The product of the prime factors of a given integer
In number theory, the radical of a positiveintegern is defined as the product of the distinct prime numbers dividing n. Each prime factor of n occurs exactly once as a factor of this product:
The radical plays a central role in the statement of the abc conjecture.[1]
Examples
Radical numbers for the first few positive integers are
The radical of any integer is the largest square-free divisor of and so also described as the square-free kernel of .[2] There is no known polynomial-time algorithm for computing the square-free part of an integer.[3]
The definition is generalized to the largest -free divisor of , , which are multiplicative functions which act on prime powers as
The notion of the radical occurs in the abc conjecture, which states that, for any , there exists a finite such that, for all triples of coprime positive integers , , and satisfying ,[1]
For any integer , the nilpotent elements of the finite ring are all of the multiples of .