English

Integer Complexity and Well-Ordering

Number Theory 2017-07-14 v2

Abstract

Define n\|n\| to be the complexity of nn, the smallest number of ones needed to write nn using an arbitrary combination of addition and multiplication. John Selfridge showed that n3log3n\|n\| \ge 3\log_3 n for all nn. Define the defect of nn, denoted δ(n)\delta(n), to be n3log3n\|n\| - 3\log_3 n. In this paper, we consider the set D:={δ(n):n1}\mathscr{D} := \{\delta(n): n \ge 1 \} of all defects. We show that as a subset of the real numbers, the set D\mathscr{D} is well-ordered, of order type ωω\omega^\omega. More specifically, for k1k\ge 1 an integer, D[0,k)\mathscr{D}\cap[0,k) has order type ωk\omega^k. We also consider some other sets related to D\mathscr{D}, and show that these too are well-ordered and have order type ωω\omega^\omega.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1310.2894,
  title  = {Integer Complexity and Well-Ordering},
  author = {Harry Altman},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1310.2894},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

26 pages, 2 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T01:44:24.477Z