Abstract

Given two sets of positive integers $A$ and $B$, let $AB := \{ab : a \in A,\, b \in B\}$ be their product set and put $A^k := A \cdots A$ ($k$ times $A$) for any positive integer $k$. Moreover, for every positive integer $n$ and every $\alpha \in [0,1]$, let $\mathcal{B}(n, \alpha)$ denote the probabilistic model in which a random set $A \subseteq \{1, \dots, n\}$ is constructed by choosing independently every element of $\{1, \dots, n\}$ with probability $\alpha$. We prove that if $A_1, \dots, A_s$ are random sets in $\mathcal{B}(n_1, \alpha_1), \dots, \mathcal{B}(n_s, \alpha_s)$, respectively, $k_1, \dots, k_s$ are fixed positive integers, $\alpha_i n_i \to +\infty$, and $1/\alpha_i$ does not grow too fast in terms of a product of $\log n_j$; then $|A_1^{k_1} \cdots A_s^{k_s}| \sim \frac{|A_1|^{k_1}}{k_1!}\cdots\frac{|A_s|^{k_s}}{k_s!}$ with probability $1 - o(1)$. This is a generalization of a result of Cilleruelo, Ramana, and Ramar\'e, who considered the case $s = 1$ and $k_1 = 2$.

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