Formulas for the nth prime number actually exist! One was cleverly engineered in 1964 by C. P. Willans. But is it useful?
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References:
Herbert Wilf, What is an answer?, The American Mathematical Monthly 89 (1982) 289-292.
C. P. Willans, On formulae for the nth prime number, The Mathematical Gazette 48 (1964) 413-415.
Further reading:
Jeffrey Shallit, No formula for the prime numbers?.
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# Python code
import math
def prime(n):
return 1 sum([
(pow(n/sum([
(pow(( * ((j - 1) 1)/j), 2))
for j in range(1, i 1)
]), 1/n))
for i in range(1, pow(2, n) 1)
])
----------------
(* Mathematica code *)
prime[n_] := 1 Sum[Floor[(n/Sum[Floor[Cos[Pi ((j - 1)! 1)/j]^2], {j, 1, i}])^(1/n)], {i, 1, 2^n}]
----------------
0:00 A formula for primes?
1:24 Engineering a prime detector
4:00 Improving the prime detector
5:46 Counting primes
6:29 Determining the nth prime
9:42 The final step
11:36 What counts as a formula?
12:56 What’s the point?
13:51 Who was Willans?
----------------
Animated with Manim.
Thanks to Ken Emmer for supplying the microphone.
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