In mathematics, a prime power is a positive integer power of a prime number. For example: 5=51, 9=32 and 16=24 are prime powers, while 6, 15 and 36 are not. The twenty smallest prime powers are (sequence A000961 in OEIS):
The prime powers are those positive integers that are divisible by just one prime number.A property of prime powers used frequently in analytic number theory is that the set of prime powers which are not prime is a small set in the sense that the infinite sum of their reciprocals converges, although the primes are a large set.
The number of elements of a finite field is always a prime power and conversely, every prime power occurs as the number of elements in some finite field.
The divisor function calculated on a prime power can be calculated with the formula
verifiable by using the formula for the sum of a geometric series. All prime powers are deficient numbers. A prime power pn is an n-almost prime.
It is not known whether a prime power pn can be an Amicable number. If there is such a number, then pn must be greater than 101500 and n must be greater than 1400.
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"Prime power".
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