Let $\omega (n)$ be the number of distinct prime divisors of n. In about 100 years ago, Hardy and Ramanujan [Reference Hardy and Ramanujan3] found out that $\omega (n)$ has normal order $\log \log n$ , which means that for almost all integers n we have $\omega (n)\sim \log \log n$ . Later, Turán [Reference Turán6] provided a quite elegantly simplified proof by establishing
In 1955, Prachar [Reference Prachar5] considered a variant arithmetic function of $\omega $ . Let $\omega ^*(n)$ be the number of primes p such that $p-1$ divides n. Prachar proved that
and
where B is a constant. Motivated by Prachar’s work, Erdős and Prachar [Reference Erdős and Prachar2] proved that the number of pairs of primes p and q so that the least common multiple $[p-1, q-1]\le x$ is bounded by $O(x\log \log x)$ . Following a remark of Erdős and Prachar, M. R. Murty and V. K. Murty [Reference Murty and Murty4] improved this to $O(x)$ . By this improvement, they reached the nice bounds
With these in hands, M. R. Murty and V. K. Murty conjectured that there is some positive constant C such that
as $x\rightarrow \infty $ . In this note, the author shall give a slight improvement of the result due to M. R. Murty and V. K. Murty toward the correct direction of their conjecture.
Theorem 1 There are two absolute constants $a_1$ and $a_2$ such that
Proof We only need to prove the lower bound as the upper bound is displayed by M. R. Murty and V. K. Murty. Throughout our proof, the number x is sufficiently large. From the paper of M. R. Murty and V. K. Murty [Reference Murty and Murty4, equation (4.10)], we have
Integrating by parts gives
where $\pi (t;d,1)$ is the number of primes $p\equiv 1 {\ (\mathrm {{mod}}\ d)}$ up to t. Thus, from equations (1) and (2), we obtain
For any integer $0\le j\le \left \lfloor \frac {\log x}{13\log 2}\right \rfloor $ , let $Q_j=2^jx^{1/4}$ . Then $Q_j<x^{1/3}$ for all integers j. From a weak form of the Bombieri–Vinogradov theorem (see, for example, [Reference Davenport1]), we have
for any $0\le j\le \left \lfloor \frac {\log x}{13\log 2}\right \rfloor $ and $x^{3/4}\le z\le x$ , where the implied constant is absolute. It follows immediately that
hold for all $Q_j<d\le 2Q_j$ but at most $O\left (Q_j/(\log x)^2\right )$ exceptions. From equation (4), we have
for all $Q_j<d\le 2Q_j$ with at most $O\left (Q_j/(\log x)^2\right )$ exceptions. A little thought with the dichotomy of z between the interval $[x^{3/4},x]$ leads to the fact
for all $Q_j<d\le 2Q_j$ except for $O\left (Q_j/\log x\right )$ exceptions. For any integer $0\le j\le \left \lfloor \frac {\log x}{13\log 2}\right \rfloor $ , let $S_j$ be the set of all integers $Q_j<d\le 2Q_j$ such that equation (5) holds. Thus, from the analysis above and equations (3) and (5), we conclude that
It is worth here mentioning that we have the following corollary:
due to (see [Reference Murty and Murty4, p. 6, last line])