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Pairwise coprime

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In mathematics, especially number theory, a set of integers is said to be pairwise coprime (or pairwise relatively prime) if every pair of integers a and b in the set are coprime (that is, have no common divisors other than 1). The concept of pairwise coprimality is important in applications of the Chinese remainder theorem.

Examples

The set {10, 7, 33, 13} is pairwise coprime, because any pair of the numbers have greatest common divisor equal to 1:

(10, 7) = (10, 33) = (10, 13) = (7, 33) = (7, 13) = (33, 13) = 1.

Here the notation (a, b) means the greatest common divisor of a and b.

On the other hand, the integers 10, 7, 33, 14 are not pairwise coprime, because (10, 14) = 2 ≠ 1 (or indeed because (7, 14) = 7 ≠ 1).

Usage

It is permissible to say "the integers 10, 7, 33, 13 are pairwise coprime", rather than the more exacting "the set of integers {10, 7, 33, 13} is pairwise coprime".

"Pairwise coprime" vs "coprime"

The concept of pairwise coprimality is stronger than that of coprimality. The latter indicates that the greatest common divisor of all integers in the set is 1. For example, the integers 6, 10, 15 are coprime (because the only positive integer dividing all of them is 1), but they are not pairwise coprime because (6, 10) = 2, (10, 15) = 5 and (6, 15) = 3. On the other hand if some integers are pairwise coprime then they are certainly coprime, i.e. pairwise coprimality implies coprimality but not vice versa. To prove the implication it is sufficient to note that any common divisor of all the integers can only be 1 (otherwise pairwise coprimality will be violated).