Brun's constant
Definition
Brun's constant is the (possibly infinite) sum of reciprocals of the twin primes . It turns out that this sum is actually convergent. Brun's constant is equal to approximately
.
Proof of convergence
Everywhere below, will stand for an odd prime number. Let
. We shall prove that
for large
with some absolute constant
.
The technique used in the proof is a version of the principle of inclusion-exclusion and is known nowadays as Brun's simple pure sieve.
Lemma
Let .
Let
be the
-th symmetric sum of the numbers
. Then
for every odd
and even
.
Proof of Lemma
Induction on .
Now, take a very big and fix some
to be chosen later. For each odd prime
, let
.
Clearly, if , and
for some
, then either
or
is
not prime. Thus, the number of primes
such that
is also prime does not exceed
.
Let now be an even number. By the inclusion-exclusion principle,
Let us now estimate .
Note that the condition
depends only on the remainder of
modulo
and that, by the Chinese Remainder Theorem, there are exactly
remainders that satisfy this condition (for each
, we must have
or
and the remainders for different
can be chosen independently). Therefore
where .
It follows that
where is the
-th symmetric sum of the set
. Indeed, we have not more than
terms in the inclusion-exclusion formula above and each term is estimated with an error not greater than
.
Now notice that
by the lemma.
The product does not exceed
(see the prime number article), so it remains to estimate
. But we have
.
This estimate yields the final inequality
.
It remains to minimize the right hand side over all possible choices of
and
. We shall choose
and
. With this choice, every term on the right does not exceed
and we are done.