abstract
Number theoretic aspects of a combinatorial function
Lorenz Halbeisen and Norbert Hungerbühler
We investigate number theoretic aspects of the integer sequence
seq(n) with identification number A000522 in Sloane's On-Line
Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences: seq(n) counts the number of
sequences without repetition one can build with n distinct objects.
By introducing the the notion of the shadow of an integer
function, we examine divisibility properties of the combinatorial
function seq(n): We show that seq(n) has the reduction property
and its shadow d therefore is multiplicative. As a consequence, the
shadow d of seq(n) is determined by its values at powers of
primes. It turns out that there is a simple characterization of
regular prime numbers, i.e. prime numbers p for which the shadow
d of seq has the socket property d(pk)=
d(p) for all integers k. Although a stochastic argument
supports the conjecture that infinitely many irregular primes exist, there
density is so thin that there is only one irregular prime number less than
2500000, namely 383.