A 'practical number' or 'panarithmic number' is a positive integer ''n'' such that all smaller positive integers can be represented as sums of distinct
divisors of ''n''. For example, 12 is a practical number because all the numbers from 1 to 11 can be expressed as sums of its divisors 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6: as well as these divisors themselves, we have 5=3+2, 7=6+1, 8=6+2, 9=6+3, 10=6+3+1, and 11=6+3+2. Any even
perfect number and any power of two is also a practical number.
The sequence of practical numbers begins
:
1,
2,
4,
6,
8,
12,
16,
18,
20,
24,
28,
30,
32,
36,
40,
42,
48,
54, ...
Practical numbers were used by
Fibonacci in his
Liber Abaci (1202) in connection with the problem of representing rational numbers as
Egyptian fractions. Fibonacci does not formally define practical numbers, but he gives a table of Egyptian fraction expansions for fractions with practical denominators (Sigler 2002). The first occurrence of practical numbers in the modern mathematical literature appears to be by Srinivasan (1948).
Characterization of practical numbers
As Stewart (1954) showed, it is straightforward to determine whether a number is practical from its
prime factorization.
A positive integer
with
and