Multiplicative partition


In number theory, a multiplicative partition or unordered factorization of an integer n is a way of writing n as a product of integers greater than 1, treating two products as equivalent if they differ only in the ordering of the factors. The number n is itself considered one of these products. Multiplicative partitions closely parallel the study of multipartite partitions, discussed in, which are additive partitions of finite sequences of positive integers, with the addition made pointwise. Although the study of multiplicative partitions has been ongoing since at least 1923, the name "multiplicative partition" appears to have been introduced by. The Latin name "factorisatio numerorum" had been used previously. MathWorld uses the term unordered factorization.

Examples

describe an application of multiplicative partitions in classifying integers with a given number of divisors. For example, the integers with exactly 12 divisors take the forms p11, p×q5, p2×q3, and p×q×r2, where p, q, and r are distinct prime numbers; these forms correspond to the multiplicative partitions 12, 2×6, 3×4, and 2×2×3 respectively. More generally, for each multiplicative partition
of the integer k, there corresponds a class of integers having exactly k divisors, of the form
where each pi is a distinct prime. This correspondence follows from the multiplicative property of the divisor function.

Bounds on the number of partitions

credits with the problem of counting the number of multiplicative partitions of n; this problem has since been studied by others under the Latin name of factorisatio numerorum. If the number of multiplicative partitions of n is an, McMahon and Oppenheim observed that its Dirichlet series generating function f has the product representation
The sequence of numbers an begins
Oppenheim also claimed an upper bound on an, of the form
but as showed, this bound is erroneous and the true bound is
Both of these bounds are not far from linear in n: they are of the form n1−o.
However, the typical value of an is much smaller: the average value of an, averaged over an interval xnx+N, is
a bound that is of the form no.

Additional results

observe, and prove, that most numbers cannot arise as the number an of multiplicative partitions of some n: the number of values less than N which arise in this way is NO. Additionally, show that most values of n are not multiples of an: the number of values nN such that an divides n is O.