A prime gap of length
is a run of
consecutive composite numbers between two successive
primes. Therefore, the difference between two successive primes
and
bounding a prime gap of length
is
,
where
is the
th prime number. Since the
prime difference function
(1)
|
is always even (except for ),
all primes gaps
are also even. The notation
is commonly used to denote the smallest prime
corresponding to the start of a prime gap of length
, i.e., such that
is prime,
,
, ...,
are all composite, and
is prime (with the additional constraint that
no smaller number satisfying these properties exists).
The maximal prime gap
is the length of the largest prime gap that begins with a prime
less than some maximum value
. For
,
2, ...,
is given by 4, 8, 20, 36, 72, 114, 154, 220, 282, 354, 464, 540, 674, 804, 906, 1132,
... (OEIS A053303).
Arbitrarily large prime gaps exist. For example, for any , the numbers
,
,
...,
are all composite (Havil 2003, p. 170).
However, no general method more sophisticated than an exhaustive search is known
for the determination of first occurrences and maximal prime gaps (Nicely 1999).
Cramér (1937) and Shanks (1964) conjectured that
(2)
|
Wolf conjectures a slightly different form
(3)
|
which agrees better with numerical evidence.
Wolf conjectures that the maximal gap between two consecutive primes less than
appears approximately at
(4)
|
where is the prime
counting function and
is the twin primes constant. Setting
reduces to Cramer's conjecture
for large
,
(5)
|
It is known that there is a prime gap of length 803 following , and a prime gap of length
following
(Baugh and O'Hara 1992). H. Dubner (2001)
discovered a prime gap of length
between two 3396-digit probable
primes. On Jan. 15, 2004, J. K. Andersen and H. Rosenthal
found a prime gap of length
between two probabilistic primes of
digits each. In January-May 2004, Hans Rosenthal and Jens
Kruse Andersen found a prime gap of length
between two probabilistic primes with
digits each (Anderson 2004).
The merit of a prime gap compares the size of a gap to the local average gap, and is given by .
In 1999, the number 1693182318746371 was found, with merit
. This remained the record merit until 804212830686677669
was found in 2005, with a gap of 1442 and a merit of
. Andersen maintains a list of the top 20 known merits.
The prime gaps of increasing merit are 2, 3, 7, 113, 1129, 1327, 19609, ... (OEIS
A111870).
Young and Potler (1989) determined the first occurrences of prime gaps up to , with all first occurrences
found between 1 and 673. Nicely (1999) has extended the list of maximal prime gaps.
The following table gives the values of
for small
, omitting degenerate runs which are part of a run with greater
(OEIS A005250
and A002386).
1 | 2 | 354 | |
2 | 3 | 382 | |
4 | 7 | 384 | |
6 | 23 | 394 | |
8 | 89 | 456 | |
14 | 113 | 464 | |
18 | 523 | 468 | |
20 | 887 | 474 | |
22 | 486 | ||
34 | 490 | ||
36 | 500 | ||
44 | 514 | ||
52 | 516 | ||
72 | 532 | ||
86 | 534 | ||
96 | 540 | ||
112 | 582 | ||
114 | 588 | ||
118 | 602 | ||
132 | 652 | ||
148 | 674 | ||
154 | 716 | ||
180 | 766 | ||
210 | 778 | ||
220 | 804 | ||
222 | 806 | ||
234 | 906 | ||
248 | 916 | ||
250 | 924 | ||
282 | |||
288 | |||
292 | |||
320 | |||
336 |
Define
(6)
|
as the infimum limit of the ratio of the th prime difference to the natural
logarithm of the
th
prime number. If there are an infinite number of twin
primes, then
.
This follows since it must then be true that
infinitely often, say at
for
, 2, ..., so a necessary condition
for the twin prime conjecture to hold is
that
(7)
| |||
(8)
| |||
(9)
| |||
(10)
|
However, this condition is not sufficient, since the same proof works if 2 is replaced by any constant.
Hardy and Littlewood showed in 1926 that, subject to the truth of the generalized Riemann hypothesis, .
This was subsequently improved by Rankin (again assuming the generalized Riemann
hypothesis) to
.
In 1940, Erdős used sieve theory to show for the first time with no assumptions
that
. This was subsequently improved
to 15/16 (Ricci),
(Bombieri and Davenport 1966), and
(Pil'Tai 1972), as quoted in Le Lionnais
(1983, p. 26). Huxley (1973, 1977) obtained
, which was improved by Maier in 1986 to
, which was the best result
known until 2003 (American Institute of Mathematics).
At a March 2003 meeting on elementary and analytic number theory in Oberwolfach, Germany, Goldston and Yildirim presented an attempted proof that . While the original proof turned out to be flawed (Mackenzie
2003ab), the result has now been established by a new proof (American Institute of
Mathematics 2005, Cipra 2005, Devlin 2005, Goldston et al. 2005ab).