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Mark Lewko
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I've heard that Roger Heath-Brown has presented the following "conjecture" at several conferences, most likely to illustrate our poor understanding of the topic more than because he actually believes it to be true.

Let $\pi_2(x)$ denote the number of twin primes less than $x$. Then

$\pi_2(x) = c \frac{x}{\log^2 x} + O(1)$$\pi_2(x) = c \int_{0}^{x}\frac{dt}{\log^2 t} + O(1)$

where $c$ is the twin prime constant.

In other words, the twin prime asymptotic holds with error term is $O(1)$.

I've heard that Roger Heath-Brown has presented the following "conjecture" at several conferences, most likely to illustrate our poor understanding of the topic more than because he actually believes it to be true.

Let $\pi_2(x)$ denote the number of twin primes less than $x$. Then

$\pi_2(x) = c \frac{x}{\log^2 x} + O(1)$

where $c$ is the twin prime constant.

In other words, the twin prime asymptotic holds with error term is $O(1)$.

I've heard that Roger Heath-Brown has presented the following "conjecture" at several conferences, most likely to illustrate our poor understanding of the topic more than because he actually believes it to be true.

Let $\pi_2(x)$ denote the number of twin primes less than $x$. Then

$\pi_2(x) = c \int_{0}^{x}\frac{dt}{\log^2 t} + O(1)$

where $c$ is the twin prime constant.

In other words, the twin prime asymptotic holds with error term is $O(1)$.

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Mark Lewko
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  • 87

I've heard that Roger Heath-Brown has presented the following "conjecture" at several conferences, most likely to illustrate our poor understanding of the topic more than because he actually believes it to be true.

Let $\pi_2(x)$ denote the number of twin primes less than $x$. Then

$\pi_2(x) \sim c \frac{x}{\log^2 x} + O(1)$$\pi_2(x) = c \frac{x}{\log^2 x} + O(1)$

where $c$ is the twin prime constant.

In other words, the twin prime asymptotic holds with error term is $O(1)$.

I've heard that Roger Heath-Brown has presented the following "conjecture" at several conferences, most likely to illustrate our poor understanding of the topic more than because he actually believes it to be true.

Let $\pi_2(x)$ denote the number of twin primes less than $x$. Then

$\pi_2(x) \sim c \frac{x}{\log^2 x} + O(1)$

where $c$ is the twin prime constant.

In other words, the twin prime asymptotic holds with error term is $O(1)$.

I've heard that Roger Heath-Brown has presented the following "conjecture" at several conferences, most likely to illustrate our poor understanding of the topic more than because he actually believes it to be true.

Let $\pi_2(x)$ denote the number of twin primes less than $x$. Then

$\pi_2(x) = c \frac{x}{\log^2 x} + O(1)$

where $c$ is the twin prime constant.

In other words, the twin prime asymptotic holds with error term is $O(1)$.

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Joël
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I've heard that Roger Heath-Brown has presented the following "conjecture" at several conferences, most likely to illustrate our poor understanding of the topic more than because he actually believes it to be true.

Let $\pi_2(x)$ denote the number of twin primes less than $x$. Then

$\pi_2(x) \sim c \frac{x}{\log^2 x} + O(1)$

where $c$ is the twin prime constant.

In other words, the twin prime asymptotic holds with error term is $O(1)$.

I've heard that Roger Heath-Brown has presented the following "conjecture" at several conferences, most likely to illustrate our poor understanding of the topic more than because he actually believes it to be true.

Let $\pi_2(x)$ denote the number of primes less than $x$. Then

$\pi_2(x) \sim c \frac{x}{\log^2 x} + O(1)$

where $c$ is the twin prime constant.

In other words, the twin prime asymptotic holds with error term is $O(1)$.

I've heard that Roger Heath-Brown has presented the following "conjecture" at several conferences, most likely to illustrate our poor understanding of the topic more than because he actually believes it to be true.

Let $\pi_2(x)$ denote the number of twin primes less than $x$. Then

$\pi_2(x) \sim c \frac{x}{\log^2 x} + O(1)$

where $c$ is the twin prime constant.

In other words, the twin prime asymptotic holds with error term is $O(1)$.

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Mark Lewko
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Mark Lewko
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