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If is a given integer, then a function is called a Dirichlet character (mod ) if it is completely multiplicative, periodic with period , and vanishes when . In other words, Dirichlet characters (mod ) satisfy the four conditions:
27.8.1 | ||||
27.8.2 | ||||
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27.8.3 | ||||
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27.8.4 | ||||
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An example is the principal character (mod ):
27.8.5 | |||
For any character , if and only if , in which case the Euler–Fermat theorem (27.2.8) implies . There are exactly different characters (mod ), which can be labeled as . If is a character (mod ), so is its complex conjugate . If , then the characters satisfy the orthogonality relation
27.8.6 | |||
A Dirichlet character is called primitive (mod ) if for every proper divisor of (that is, a divisor ), there exists an integer , with and . If is prime, then every nonprincipal character is primitive. A divisor of is called an induced modulus for if
27.8.7 | |||
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Every Dirichlet character (mod ) is a product
27.8.8 | |||
where is a character (mod ) for some induced modulus for , and is the principal character (mod ). A character is real if all its values are real. If is odd, then the real characters (mod ) are the principal character and the quadratic characters described in the next section.
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