Linnik's theorem

Linnik's theorem in analytic number theory answers a natural question after Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions. It asserts that there exist positive c and L such that, if we denote p(a,d) the least prime in the arithmetic progression

where n runs through the positive integers and a and d are any given positive coprime integers with 1 ≤ ad − 1, then:

The theorem is named after Yuri Vladimirovich Linnik, who proved it in 1944. Although Linnik's proof showed c and L to be effectively computable, he provided no numerical values for them.

It follows from Zsigmondy's theorem that p(1,d) ≤ 2d − 1, for all d ≥ 3. It is known that p(1,p) ≤ Lp, for all primes p ≥ 5, as Lp is congruent to 1 modulo p for all prime numbers p, where Lp denotes the p-th Lucas number. Just like Mersenne numbers, Lucas numbers with prime indices have divisors of the form 2kp+1.

Properties

It is known that L ≤ 2 for almost all integers d.

On the generalized Riemann hypothesis it can be shown that

where is the totient function, and the stronger bound

has been also proved.

It is also conjectured that:

Bounds for L

The constant L is called Linnik's constant and the following table shows the progress that has been made on determining its size.

LYear of publicationAuthor
100001957Pan
54481958Pan
7771965Chen
6301971Jutila
5501970Jutila
1681977Chen
801977Jutila
361977Graham
201981Graham (submitted before Chen's 1979 paper)
171979Chen
161986Wang
13.51989Chen and Liu
81990Wang
5.51992Heath-Brown
5.182009Xylouris
52011Xylouris
5 − ε2018Xylouris

Moreover, in Heath-Brown's result the constant c is effectively computable.

Notes

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Linnik's theorem, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.