Integer complexity: The integer defect
Abstract
Define to be the complexity of , the smallest number of ones needed to write using an arbitrary combination of addition and multiplication. John Selfridge showed that for all , leading this author and Zelinsky to define the defect of , , to be the difference . Meanwhile, in the study of addition chains, it is common to consider , the number of small steps of , defined as , an integer quantity. So here we analogously define , the integer defect of , an integer version of analogous to . Note that is not the same as . We show that has additional meaning in terms of the defect well-ordering considered in [3], in that indicates which powers of the quantity lies between when one restricts to with lying in a specified congruence class modulo . We also determine all numbers with , and use this to generalize a result of Rawsthorne [18].
Cite
@article{arxiv.1804.07446,
title = {Integer complexity: The integer defect},
author = {Harry Altman},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1804.07446},
year = {2019}
}
Comments
25 pages, 6 tables