Port Fillings for Primary Pseudoperfect Numbers
Abstract
Erdős asked whether there are infinitely many finite sets of distinct primes p1<·s<pk and positive integers m such that equationeq:erdos-original 1p1+·s+1pk=1-1m. equation This is Erdős Problems \#313~ErdosProblems313. As recalled below, it is equivalent to the infinitude of primary pseudoperfect numbers. Following Butske, Jaje, and Mayernik~ButskeJajeMayernik, a squarefree positive integer n is a primary pseudoperfect number if equationeq:ppn-def 1n+Σp n1p=1, equation where the sum is over the prime divisors of n. OEIS A054377~OEISA054377 records the initial values \[ arrayc 2,\ 6,\ 42,\ 1806,\ 47058,\\[2pt] 2214502422,\ 52495396602. array \] and the eight-prime-factor example \[ 8490421583559688410706771261086. \] Butske, Jaje, and Mayernik proved by computation that for each r 8 there is exactly one primary pseudoperfect number with r distinct prime factors~ButskeJajeMayernik. This result gives a useful baseline, but it does not address later layers or the infinitude problem. This paper uses a local language for residual equations. A port is a pair (R,c), and a squarefree integer B fills it if \[ ΔR,c(B):=cB-R∂(B)=1. \] The corresponding reciprocal form is \[ Σq B1q+1RB= cR. \] The product rule for the arithmetic derivative gives the composition law for ports. This law separates fillings inherited from smaller primary pseudoperfect numbers from fillings that are primitive relative to the fixed residual equation. The unconditional results of the paper are as follows.
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