1. Introduction
In number theory, a perfect number is a positive integer N whose sum of positive divisors, denoted , equals twice the number itself, that is, . Examples include 6 and 28, which are even and generated by Euclid’s formula involving Mersenne primes. A closely related concept is that of a quasiperfect number, defined as a positive integer N for which the sum of its divisors satisfies . Equivalently, the sum of the proper divisors (all divisors except N itself) equals . Unlike perfect numbers, no quasiperfect numbers are known, and their existence remains an open question. It is established that if quasiperfect numbers exist, they must be odd, greater than and possess at least seven distinct prime factors, reflecting the stringent arithmetic constraints imposed by the condition . This paper addresses the conjecture that quasiperfect numbers do not exist, aiming to resolve this problem through a rigorous mathematical proof.
The study of perfect numbers dates back to ancient Greece, with Euclid demonstrating that numbers of the form , where is prime, are perfect. Euler later showed that all even perfect numbers follow this form, leaving the existence of odd perfect numbers unresolved. Quasiperfect numbers, though less studied, emerged as a natural extension of this inquiry, first explicitly considered in the 20th century as mathematicians explored numbers with divisor sums slightly exceeding twice the number. Early investigations by researchers like Cohen and Hagis established key properties, such as the requirement that quasiperfect numbers be odd and have multiple prime factors, due to the near-perfect balance required by . Computational searches have failed to identify any quasiperfect numbers, and theoretical bounds suggest they must be extremely large, if they exist at all. The problem parallels the odd perfect number conjecture, sharing techniques rooted in divisor sums, prime factorizations, and arithmetic functions like Euler’s totient function .
This paper proves that quasiperfect numbers do not exist using a proof by contradiction. We assume the existence of a quasiperfect number N, which is odd and satisfies , implying an abundancy index of . Leveraging the known result for odd integers that , we derive the inequality for . However, since N has at least seven distinct prime factors and is greater than , we compute , with the ratio increasing for more prime factors. This creates a contradiction, as . The proof, grounded in elementary number theory, combines classical inequalities with precise bounds on arithmetic functions to demonstrate that no quasiperfect number can exist, contributing a significant result to the study of numbers defined by their divisor sums.
2. Background and Ancillary Results
Definition 1. In number theory, the p-adic order of a positive integer n, denoted , is the highest exponent of a prime number p that divides n. For example, if , then and .
The divisor sum function, written as , is a key arithmetic function that calculates the sum of all positive divisors of n, including 1 and n. As an example, the divisors of 18 are , so . This function can be decomposed multiplicatively using the prime factorization of n, making it useful for studying number-theoretic properties like abundant numbers.
Proposition 1.
For a positive integer with prime factorization [1]:
where denotes that p is a prime factor of n.
Proposition 2. Euler’s totient function, which gives the number of integers up to n that are relatively prime to n, satisfies [2].
The abundance index, defined as , assigns to each positive integer a rational number, measuring how the sum of its divisors relates to its value. The next result establishes a foundational inequality for odd integers.
Proposition 3.
Let n be an odd positive integer, be Euler’s totient function, which counts the number of integers up to n that are coprime to n, and be the divisor sum function, which sums all positive divisors of n. Then [3]:
In our proof, we utilize the following propositions:
Proposition 4. A positive integer n is a quasiperfect number if and only if , meaning .
Proposition 5. If a quasiperfect number exists, it must be an odd square number greater than and have at least seven distinct prime factors [4].
By establishing a contradiction in the assumed existence of quasiperfect numbers, leveraging the above properties, we aim to resolve their non-existence definitively.
3. Main Result
This is a main insight.
Lemma 1.
Let N be a quasiperfect number, i.e., a positive odd integer such that , where denotes the sum of the divisors of N. Then, the ratio of N to its Euler totient function , which counts the number of integers up to N that are coprime to N, satisfies:
Proof. Assume
N is a quasiperfect number, so
, and
N is odd with at least seven distinct prime factors. Let
N have the prime factorization:
where
are distinct odd primes (i.e.,
),
are their multiplicities, and
due to the known constraint on quasiperfect numbers.
The Euler totient function
is given by:
since for a prime power
, we have
, and
is multiplicative across distinct primes. Thus, the ratio is:
To find a lower bound for
, we need to maximize the product
, as this minimizes the ratio. The product is maximized by choosing the smallest possible odd primes and the minimum number of distinct primes,
. Consider the first seven odd primes:
,
,
,
,
,
,
. Compute the product:
Evaluate step-by-step:
Thus:
So:
If
N has more than seven distinct prime factors (
), include the next prime, e.g.,
, so
. This reduces the product:
yielding:
As
m increases, the product
decreases further, making
larger.
Since
, the smallest value of
occurs at
with the smallest odd primes, giving
. Since
and the product is maximized (i.e., largest denominator, smallest ratio) when using the smallest
m and smallest primes, the approximate value of 2.9243 corresponds to
with the first 7 odd primes. For
, the ratio is at least 2.9, and typically larger (e.g., modern bounds suggest at least 7 distinct primes). Therefore, for any quasiperfect number
N:
□
This is the main theorem.
Theorem 1. Quasiperfect numbers do not exist.
Proof. Suppose, for the sake of contradiction, that a quasiperfect number
N exists. By definition, a quasiperfect number satisfies
, where
is the sum of all positive divisors of
N (including 1 and
N). It is known that any quasiperfect number must be odd, greater than
and have at least seven distinct prime factors. Thus,
N has the prime factorization:
where
are distinct odd primes (
),
are their multiplicities, and
.
Since
N is quasiperfect, the abundancy index is:
Consider the Euler totient function
, which counts the number of integers up to
N coprime to
N. For any odd positive integer
N, it is established that:
Rewrite this as:
Since
, we obtain:
Thus:
Substitute
:
Compute the left-hand side:
Since
,
, we have:
For large
N,
is small, so:
Since
, the left-hand side is slightly greater than 2.4674 but less than, say, 2.5 for reasonable
N. Thus, we have:
For a quasiperfect number
N with at least seven distinct prime factors, compute:
where
. To find a lower bound, maximize the product
by using the smallest
and the smallest odd primes: 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19. Calculate:
Thus:
For
, include the next prime, e.g.,
, where
:
Since
, we estimate:
For
:
Thus:
However, from Lemma 1:
This leads to a contradiction, since:
Since assuming the existence of a quasiperfect number leads to a contradiction, no such number exists. □
Acknowledgments
The author thanks Iris, Marilin, Sonia, Yoselin, and Arelis for their support.
References
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