English

Integer complexity: The integer defect

Number Theory 2019-08-14 v4

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, leading this author and Zelinsky to define the defect of nn, δ(n)\delta(n), to be the difference n3log3n\|n\|-3\log_3 n. Meanwhile, in the study of addition chains, it is common to consider s(n)s(n), the number of small steps of nn, defined as (n)log2n\ell(n)-\lfloor\log_2 n\rfloor, an integer quantity. So here we analogously define D(n)D(n), the integer defect of nn, an integer version of δ(n)\delta(n) analogous to s(n)s(n). Note that D(n)D(n) is not the same as δ(n)\lceil \delta(n) \rceil. We show that D(n)D(n) has additional meaning in terms of the defect well-ordering considered in [3], in that D(n)D(n) indicates which powers of ω\omega the quantity δ(n)\delta(n) lies between when one restricts to nn with n\|n\| lying in a specified congruence class modulo 33. We also determine all numbers nn with D(n)1D(n)\le 1, and use this to generalize a result of Rawsthorne [18].

Keywords

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