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===Integers appearing as coefficients=== The problem of bounding the magnitude of the coefficients of the cyclotomic polynomials has been the object of a number of research papers.<ref name=arXivSanna>{{cite arXiv|eprint=2111.04034 |last1=Sanna |first1=Carlo |title=A Survey on Coefficients of Cyclotomic Polynomials |year=2021 |class=math.NT|mode=cs2 }}</ref> If ''n'' has at most two distinct odd prime factors, then Migotti showed that the coefficients of <math>\Phi_n</math> are all in the set {1, β1, 0}.<ref>{{citation |title=Algebra: A Graduate Course |first=Martin |last=Isaacs |page=310 |isbn=978-0-8218-4799-2 |publisher=AMS Bookstore |year=2009}}</ref> The first cyclotomic polynomial for a product of three different odd prime factors is <math>\Phi_{105}(x);</math> it has a coefficient β2 (see [[#Examples|above]]). The converse is not true: <math>\Phi_{231}(x)=\Phi_{3\times 7\times 11}(x)</math> only has coefficients in {1, β1, 0}. If ''n'' is a product of more different odd prime factors, the coefficients may increase to very high values. E.g., <math>\Phi_{15015}(x) =\Phi_{3\times 5\times 7\times 11\times 13}(x)</math> has coefficients running from β22 to 23; also <math>\Phi_{255255}(x)=\Phi_{3\times 5\times 7\times 11\times 13\times 17}(x)</math>, the smallest ''n'' with 6 different odd primes, has coefficients of magnitude up to 532. Let ''A''(''n'') denote the maximum absolute value of the coefficients of <math>\Phi_{n}(x)</math>. It is known that for any positive ''k'', the number of ''n'' up to ''x'' with ''A''(''n'') > ''n''<sup>''k''</sup> is at least ''c''(''k'')β ''x'' for a positive ''c''(''k'') depending on ''k'' and ''x'' sufficiently large. In the opposite direction, for any function Ο(''n'') tending to [[infinity]] with ''n'' we have ''A''(''n'') bounded above by ''n''<sup>Ο(''n'')</sup> for almost all ''n''.<ref name=Mai2008>{{Citation | last = Maier | first = Helmut | chapter = Anatomy of integers and cyclotomic polynomials | editor1-last = De Koninck | editor1-first = Jean-Marie | editor2-last = Granville | editor2-first = Andrew | editor2-link = Andrew Granville | editor3-last = Luca | editor3-first = Florian | title = Anatomy of integers. Based on the CRM workshop, Montreal, Canada, March 13-17, 2006 | location = Providence, RI | publisher = [[American Mathematical Society]] | series = CRM Proceedings and Lecture Notes | volume = 46 | pages = 89β95 | year = 2008 | isbn = 978-0-8218-4406-9 | zbl = 1186.11010 }}</ref> A combination of theorems of Bateman and Vaughan states that{{r|arXivSanna|p=10}} on the one hand, for every <math>\varepsilon>0</math>, we have :<math>A(n) < e^{\left(n^{(\log 2+\varepsilon)/(\log\log n)}\right)}</math> for all sufficiently large positive integers <math>n</math>, and on the other hand, we have :<math>A(n) > e^{\left(n^{(\log 2)/(\log\log n)}\right)}</math> for infinitely many positive integers <math>n</math>. This implies in particular that [[univariate polynomial|univariate polynomials]] (concretely <math>x^n-1</math> for infinitely many positive integers <math>n</math>) can have factors (like <math>\Phi_n</math>) whose coefficients are [[Superpolynomial|superpolynomially]] larger than the original coefficients. This is not too far from the general [[Landau-Mignotte bound]].
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