On the Reciprocal of the Binary Generating Function for the Sum of Divisors
Joshua Cooper, Alexander Riasanovsky

TL;DR
This paper investigates the reciprocal set related to the sum of divisors function's parity, connecting it to classical number theory results and conjectures, and provides bounds and conjectures on its density.
Contribution
It introduces a new reciprocal set based on the parity of divisor sums, analyzes its properties, and conjectures its density, extending classical results like Euler's Pentagonal Number Theorem.
Findings
Conjecture that the density of the reciprocal set is 1/32.
Proved that the density lies between 0 and 1/16.
Discovered connections with Beatty sequences and divisor sum parity.
Abstract
If \(A \) is a set of natural numbers containing \(0 \), then there is a unique nonempty "reciprocal" set \(B \) of natural numbers (containing \(0 \)) such that every positive integer can be written in the form \(a + b \), where \(a \in A \) and \(b \in B \), in an even number of ways. Furthermore, the generating functions for \(A \) and \(B \) over \(\FF_2 \) are reciprocals in \(\FF_2 [[q]] \). We consider the reciprocal set \(B \) for the set \(A \) containing \(0 \) and all integers such that \(\sigma(n) \) is odd, where \(\sigma(n) \) is the sum of all the positive divisors of \(n \). This problem is motivated by Euler's "Pentagonal Number Theorem", a corollary of which is that the set of natural numbers \(n \) so that the number \(p(n) \) of partitions of an integer \(n \) is odd is the reciprocal of the set of generalized pentagonal numbers (integers of the form \(k(3k\pm1)/2…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnalytic Number Theory Research · Mathematical Dynamics and Fractals · Advanced Mathematical Identities
