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arxiv: 2606.22997 · v1 · pith:IW3Q4Z7Enew · submitted 2026-06-22 · 🧮 math.NT · cs.LO

A Greatest Common Divisor Criterion of Certain Binomial Coefficients

Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 07:23 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.NT cs.LO
keywords binomial coefficientsgreatest common divisorprime powersnumber theoryOEIS A080170formal verificationLean theorem prover
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The pith

Binomial gcd D(k) equals 1 exactly when n/P exceeds P, with P the largest prime-power divisor of n = k+1.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper proves an exact criterion for when a specific family of binomial coefficients shares no common divisor larger than one. Define D(k) as the gcd of binom(qk, k) over q from 2 to k+1, and let n equal k+1. If P is the largest prime power exactly dividing n, then D(k) equals one if and only if n/P is greater than P. This settles a recorded OEIS conjecture and is accompanied by a complete Lean formalization of both the statement and its proof. A reader cares because the condition depends only on the prime factorization of n rather than direct computation of the binomials themselves.

Core claim

The paper proves that for k greater than or equal to 2, D(k) equals 1 if and only if n/P is greater than P, where D(k) is the gcd over q=2 to k+1 of binom(qk, k), n equals k+1, and P is the largest prime-power component exactly dividing n. Both the natural-language argument and its Lean encoding are supplied, with the formal artifact accepted into the Formal Conjectures project.

What carries the argument

The equivalence D(k)=1 ⇔ n/P > P, where P is the largest prime power exactly dividing n.

If this is right

  • The value of D(k) is completely determined by the prime factorization of n without evaluating any binomial coefficient.
  • The criterion holds for every integer k at least 2.
  • The result resolves conjecture (17) in Ralf Stephan's list of OEIS conjectures.
  • The Lean artifact provides a machine-checked verification that can be independently checked by the theorem-prover community.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same factorization test could be used to decide coprimality questions for other ranges of binomial coefficients without explicit gcd computation.
  • The existence of an elementary criterion suggests similar divisibility statements for binomial arrays may reduce to prime-power comparisons.
  • Computational checks for very large k become feasible once the prime factorization of n is known.

Load-bearing premise

The Lean formalization correctly encodes the natural-language statement of the criterion together with all intermediate lemmas.

What would settle it

Finding any integer k greater than or equal to 2 such that D(k) is greater than 1 yet n/P exceeds P, or D(k) equals 1 yet n/P does not exceed P, would falsify the claimed equivalence.

read the original abstract

The binomial greatest common divisor (gcd) criterion recorded as OEIS A080170 is proven. The criterion also appears as conjecture (17) in Ralf Stephan's list of OEIS conjectures. For $k\geq 2$, put \[ D(k)=\gcd_{2\leq q\leq k+1}\binom{qk}{k}, \qquad n=k+1. \] If $P$ is the largest prime-power component $p^a$ exactly dividing $n$, then the criterion asserts \[ D(k)=1 \quad\Longleftrightarrow\quad \frac{n}{P}>P. \] The proof is formalized in Lean and the Lean artifact is accepted as part of the Formal Conjectures project. Both the natural-language proof and the Lean formalization are generated by the MechMath Agent Team, an AI agent developed by the authors.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript proves the binomial gcd criterion recorded as OEIS A080170 (also conjecture (17) in Stephan's list). For k≥2, D(k) is defined as the gcd of binom(qk,k) over 2≤q≤k+1, with n=k+1; if P is the largest prime-power exactly dividing n, then D(k)=1 if and only if n/P > P. Both a natural-language proof and a Lean formalization are provided, with the Lean artifact accepted into the independent Formal Conjectures project.

Significance. If the result holds, it resolves a recorded OEIS conjecture. The acceptance of the Lean formalization into Formal Conjectures supplies independent machine-checked verification of the proof, which is a clear strength of the work and raises the evidential bar above a conventional pen-and-paper argument.

minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: the description of the Lean artifact could include a one-sentence indication of the main formalized lemmas or the structure of the proof (e.g., induction on the prime-power factorization) to orient readers who will not immediately consult the repository.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive assessment and recommendation to accept the manuscript. The report correctly captures the main result and the value of the independent Lean verification.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity; external Lean formalization supplies independent verification of the criterion

full rationale

The paper states an external conjecture (OEIS A080170 / Stephan (17)), supplies a natural-language proof, and encodes the identical statement plus lemmas in Lean. The Lean artifact is machine-checked by the kernel and accepted into the independent Formal Conjectures project. No step reduces by definition, by fitting a parameter then relabeling it a prediction, or by a load-bearing self-citation whose justification is internal to the authors. The formalization therefore constitutes external evidence rather than a renaming or self-referential closure. The derivation chain is self-contained against the external benchmark.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

Only the abstract is available, so the ledger records reliance on standard number-theoretic background rather than any new fitted constants or postulated objects.

axioms (1)
  • standard math Standard properties of binomial coefficients, primes, and the gcd operation on the integers
    Invoked throughout any proof of the stated criterion.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5690 in / 1215 out tokens · 42890 ms · 2026-06-26T07:23:14.818355+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Reference graph

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