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Natural density

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In number theory, natural density, also referred to as asymptotic density or arithmetic density, is one method to measure how "large" a subset of the set of natural numbers is. It relies chiefly on the probability of encountering members of the desired subset when combing through the interval [1, n] as n grows large.

Intuitively, it is thought that there are more positive integers than perfect squares, since every perfect square is already positive, and many other positive integers exist besides. However, the set of positive integers is not in fact larger than the set of perfect squares: both sets are infinite and countable and can therefore be put in one-to-one correspondence. Nevertheless if one goes through the natural numbers, the squares become increasingly scarce. The notion of natural density makes this intuition precise for many, but not all, subsets of the naturals (see Schnirelmann density, which is similar to natural density but defined for all subsets of ).

If an integer is randomly selected from the interval [1, n], then the probability that it belongs to A is the ratio of the number of elements of A in [1, n] to the total number of elements in [1, n]. If this probability tends to some limit as n tends to infinity, then this limit is referred to as the asymptotic density of A. This notion can be understood as a kind of probability of choosing a number from the set A. Indeed, the asymptotic density (as well as some other types of densities) is studied in probabilistic number theory.

Definition

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A subset A of positive integers has natural density α if the proportion of elements of A among all natural numbers from 1 to n converges to α as n tends to infinity.

More explicitly, if one defines for any natural number n the counting function a(n) as the number of elements of A less than or equal to n, then the natural density of A being α exactly means that[1]

a(n)/nα as n → ∞.

It follows from the definition that if a set A has natural density α then 0 ≤ α ≤ 1.

Upper and lower asymptotic density

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Let be a subset of the set of natural numbers For any , define to be the intersection and let be the number of elements of less than or equal to .

Define the upper asymptotic density of (also called the "upper density") by where lim sup is the limit superior.

Similarly, define the lower asymptotic density of (also called the "lower density") by where lim inf is the limit inferior. One may say has asymptotic density if , in which case is equal to this common value.

This definition can be restated in the following way: if this limit exists.[2]

These definitions may equivalently[citation needed] be expressed in the following way. Given a subset of , write it as an increasing sequence indexed by the natural numbers: Then and if the limit exists.

A somewhat weaker notion of density is the upper Banach density of a set This is defined as

Properties and examples

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  • For any finite set F of positive integers, d(F) = 0.
  • If d(A) exists for some set A and Ac denotes its complement set with respect to , then d(Ac) = 1 − d(A).
    • Corollary: If is finite (including the case ),
  • If and exist, then
  • If is the set of all squares, then d(A) = 0.
  • If is the set of all even numbers, then d(A) = 0.5. Similarly, for any arithmetical progression we get
  • For the set P of all primes we get from the prime number theorem that d(P) = 0.
  • The set of all square-free integers has density More generally, the set of all nth-power-free numbers for any natural n has density where is the Riemann zeta function.
  • The set of abundant numbers has non-zero density.[3] Marc Deléglise showed in 1998 that the density of the set of abundant numbers is between 0.2474 and 0.2480.[4]
  • The set of numbers whose binary expansion contains an odd number of digits is an example of a set which does not have an asymptotic density, since the upper density of this set is whereas its lower density is
  • The set of numbers whose decimal expansion begins with the digit 1 similarly has no natural density: the lower density is 1/9 and the upper density is 5/9.[1] (See Benford's law.)
  • Consider an equidistributed sequence in and define a monotone family of sets: Then, by definition, for all .
  • If S is a set of positive upper density then Szemerédi's theorem states that S contains arbitrarily large finite arithmetic progressions, and the Furstenberg–Sárközy theorem states that some two members of S differ by a square number.

Other density functions

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Other density functions on subsets of the natural numbers may be defined analogously. For example, the logarithmic density of a set A is defined as the limit (if it exists)

Upper and lower logarithmic densities are defined analogously as well.

For the set of multiples of an integer sequence, the Davenport–Erdős theorem states that the natural density, when it exists, is equal to the logarithmic density.[5]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b Tenenbaum (1995) p.261
  2. ^ Nathanson (2000) pp.256–257
  3. ^ Hall, Richard R.; Tenenbaum, Gérald (1988). Divisors. Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics. Vol. 90. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 95. ISBN 978-0-521-34056-4. Zbl 0653.10001.
  4. ^ Deléglise, Marc (1998). "Bounds for the density of abundant integers". Experimental Mathematics. 7 (2): 137–143. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.36.8272. doi:10.1080/10586458.1998.10504363. ISSN 1058-6458. MR 1677091. Zbl 0923.11127.
  5. ^ Hall, Richard R. (1996), Sets of multiples, Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics, vol. 118, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, Theorem 0.2, p. 5, doi:10.1017/CBO9780511566011, ISBN 978-0-521-40424-2, MR 1414678

References

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This article incorporates material from Asymptotic density on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.