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All known Giuga numbers n in fact satisfy the stronger condition
Examples
The sequence of Giuga numbers begins
30, 858, 1722, 66198, 2214408306, 24423128562, 432749205173838, … (sequence A007850 in the OEIS).
For example, 30 is a Giuga number since its prime factors are 2, 3 and 5, and we can verify that
30/2 - 1 = 14, which is divisible by 2,
30/3 - 1 = 9, which is 3 squared, and
30/5 - 1 = 5, the third prime factor itself.
Properties
The prime factors of a Giuga number must be distinct. If divides , then it follows that , where is divisible by . Hence, would not be divisible by , and thus would not be a Giuga number.
Thus, only square-free integers can be Giuga numbers. For example, the factors of 60 are 2, 2, 3 and 5, and 60/2 - 1 = 29, which is not divisible by 2. Thus, 60 is not a Giuga number.
This rules out squares of primes, but semiprimes cannot be Giuga numbers either. For if , with primes, then
, so will not divide , and thus is not a Giuga number.
All known Giuga numbers are even. If an odd Giuga number exists, it must be the product of at least 14 primes. It is not known if there are infinitely many Giuga numbers.
It has been conjectured by Paolo P. Lava (2009) that Giuga numbers are the solutions of the differential equation n' = n+1, where n' is the arithmetic derivative of n. (For square-free numbers , , so n' = n+1 is just the last equation in the above section Definitions, multiplied by n.)
José Mª Grau and Antonio Oller-Marcén have shown that an integer n is a Giuga number if and only if it satisfies n' = a n + 1 for some integer a > 0, where n' is the arithmetic derivative of n. (Again, n' = a n + 1 is identical to the third equation in Definitions, multiplied by n.)