What theorem is this called? For any gap size n, no more than n gaps

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The discussion revolves around the concept of prime gaps, specifically the claim that for any gap size n, no more than n gaps of size n can consecutively occur in the sequence of prime gaps. Participants clarify that gaps between primes can be arbitrarily large and reference the Prime Number Theorem. A linked paper is mentioned, which attempts to prove the Twin Primes Conjecture, though the original claim is viewed as less significant. An example is provided to illustrate the claim using primes and their remainders. The conversation highlights an interest in the implications of prime gaps and their mathematical significance.
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of size n can consecutively occur in the sequence of primes.
 
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Do you mean size exactly n? You can have gaps between primes that are as large as you want them to be.
 
Oops, I meant "occur in the sequence of prime gaps" not "occur in the sequence of primes", of course :blushing:

e.g. for the gap size 12, no more than 12 gaps of size 12 can consecutively occur in the sequence of prime gaps 1, 2, 2, 4, 2, 4, 2, 4, 6, 2, 6, 4, 2, 4, 6, 6, 2, 6, 4, 2, 6, 4, 6, 8, 4, 2, 4, 2, 4, 14, ...
 
UltrafastPED said:
Are you looking for something like this: http://arxiv.org/pdf/math/0508185v1.pdf

Upon reading over their intro, I would say it's similar, but not quite. I claim that, for any gap size n, at most n gaps of size n can consecutively occur in the sequence of prime gaps. The provided paper is an attempt at proving the Twin Primes Conjecture. I suppose my claim can be very easily proven and doesn't amount to much significance other than possibly getting school kids excited about learning remainders. :-p For instance, it can be easily seen from remainders after dividing by 3 that the primes 3, 5, 7 produce the only instance of 2 gaps of size 2 appearing consecutively in the sequence of prime gaps.

Much thanks for the link. :cool: I recently came across the GPY result while reading about Zhang's work on the Twin Primes Conjecture.
 
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