Gaussian distribution of squarefree and B-free numbers in short intervals

Sacha Mangerel (Durham)

15-Jun-2022, 15:00-16:00 (22 months ago)

Abstract: (Joint with O. Gorodetsky and B. Rodgers) It is of classical interest in analytic number theory to understand the fine-scale distribution of arithmetic sequences such as the primes. For a given length scale h, the number of elements of a ``nice'' sequence in a uniformly randomly selected interval $(x,x+h], 1 \leq x \leq X$, might be expected to follow the statistics of a normally distributed random variable (in suitable ranges of $1 \leq h \leq X$). Following the work of Montgomery and Soundararajan, this is known to be true for the primes, but only if we assume several deep and long-standing conjectures among which the Riemann Hypothesis.

As a model for the primes, in this talk I will address such statistical questions for the sequence of squarefree numbers, i.e., numbers not divisible by the square of any prime, among other related ``sifted'' sequences called B-free numbers. I hope to further motivate and explain our main result that shows, unconditionally, that short interval counts of squarefree numbers do satisfy Gaussian statistics, answering several questions of R.R. Hall.

number theory

Audience: researchers in the topic


London number theory seminar

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Organizers: Aled Walker*, Vaidehee Thatte*
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