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where we ignore the fact that 22021 is composite (22021 = 19 ⋅ 61).
A Descartes number is defined as an odd number n = m ⋅ p where m and p are coprime and 2n = σ(m) ⋅ (p + 1), whence p is taken as a 'spoof' prime. The example given is the only one currently known.
If m is an odd almost perfect number, that is, σ(m) = 2m − 1 and 2m − 1 is taken as a 'spoof' prime, then n = m ⋅ (2m − 1) is a Descartes number, since σ(n) = σ(m ⋅ (2m − 1)) = σ(m) ⋅ 2m = (2m − 1) ⋅ 2m = 2n. If 2m − 1 were prime, n would be an odd perfect number.
Properties
Banks et al. showed in 2008 that if n is a cube-free Descartes number not divisible by , then n has over a million distinct prime divisors.
Tóth showed in 2021 that if denotes a Descartes number (other than Descartes’ example), with pseudo-prime factor , then .
Generalizations
John Voight generalized Descartes numbers to allow negative bases. He found the example . Subsequent work by a group at Brigham Young University found more examples similar to Voight's example, and also allowed a new class of spoofs where one is allowed to also not notice that a prime is the same as another prime in the factorization.
Andersen, Nickolas; Durham, Spencer ; Griffin, Michael J. ; Hales, Jonathan ; Jenkins, Paul ; Keck, Ryan ; Ko, Hankun ; Molnar, Grant; Moss, Eric ; Nielsen, Pace P. ; Niendorf, Kyle ; Tombs, Vandy; Warnick, Merrill ; Wu, Dongsheng (2020). "Odd, spoof perfect factorizations". J. Number Theory (234): 31-47. arXiv:2006.10697.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) arXiv version