Giuseppe Melfi

Giuseppe Melfi
Born (1967-06-11) 11 June 1967
Uznach, Switzerland
Nationality  Italy
  Switzerland
Fields Mathematics
Institutions University of Neuchâtel
University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland
University of Teacher Education BEJUNE
Known for Practical numbers
Ramanujan-type identities
Notable awards Premio Ulisse (2010)

Giuseppe Melfi (born June 11, 1967) is an Italo-Swiss mathematician. He achieved his PhD in mathematics in 1997 at the University of Pisa. After some years spent at the University of Lausanne, he works now at the University of Neuchâtel, as well as at the University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland and at the local University of Teacher Education.

His work

His major contributions are in the theory of practical numbers. This prime-like sequence of numbers is known for having an asymptotic behavior and other distribution properties similar to the sequence of primes. Melfi proved two conjectures both raised in 1984 one of which is the corresponding of the Goldbach conjecture for practical numbers: every even number is a sum of two practical numbers. He also proved that there exist infinitely many triples of practical numbers of the form .

Another notable contribution has been in an application of the theory of modular forms, where he found new Ramanujan-type identities for the sum-of-divisor functions. In particular he found the remarkable identity

where is the sum of the -th powers of divisors of .

Melfi has an Erdős number of one due to a joint work with Erdős and Deshouillers which proved the existence of sum-free sequences having polynomial growth.[1]

Among other problems in elementary number theory, he is the author of a theorem that allowed him getting a 5328-digit number that is at present the largest known primitive weird number.

In applied mathematics his research interests include probability and simulation.

Selected research publications

See also

References

External links

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