mersenneforum.org  

Go Back   mersenneforum.org > Factoring Projects > Factoring

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 2007-09-19, 23:16   #45
Jens K Andersen
 
Jens K Andersen's Avatar
 
Feb 2006
Denmark

2·5·23 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by roger View Post
As for the quotient, I don't know in algebraic terms. I'll have a look through the factor file.
It appears you missed my point. I answered my own question.
You had noted that p(n)#+p(n) is divisible by p(n).
The quotient is (p(n)#+p(n))/p(n) = p(n)#/p(n)+1 = p(n-1)#+1.
This means p(n)#+p(n) = p(n)*(p(n-1)#+1), so you are repeating the work of others who have already factored many numbers of form p(n-1)#+1.
Jens K Andersen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-09-20, 15:51   #46
roger
 
roger's Avatar
 
Oct 2006

26010 Posts
Default

I understood your question, I just didn't get to looking into it before reading your answer...

As for repeating other's work, once again the newbie doesn't look at the math. Oh well, it was fun while it lasted.

Regards,

Roger
roger is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-09-24, 08:41   #47
Joppe_Bos
 
Apr 2007

2416 Posts
Default

Found a new factor for:
P118# - 1 = 647# - 1 = (c153) = p40 * p113
With p40 = 4460710194647866091044047379244155081819
This completes the factorization of P118# - 1.

Found a new factor for:
P114# + 1 = 619# + 1 = (c222) = p42 * c181
With P42 = 157789955962685027270645602902098758580423

Done 6300 curves on P106# + 1 with B1=43e6
Done 2600 curves on P118# - 1 with B1=11e6

Roger: Too bad you were repeating work, maybe help me on p(n)# +- 1 or work on p(n)# +- p(n+1) see here and here.

Last fiddled with by Joppe_Bos on 2007-09-24 at 08:46 Reason: Typo
Joppe_Bos is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-09-24, 11:04   #48
fivemack
(loop (#_fork))
 
fivemack's Avatar
 
Feb 2006
Cambridge, England

2·132·19 Posts
Default

I'm back in England; P109+ is rather over-sieved. I'm running the LA step as I speak and I ought to have an answer this evening.

I'm planning to run P84+ at the 43e6 level on a dual-core at work; one curve takes a bit over six minutes, I've set up for 6000 curves, which ought to be done by the end of the first week in October. That's 700 CPU-hours, a GNFS run would take around 2000, so if I haven't got factors by that point I'll start GNFS and expect a result by the end of the year.
fivemack is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-09-24, 17:10   #49
fivemack
(loop (#_fork))
 
fivemack's Avatar
 
Feb 2006
Cambridge, England

2·132·19 Posts
Default

P109#+1 has largest factor

Code:
16637910325093937816348627843064814495390600075720882557526353118578057861799584359

and next-largest factor

Code:
1880485480056918062175760642974820848340056891251805332288693
The full factorisation is

Code:
P109# + 1 = 154006033 *
74119649873 *
1650289933478587 *
190883459271153022334840970773 *
280818180154859694807701663308663035067 *
1880485480056918062175760642974820848340056891251805332288693 *
16637910325093937816348627843064814495390600075720882557526353118578057861799584359
This took 15 hours on two CPUs for the linear algebra, about two CPU-weeks for polynomial search, and about 1500 CPU-hours for the sieving (started polysearch 14 August, started sieving 20 August, switched to linear algebra 23 September), all on Core2Duo @ 2400MHz. It's the largest GNFS job I've done yet (though I've a C151 on the go which is two-thirds sieved), and thanks to msieve it went very smoothly.

Last fiddled with by fivemack on 2007-09-24 at 17:13
fivemack is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-09-25, 03:13   #50
jasonp
Tribal Bullet
 
jasonp's Avatar
 
Oct 2004

3·1,181 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by fivemack View Post
It's the largest GNFS job I've done yet (though I've a C151 on the go which is two-thirds sieved), and thanks to msieve it went very smoothly.
Awesome. I'll try to get another release out before you finish sieving; I'm working on linear algebra optimizations that slow down the solver by 2-3% but reduce memory use by 15%. As the code gets pushed up to 512 bits that's going to become quite important.
jasonp is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-09-25, 07:49   #51
Joppe_Bos
 
Apr 2007

22×32 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by fivemack View Post
This took 15 hours on two CPUs for the linear algebra, about two CPU-weeks for polynomial search, and about 1500 CPU-hours for the sieving (started polysearch 14 August, started sieving 20 August, switched to linear algebra 23 September), all on Core2Duo @ 2400MHz. It's the largest GNFS job I've done yet (though I've a C151 on the go which is two-thirds sieved), and thanks to msieve it went very smoothly.
Wow! Congratulations, certainly a really nice result (and no ECM miss)!
Joppe_Bos is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-10-02, 08:53   #52
Joppe_Bos
 
Apr 2007

22×32 Posts
Default

Done 6000 curves on P112# - 1 with B1=11e6
Done 7400 curves on P82# + 1 with B1=43e6
No factors found.
Joppe_Bos is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-10-08, 08:59   #53
Joppe_Bos
 
Apr 2007

3610 Posts
Default

Done 5200 curves on P76# + 1 with B1=43e6
Done 5100 curves on P86# + 1 with B1=43e6
Done 4700 curves on P114# - 1 with B1=11e6
No factors found.
Joppe_Bos is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-10-09, 09:28   #54
fivemack
(loop (#_fork))
 
fivemack's Avatar
 
Feb 2006
Cambridge, England

2·132·19 Posts
Default

Done 5925 curves on P84#+1 with B1=43e6.

No factors found.

I could do this by GNFS, but it'd take about a month and I've got about three weeks of work on Cunningham-project numbers already queued up; unless someone else wants to run GNFS, I'll reserve it now but can't promise factors until mid-December.
fivemack is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2007-10-09, 17:22   #55
Joppe_Bos
 
Apr 2007

22×32 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by fivemack View Post
Done 5925 curves on P84#+1 with B1=43e6.

No factors found.

I could do this by GNFS, but it'd take about a month and I've got about three weeks of work on Cunningham-project numbers already queued up; unless someone else wants to run GNFS, I'll reserve it now but can't promise factors until mid-December.
Thanks, I updated the tables. I am willing to do this number with NFS. It would be fun to learn more about ggnfs, since I have only experience with the CWI suite and just little with ggnfs (only using the factLat script), and how to use it. From what I have read here using msieve for the post-processing seems the way to go (but I will start with searching for a good polynomial for at least a week).
Joppe_Bos is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Primorials squared primes? siegert81 Math 6 2010-12-28 15:17
Factorization of 7,254+ dleclair NFSNET Discussion 1 2006-03-21 05:11
Factorization of 11,212+ Wacky NFSNET Discussion 1 2006-03-20 23:43
Factorization of 5,307- Jeff Gilchrist NFSNET Discussion 7 2005-02-23 19:46
Factors of primorials grandpascorpion Math 9 2005-02-10 07:13

All times are UTC. The time now is 08:01.


Tue Jul 27 08:01:42 UTC 2021 up 4 days, 2:30, 0 users, load averages: 1.64, 1.80, 1.83

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

This forum has received and complied with 0 (zero) government requests for information.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
A copy of the license is included in the FAQ.