omielan
49 mins ago






$begingroup$
I have checked to confirm what you're asking is true for $n$ up to $18$. However, I have my doubts it'll always work, partially because it doesn't work for $n = 0$. Also, a similar type condition is that $I(6n) - 2I(6n + 1) + I(6n + 2) = 2$, which holds for $1 le n le 5$, but at $n = 6$, the LHS becomes $0$ instead. If I get a chance, I will investigate your equation to see if I can figure out why it's true for at least the first $18$ values and, more importantly, will it always stay true. Regardless, though, it's an excellent observation you've made, even if it doesn't always hold.
$endgroup$
– John Omielan
49 mins ago














$begingroup$
I checked your result up to $n=533$ (for $n geq 534$, I have problems. Would you be interested by a huge table of $I(k)$ (I was able to generate it up to $k=540$). This is a very interesting problem.
$endgroup$
– Claude Leibovici
30 mins ago






$begingroup$
I checked your result up to $n=533$ (for $n geq 534$, I have problems. Would you be interested by a huge table of $I(k)$ (I was able to generate it up to $k=540$). This is a very interesting problem.
$endgroup$
– Claude Leibovici
30 mins ago














$begingroup$
@ClaudeLeibovici: Thanks for checking, Claude! However, that table would be too huge for MSE. :)
$endgroup$
– Tito Piezas III
28 mins ago




$begingroup$
@ClaudeLeibovici: Thanks for checking, Claude! However, that table would be too huge for MSE. :)
$endgroup$
– Tito Piezas III
28 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















10












$begingroup$

The answer is yes. Sketch of solution:
$$
I(k) = int_0^k sum_{ple x} sum_{qle k-x} 1 ,dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} int_p^{k-q} dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} (k-(p+q)) = sum_{mle k} r(m)(k-m),
$$

where $r(m)$ is the number of ways of writing $m$ as the sum of two primes. Then
$$
I(6n+6)-2I(6n+5)+I(6n+4) = sum_{mle 6n+4} r(m)big( (6n+6-m)-2(6n+5-m)+(6m+4-m) big) + r(6n+5) = \0 + r(6n+5);
$$

and $r(6n+5)=0$ for every $nge1$, since the only way the odd integer $6n+5$ can be the sum of two primes is $6n+5=2+(6n+3)$, but $6n+3=3(2n+1)$ is always composite when $nge1$.



The same argument gives $I(6n+2)-2I(6n+1)+I(6n) = r(6n+1)$, which is $2$ if $6n-1$ is prime and $0$ otherwise; this is why (as observed by John Omielan) it equals $2$ for $1le nle 5$ but $0$ for $n=6$.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    MSE never ceases to amaze me how fast some people can figure out the answer.
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    15 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    Greg, do you know how to address Ultradark's question regarding when $I(k)$ is prime?
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    6 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    This really surprises me since I thought the equation will be eventually false...
    $endgroup$
    – Seewoo Lee
    51 secs ago











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









10












$begingroup$

The answer is yes. Sketch of solution:
$$
I(k) = int_0^k sum_{ple x} sum_{qle k-x} 1 ,dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} int_p^{k-q} dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} (k-(p+q)) = sum_{mle k} r(m)(k-m),
$$

where $r(m)$ is the number of ways of writing $m$ as the sum of two primes. Then
$$
I(6n+6)-2I(6n+5)+I(6n+4) = sum_{mle 6n+4} r(m)big( (6n+6-m)-2(6n+5-m)+(6m+4-m) big) + r(6n+5) = \0 + r(6n+5);
$$

and $r(6n+5)=0$ for every $nge1$, since the only way the odd integer $6n+5$ can be the sum of two primes is $6n+5=2+(6n+3)$, but $6n+3=3(2n+1)$ is always composite when $nge1$.



The same argument gives $I(6n+2)-2I(6n+1)+I(6n) = r(6n+1)$, which is $2$ if $6n-1$ is prime and $0$ otherwise; this is why (as observed by John Omielan) it equals $2$ for $1le nle 5$ but $0$ for $n=6$.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    MSE never ceases to amaze me how fast some people can figure out the answer.
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    15 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    Greg, do you know how to address Ultradark's question regarding when $I(k)$ is prime?
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    6 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    This really surprises me since I thought the equation will be eventually false...
    $endgroup$
    – Seewoo Lee
    51 secs ago
















10












$begingroup$

The answer is yes. Sketch of solution:
$$
I(k) = int_0^k sum_{ple x} sum_{qle k-x} 1 ,dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} int_p^{k-q} dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} (k-(p+q)) = sum_{mle k} r(m)(k-m),
$$

where $r(m)$ is the number of ways of writing $m$ as the sum of two primes. Then
$$
I(6n+6)-2I(6n+5)+I(6n+4) = sum_{mle 6n+4} r(m)big( (6n+6-m)-2(6n+5-m)+(6m+4-m) big) + r(6n+5) = \0 + r(6n+5);
$$

and $r(6n+5)=0$ for every $nge1$, since the only way the odd integer $6n+5$ can be the sum of two primes is $6n+5=2+(6n+3)$, but $6n+3=3(2n+1)$ is always composite when $nge1$.



The same argument gives $I(6n+2)-2I(6n+1)+I(6n) = r(6n+1)$, which is $2$ if $6n-1$ is prime and $0$ otherwise; this is why (as observed by John Omielan) it equals $2$ for $1le nle 5$ but $0$ for $n=6$.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    MSE never ceases to amaze me how fast some people can figure out the answer.
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    15 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    Greg, do you know how to address Ultradark's question regarding when $I(k)$ is prime?
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    6 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    This really surprises me since I thought the equation will be eventually false...
    $endgroup$
    – Seewoo Lee
    51 secs ago














10












10








10





$begingroup$

The answer is yes. Sketch of solution:
$$
I(k) = int_0^k sum_{ple x} sum_{qle k-x} 1 ,dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} int_p^{k-q} dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} (k-(p+q)) = sum_{mle k} r(m)(k-m),
$$

where $r(m)$ is the number of ways of writing $m$ as the sum of two primes. Then
$$
I(6n+6)-2I(6n+5)+I(6n+4) = sum_{mle 6n+4} r(m)big( (6n+6-m)-2(6n+5-m)+(6m+4-m) big) + r(6n+5) = \0 + r(6n+5);
$$

and $r(6n+5)=0$ for every $nge1$, since the only way the odd integer $6n+5$ can be the sum of two primes is $6n+5=2+(6n+3)$, but $6n+3=3(2n+1)$ is always composite when $nge1$.



The same argument gives $I(6n+2)-2I(6n+1)+I(6n) = r(6n+1)$, which is $2$ if $6n-1$ is prime and $0$ otherwise; this is why (as observed by John Omielan) it equals $2$ for $1le nle 5$ but $0$ for $n=6$.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$



The answer is yes. Sketch of solution:
$$
I(k) = int_0^k sum_{ple x} sum_{qle k-x} 1 ,dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} int_p^{k-q} dx = sum_p sum_{qle k-p} (k-(p+q)) = sum_{mle k} r(m)(k-m),
$$

where $r(m)$ is the number of ways of writing $m$ as the sum of two primes. Then
$$
I(6n+6)-2I(6n+5)+I(6n+4) = sum_{mle 6n+4} r(m)big( (6n+6-m)-2(6n+5-m)+(6m+4-m) big) + r(6n+5) = \0 + r(6n+5);
$$

and $r(6n+5)=0$ for every $nge1$, since the only way the odd integer $6n+5$ can be the sum of two primes is $6n+5=2+(6n+3)$, but $6n+3=3(2n+1)$ is always composite when $nge1$.



The same argument gives $I(6n+2)-2I(6n+1)+I(6n) = r(6n+1)$, which is $2$ if $6n-1$ is prime and $0$ otherwise; this is why (as observed by John Omielan) it equals $2$ for $1le nle 5$ but $0$ for $n=6$.







share|cite|improve this answer














share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer








edited 17 mins ago









Tito Piezas III

27.4k366174




27.4k366174










answered 29 mins ago









Greg MartinGreg Martin

35.5k23263




35.5k23263








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    MSE never ceases to amaze me how fast some people can figure out the answer.
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    15 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    Greg, do you know how to address Ultradark's question regarding when $I(k)$ is prime?
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    6 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    This really surprises me since I thought the equation will be eventually false...
    $endgroup$
    – Seewoo Lee
    51 secs ago














  • 1




    $begingroup$
    MSE never ceases to amaze me how fast some people can figure out the answer.
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    15 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    Greg, do you know how to address Ultradark's question regarding when $I(k)$ is prime?
    $endgroup$
    – Tito Piezas III
    6 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    This really surprises me since I thought the equation will be eventually false...
    $endgroup$
    – Seewoo Lee
    51 secs ago








1




1




$begingroup$
MSE never ceases to amaze me how fast some people can figure out the answer.
$endgroup$
– Tito Piezas III
15 mins ago




$begingroup$
MSE never ceases to amaze me how fast some people can figure out the answer.
$endgroup$
– Tito Piezas III
15 mins ago












$begingroup$
Greg, do you know how to address Ultradark's question regarding when $I(k)$ is prime?
$endgroup$
– Tito Piezas III
6 mins ago




$begingroup$
Greg, do you know how to address Ultradark's question regarding when $I(k)$ is prime?
$endgroup$
– Tito Piezas III
6 mins ago












$begingroup$
This really surprises me since I thought the equation will be eventually false...
$endgroup$
– Seewoo Lee
51 secs ago




$begingroup$
This really surprises me since I thought the equation will be eventually false...
$endgroup$
– Seewoo Lee
51 secs ago


















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