Number whose divisors add to a multiple of that number
Demonstration, with Cuisenaire rods, of the 2-perfection of the number 6
In mathematics, a multiply perfect number (also called multiperfect number or pluperfect number) is a generalization of a perfect number.
For a given natural numberk, a number n is called k-perfect (or k-fold perfect) if the sum of all positive divisors of n (the divisor function, σ(n)) is equal to kn; a number is thus perfectif and only if it is 2-perfect. A number that is k-perfect for a certain k is called a multiply perfect number. As of 2014, k-perfect numbers are known for each value of k up to 11.[1]
It is unknown whether there are any odd multiply perfect numbers other than 1. The first few multiply perfect numbers are:
For a given prime numberp, if n is p-perfect and p does not divide n, then pn is (p + 1)-perfect. This implies that an integern is a 3-perfect number divisible by 2 but not by 4, if and only if n/2 is an odd perfect number, of which none are known.
If 3n is 4k-perfect and 3 does not divide n, then n is 3k-perfect.
It is unknown whether there are any odd multiply perfect numbers other than 1. However if an odd k-perfect number n exists where k > 2, then it must satisfy the following conditions:[2]
The largest prime factor is ≥ 100129
The second largest prime factor is ≥ 1009
The third largest prime factor is ≥ 101
Tóth found several numbers that would be odd multiperfect, if one of their factors was a square (Tóth (2025)). An example is , which would be an odd multiperfect number, if only one of its prime factors, , was a square. This is closely related to the concept of Descartes numbers.
Bounds
In little-o notation, the number of multiply perfect numbers less than x is for all ε > 0.[2]
The number of k-perfect numbers n for n ≤ x is less than , where c and c' are constants independent of k.[2]
Under the assumption of the Riemann hypothesis, the following inequality is true for all k-perfect numbers n, where k > 3
A number n with σ(n) = 3n is triperfect. There are only six known triperfect numbers and these are believed to comprise all such numbers:
120, 672, 523776, 459818240, 1476304896, 51001180160 (sequence A005820 in the OEIS)
If there exists an odd perfect number m (a famous open problem) then 2m would be 3-perfect, since σ(2m) = σ(2) σ(m) = 3×2m. An odd triperfect number must be a square number exceeding 1070 and have at least 12 distinct prime factors, the largest exceeding 105.[5]
Variations
Unitary multiply perfect numbers
A similar extension can be made for unitary perfect numbers. A positive integer n is called a unitary multik-perfectnumber if σ*(n) = kn where σ*(n) is the sum of its unitary divisors. (A divisor d of a number n is a unitary divisor if d and n/dshare no common factors.).
A unitary multiply perfect number is simply a unitary multi k-perfect number for some positive integer k. Equivalently, unitary multiply perfect numbers are those n for which n divides σ*(n). A unitary multi 2-perfect number is naturally called a unitary perfect number. In the case k > 2, no example of a unitary multi k-perfect number is yet known. It is known that if such a number exists, it must be even and greater than 10102 and must have more than forty four odd prime factors. This problem is probably very difficult to settle. The concept of unitary divisor was originally due to R. Vaidyanathaswamy (1931) who called such a divisor as block factor. The present terminology is due to E. Cohen (1960).
The first few unitary multiply perfect numbers are:
1, 6, 60, 90, 87360 (sequence A327158 in the OEIS)
Bi-unitary multiply perfect numbers
A positive integer n is called a bi-unitary multik-perfectnumber if σ**(n) = kn where σ**(n) is the sum of its bi-unitary divisors. This concept is due to Peter Hagis (1987). A bi-unitary multiply perfect number is simply a bi-unitary multi k-perfect number for some positive integer k. Equivalently, bi-unitary multiply perfect numbers are those n for which n divides σ**(n). A bi-unitary multi 2-perfect number is naturally called a bi-unitary perfect number, and a bi-unitary multi 3-perfect number is called a bi-unitary triperfect number.
A divisor d of a positive integer n is called a bi-unitary divisor of n if the greatest common unitary divisor (gcud) of d and n/d equals 1. This concept is due to D. Surynarayana (1972). The sum of the (positive) bi-unitary divisors of n is denoted by σ**(n).
Peter Hagis (1987) proved that there are no odd bi-unitary multiperfect numbers other than 1. Haukkanen and Sitaramaiah (2020) found all bi-unitary triperfect numbers of the form 2au where 1 ≤ a ≤ 6 and u is odd,[6][7][8] and partially the case where a = 7.[9][10]
Further, they fixed completely the case a = 8.[11]
Tomohiro Yamada (Determining all biunitary triperfect numbers of a certain form, arXiv:2406.19331 [math.NT], 2024) proved that 2160 = 33 80 is the only biunitary triperfect number of the form 3au where 3 ≤ a and u is not divisible by 3.
The first few bi-unitary multiply perfect numbers are:
1, 6, 60, 90, 120, 672, 2160, 10080, 22848, 30240 (sequence A189000 in the OEIS)
Merickel, James G. (1999). "Divisors of Sums of Divisors: 10617". The American Mathematical Monthly. 106 (7): 693. doi:10.2307/2589515. JSTOR2589515. MR1543520.
Sorli, Ronald M. (2003). Algorithms in the study of multiperfect and odd perfect numbers (PhD thesis). Sydney: University of Technology. hdl:10453/20034.