Why is this arbitrary-looking identity of arithmetic functions "obvious"? If f is a multiplicative arithmetic function, and g is a completely multiplicative arithmetic function, and furthermore for all primes p and n>=1 we have the relation f(p^{n+1})=f(p)f(p^n)-g(p)f(p^{n-1})
Yazmin Sims
Answered question
2022-10-27
Why is this arbitrary-looking identity of arithmetic functions "obvious"?
The question asks us the following: if f is a multiplicative arithmetic function, and g is a completely multiplicative arithmetic function, and furthermore for all primes p and we have the relation
then for all n,m
More than any exercise so far in this book, this looks completely arbitrary to me. I have solved it: you can consider the question only for , and then it follows for arbitrary n,m by multiplicativity of f,g; and we can prove it for by induction on a. But that has really taught me nothing: I don't understand why it might make some sense that this is true.
If for all primes p, then the relation we start from becomes - i.e., f is completely multiplicative. Thus maybe we can see the as a sort of error term of the complete multiplicativity of f. But this doesn't help me see why the result makes sense.
Another approach I tried was noting that the relation allows us to write as a polynomial in f(p),g(p), but I wrote out a few and I didn't see a pattern I understood.
So my question is: where does this identity come from? How should I understand it, visualize it, "get" it? How would one come up with an exercise like this?