In number theory, the prime omega functions
and
count the number of prime factors of a natural number
The number of distinct prime factors is assigned to
(little omega), while
(big omega) counts the total number of prime factors with multiplicity (see arithmetic function). That is, if we have a prime factorization of
of the form
for distinct primes
(
), then the prime omega functions are given by
and
. These prime-factor-counting functions have many important number theoretic relations.
Properties and relations
The function
is additive and
is completely additive. Little omega has the formula
where notation p|n indicates that the sum is taken over all primes p that divide n, without multiplicity. For example,
.
Big omega has the formulas
The notation pα|n indicates that the sum is taken over all prime powers pα that divide n, while pα||n indicates that the sum is taken over all prime powers pα that divide n and such that n / pα is coprime to pα. For example,
.
The omegas are related by the inequalities ω(n) ≤ Ω(n) and 2ω(n) ≤ d(n) ≤ 2Ω(n), where d(n) is the divisor-counting function.[1] If Ω(n) = ω(n), then n is squarefree and related to the Möbius function by

If
then
is a prime power, and if
then
is prime.
An asymptotic series for the average order of
is [2]

where
is the Mertens constant and
are the Stieltjes constants.
The function
is related to divisor sums over the Möbius function and the divisor function, including:[3]
is the number of unitary divisors. OEIS: A034444






The characteristic function of the primes can be expressed by a convolution with the Möbius function:[4]

A partition-related exact identity for
is given by [5]
![{\displaystyle \omega (n)=\log _{2}\left[\sum _{k=1}^{n}\sum _{j=1}^{k}\left(\sum _{d\mid k}\sum _{i=1}^{d}p(d-ji)\right)s_{n,k}\cdot |\mu (j)|\right],}](./1f0b3b56784fcb4a1f351f833b240ba95e98e6e9.svg)
where
is the partition function,
is the Möbius function, and the triangular sequence
is expanded by
_{\infty }{\frac {q^{k}}{1-q^{k}}}=s_{o}(n,k)-s_{e}(n,k),}](./040e47960bba335bacb93086587c53e5f0feb113.svg)
in terms of the infinite q-Pochhammer symbol and the restricted partition functions
which respectively denote the number of
's in all partitions of
into an odd (even) number of distinct parts.[6]
Continuation to the complex plane
A continuation of
has been found, though it is not analytic everywhere.[7] Note that the normalized
function
is used.

This is closely related to the following partition identity. Consider partitions of the form

where
,
, and
are positive integers, and
. The number of partitions is then given by
. [8]
Average order and summatory functions
An average order of both
and
is
. When
is prime a lower bound on the value of the function is
. Similarly, if
is primorial then the function is as large as
on average order. When
is a power of 2, then
[9]
Asymptotics for the summatory functions over
,
, and powers of
are respectively[10][11]

where
is the Mertens constant and the constant
is defined by

The sum of number of unitary divisors is
[12] (sequence A064608 in the OEIS)
Other sums relating the two variants of the prime omega functions include [13]

and

Example I: A modified summatory function
In this example we suggest a variant of the summatory functions
estimated in the above results for sufficiently large
. We then prove an asymptotic formula for the growth of this modified summatory function derived from the asymptotic estimate of
provided in the formulas in the main subsection of this article above.[14]
To be completely precise, let the odd-indexed summatory function be defined as
![{\displaystyle S_{\operatorname {odd} }(x):=\sum _{n\leq x}\omega (n)[n{\text{ odd}}],}](./0a00395a9d41293adda01671f6e5090d2511805c.svg)
where
denotes Iverson bracket. Then we have that
![{\displaystyle S_{\operatorname {odd} }(x)={\frac {x}{2}}\log \log x+{\frac {(2B_{1}-1)x}{4}}+\left\{{\frac {x}{4}}\right\}-\left[x\equiv 2,3{\bmod {4}}\right]+O\left({\frac {x}{\log x}}\right).}](./e69e31ab5be7d0829b790b39d3cdb50f72d11a61.svg)
The proof of this result follows by first observing that

and then applying the asymptotic result from Hardy and Wright for the summatory function over
, denoted by
, in the following form:

Example II: Summatory functions for so-termed factorial moments of ω(n)
The computations expanded in Chapter 22.11 of Hardy and Wright provide asymptotic estimates for the summatory function

by estimating the product of these two component omega functions as

We can similarly calculate asymptotic formulas more generally for the related summatory functions over so-termed factorial moments of the function
.
Dirichlet series
A known Dirichlet series involving
and the Riemann zeta function is given by [15]

We can also see that


The function
is completely additive, where
is strongly additive (additive). Now we can prove a short lemma in the following form which implies exact formulas for the expansions of the Dirichlet series over both
and
:
Lemma. Suppose that
is a strongly additive arithmetic function defined such that its values at prime powers is given by
, i.e.,
for distinct primes
and exponents
. The Dirichlet series of
is expanded by

Proof. We can see that

This implies that
![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\sum _{n\geq 1}{\frac {f(n)}{n^{s}}}&={\frac {d}{du}}\left[\prod _{p\mathrm {\ prime} }\left(1+\sum _{n\geq 1}u^{f_{0}(p,n)}p^{-ns}\right)\right]{\Biggr |}_{u=1}=\prod _{p}\left(1+\sum _{n\geq 1}p^{-ns}\right)\times \sum _{p}{\frac {\sum _{n\geq 1}f_{0}(p,n)p^{-ns}}{1+\sum _{n\geq 1}p^{-ns}}}\\&=\zeta (s)\times \sum _{p\mathrm {\ prime} }(1-p^{-s})\cdot \sum _{n\geq 1}f_{0}(p,n)p^{-ns},\end{aligned}}}](./70698ccff8d31b759817ede279c2db266490bc41.svg)
wherever the corresponding series and products are convergent. In the last equation, we have used the Euler product representation of the Riemann zeta function.
The lemma implies that for
,

where
is the prime zeta function,
where
is the
-th harmonic number and
is the identity for the Dirichlet convolution,
.
The distribution of the difference of prime omega functions
The distribution of the distinct integer values of the differences
is regular in comparison with the semi-random properties of the component functions. For
, define
![{\displaystyle N_{k}(x):=\#(\{n\in \mathbb {Z} ^{+}:\Omega (n)-\omega (n)=k\}\cap [1,x]).}](./b2d6aac5e611310660f4cea908856576b3c3c330.svg)
These cardinalities have a corresponding sequence of limiting densities
such that for

These densities are generated by the prime products

With the absolute constant
,
the densities
satisfy

Compare to the definition of the prime products defined in the last section of [16] in relation to the Erdős–Kac theorem.
See also
Notes
- ^ This inequality is given in Section 22.13 of Hardy and Wright.
- ^ S. R. Finch, Two asymptotic series, Mathematical Constants II, Cambridge Univ. Press, pp. 21-32, [1]
- ^ Each of these started from the second identity in the list are cited individually on the pages Dirichlet convolutions of arithmetic functions, Menon's identity, and other formulas for Euler's totient function. The first identity is a combination of two known divisor sums cited in Section 27.6 of the NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions.
- ^ This is suggested as an exercise in Apostol's book. Namely, we write
where
. We can form the Dirichlet series over
as
where
is the prime zeta function. Then it becomes obvious to see that
is the indicator function of the primes.
- ^ This identity is proved in the article by Schmidt cited on this page below.
- ^ This triangular sequence also shows up prominently in the Lambert series factorization theorems proved by Merca and Schmidt (2017–2018)
- ^ Hoelscher, Zachary; Palsson, Eyvindur (2020-12-05). "Counting Restricted Partitions of Integers Into Fractions: Symmetry and Modes of the Generating Function and a Connection to ω(t)". The PUMP Journal of Undergraduate Research. 3: 277–307. arXiv:2011.14502. doi:10.46787/pump.v3i0.2428. ISSN 2576-3725.
- ^ Hoelscher, Zachary; Palsson, Eyvindur (2020-12-05). "Counting Restricted Partitions of Integers Into Fractions: Symmetry and Modes of the Generating Function and a Connection to ω(t)". The PUMP Journal of Undergraduate Research. 3: 277–307. arXiv:2011.14502. doi:10.46787/pump.v3i0.2428. ISSN 2576-3725.
- ^ For references to each of these average order estimates see equations (3) and (18) of the MathWorld reference and Section 22.10-22.11 of Hardy and Wright.
- ^ See Sections 22.10 and 22.11 for reference and explicit derivations of these asymptotic estimates.
- ^ Actually, the proof of the last result given in Hardy and Wright actually suggests a more general procedure for extracting asymptotic estimates of the moments
for any
by considering the summatory functions of the factorial moments of the form
for more general cases of
.
- ^ Cohen, Eckford (1960). "The Number of Unitary Divisors of an Integer". The American Mathematical Monthly. 67 (9): 879–880. doi:10.2307/2309455. ISSN 0002-9890. JSTOR 2309455.
- ^ Hardy and Wright Chapter 22.11.
- ^ N.b., this sum is suggested by work contained in an unpublished manuscript by the contributor to this page related to the growth of the Mertens function. Hence it is not just a vacuous and/or trivial estimate obtained for the purpose of exposition here.
- ^ This identity is found in Section 27.4 of the NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions.
- ^ Rényi, A.; Turán, P. (1958). "On a theorem of Erdös-Kac" (PDF). Acta Arithmetica. 4 (1): 71–84. doi:10.4064/aa-4-1-71-84.
References
- G. H. Hardy and E. M. Wright (2006). An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers (6th ed.). Oxford University Press.
- H. L. Montgomery and R. C. Vaughan (2007). Multiplicative number theory I. Classical theory (1st ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Schmidt, Maxie (2017). "Factorization Theorems for Hadamard Products and Higher-Order Derivatives of Lambert Series Generating Functions". arXiv:1712.00608 [math.NT].
- Weisstein, Eric. "Distinct Prime Factors". MathWorld. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
External links