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Sphenic number


In number theory, a sphenic number (from Ancient Greek: σφήνα, 'wedge') is a positive integer that is the product of three distinct prime numbers.

A sphenic number is a product pqr where p, q, and r are three distinct prime numbers. This definition is more stringent than simply requiring the integer to have exactly three prime factors. For instance, 60 = 22 × 3 × 5 has exactly 3 prime factors, but is not sphenic.

The smallest sphenic number is 30 = 2 × 3 × 5, the product of the smallest three primes. The first few sphenic numbers are

As of January 2016 the largest known sphenic number is

It is the product of the three largest known primes.

All sphenic numbers have exactly eight divisors. If we express the sphenic number as , where p, q, and r are distinct primes, then the set of divisors of n will be:

The converse does not hold. For example, 24 is not a sphenic number, but it has exactly eight divisors.

All sphenic numbers are by definition squarefree, because the prime factors must be distinct.

The Möbius function of any sphenic number is −1.

The cyclotomic polynomials , taken over all sphenic numbers n, may contain arbitrarily large coefficients (for n a product of two primes the coefficients are or 0).


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