Yi Zhou, Parikshit Ram, et al.
ICLR 2023
E. D. F. Meissel, a German astronomer, found in the 1870's a method for computing individual values of ir(x), the counting function for the number of primes $ x. His method was based on recurrences for partial sieving functions, and he used it to compute w(109). D. H. Lehmer simplified and extended Meissels method. We present further refinements of the Meissel-Lehmer method which incorporate some new sieving techniques. We give an asymptotic running time analysis of the resulting algorithm, showing that for every e0 it computes w(.x) using at most 0(x23 + l) arithmetic operations and using at most 0(x1/3 + F) storage locations on a Random Access Machine (RAM) using words of length [log2 x] + 1 bits. The algorithm can be further speeded up using parallel processors. We show that there is an algorithm which, when given M RAM parallel processors, computes w(x) in time at most 0(Mlx2/3 + F) using at most 0(x1/3 + f) storage locations on each parallel processor, provided M x1. A variant of the algorithm was implemented and used to compute ir(4 X 1016). © 1985 American Mathematical Society.
Yi Zhou, Parikshit Ram, et al.
ICLR 2023
Sonia Cafieri, Jon Lee, et al.
Journal of Global Optimization
Guo-Jun Qi, Charu Aggarwal, et al.
IEEE TPAMI
Kafai Lai, Alan E. Rosenbluth, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2007