October 2, 2023
Let $\sigma(n)$ be the sum of the positive divisors of $n$. A number $n$ is said to be 2-near perfect if $\sigma(n) = 2n +d_1 +d_2 $, where $d_1$ and $d_2$ are distinct positive divisors of $n$. We give a complete description of those $n$ which are 2-near perfect and of the form $n=2^k p^i$ where $p$ is prime and $i \in \{1,2\}$. We also prove related results under the additional restriction where $d_1d_2=n$.
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January 20, 2020
Let $n$ and $k$ be positive integers and $\sigma(n)$ the sum of all positive divisors of $n$. We call $n$ an exactly $k$-deficient-perfect number with deficient divisors $d_1, d_2, \ldots, d_k$ if $d_1, d_2, \ldots, d_k$ are distinct proper divisors of $n$ and $\sigma (n)=2n-(d_1+d_2+\ldots + d_k)$. In this article, we show that the only odd exactly $3$-deficient-perfect number with at most two distinct prime factors is $1521=3^2 \cdot 13^2$.
August 14, 2019
For a positive integer $n$, let $\sigma(n)$ denote the sum of the positive divisors of $n$. Let $d$ be a proper divisor of $n$. We call $n$ a deficient-perfect number if $\sigma(n)=2n-d$. In this paper, we show that the only odd deficient-perfect number with four distinct prime divisors is $3^{2}\cdot 7^{2}\cdot 11^{2}\cdot 13^{2}$.
May 25, 2020
Let $\sigma(n)$ to be the sum of the positive divisors of $n$. A number is non-deficient if $\sigma(n) \geq 2n$. We establish new lower bounds for the number of distinct prime factors of an odd non-deficient number in terms of its second smallest, third smallest and fourth smallest prime factors. We also obtain tighter bounds for odd perfect numbers. We also discuss the behavior of $\sigma(n!+1)$, $\sigma(2^n+1)$, and related sequences.
November 29, 2010
We call positive integer n a near-perfect number, if it is sum of all its proper divisors, except of one of them ("redundant divisor"). We prove an Euclid-like theorem for near-perfect numbers and obtain some other results for them.
June 18, 2019
For a positive integer $n$, if $\sigma(n)$ denotes the sum of the positive divisors of $n$, then $n$ is called a deficient perfect number if $\sigma(n)=2n-d$ for some positive divisor $d$ of $n$. In this paper, we prove some results about odd deficient perfect numbers with four distinct prime factors.
October 13, 2016
The study of perfect numbers (numbers which equal the sum of their proper divisors) goes back to antiquity, and is responsible for some of the oldest and most popular conjectures in number theory. We investigate a generalization introduced by Pollack and Shevelev: $k$-near-perfect numbers. These are examples to the well-known pseudoperfect numbers first defined by Sierpi\'nski, and are numbers such that the sum of all but at most $k$ of its proper divisors equals the number. ...
February 8, 2011
A perfect number is a number whose divisors add up to twice the number itself. The existence of odd perfect numbers is a millennia-old unsolved problem. This note proposes a proof of the nonexistence of odd perfect numbers. More generally, the same analysis seems to generalize to a proof of the nonexistence of odd multiperfect numbers.
February 22, 2011
A natural number $n$ is called {\it multiperfect} or {\it$k$-perfect} for integer $k\ge2$ if $\sigma(n)=kn$, where $\sigma(n)$ is the sum of the positive divisors of $n$. In this paper, we establish the structure theorem of odd multiperfect numbers analogous as Euler's theorem on odd perfect numbers. We prove the divisibility of the Euler part of odd multiperfect numbers and characterize the forms of odd perfect numbers $n=\pi^\alpha M^2$ such that $\pi\equiv\alpha(\text{mod}...
January 5, 2005
Let $\sigma(n)$ denote the sum of the positive divisors of $n$. We say that $n$ is perfect if $\sigma(n) = 2 n$. Currently there are no known odd perfect numbers. It is known that if an odd perfect number exists, then it must be of the form $N = p^\alpha \prod_{j=1}^k q_j^{2 \beta_j}$, where $p, q_1, ..., q_k$ are distinct primes and $p \equiv \alpha\equiv 1 \pmod{4}$. Define the total number of prime factors of $N$ as $\Omega(N) := \alpha + 2 \sum_{j=1}^k \beta_j$. Sayers sh...
December 30, 2009
A positive integer n is said to be perfect if sigma(n)=2n, where sigma denotes the sum of the divisors of n. In this article, we show that if n is an even perfect number, then any integer m<=n is expressed as a sum of some of divisors of n.