![]() |
|
|
#34 | |
|
Nov 2003
22×5×373 Posts |
Quote:
you failed to learn in high school. The above identity, which you seem to think is a mystery, is a trivial consequence of elementary polynomial algebra. You did study factorization of polynomials, didn't you? Here's a high school level exercize: Given the polynomial x^ab - 1 for a,b, odd integers, PROVE that it is divisible by x^a-1, and x^b-1. (and, of course, x-1). The proof uses nothing more than elementary facts about polynomials. Hint: One such proof uses the roots of the polynomials. You do know the remainder theorem for polynomials?? If not, I give it as an exercize: Given a polynomial over R: f(x) = sum a_i x^i, i=0,...N, PROVE: f(r) = the remainder when f(x) is divisible by (x-r). I do not know you personally and intend no insult, but anyone who can not do the above exercizes has no business dabbling in number theory. Such a person simply lacks too much basic algebra. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#35 | |
|
Nov 2003
22·5·373 Posts |
Quote:
'Why' comes from trivial first year algebra, plus a little thought about when an integer might be divisible by 3. (1) 2^p-2 is trivially divisible by 2. (2) 2(2^(p-1) - 1) is, with a little more work, easily seen to be divisible by 3. Think about difference of squares. The math involved is TRIVIAL HIGH SCHOOL ALGEBRA. If K is even, then either K+1 or K-1 is divisible by 3. If one can't explain this, one has no business trying to discuss number theory. Such a person is simply too ignorant about elementary high school algebra to have any hope of understanding this subject. I have said this multiple times, but the message does not get through. Elementary number theory can be learned with just minimal background, but that minimal background MUST include mastery of high school algebra, plus the ability to put together a mathematical argument from basic principles, rather than just parroting from memory. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#36 | |
|
"Phil"
Sep 2002
Tracktown, U.S.A.
111910 Posts |
Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#37 |
|
"Serge"
Mar 2008
Phi(4,2^7658614+1)/2
24×593 Posts |
Nice pair, now. Congratulations!
|
|
|
|
|
|
#38 | |
|
Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
184416 Posts |
Quote:
Is it not true that all words are invented words? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#39 |
|
"Bo Chen"
Oct 2005
Wuhan,China
23×3×7 Posts |
Here is the second p73's group order
Code:
Magma V2.16-6 Mon Apr 19 2010 20:22:13 [Seed = 2434200602] ------------------------------------- [ <2, 2>, <3, 2>, <5, 1>, <23, 1>, <1429, 1>, <28229, 1>, <139133, 1>, <249677, 1>, <389749, 1>, <15487861, 1>, <47501591, 1>, <111707179, 1>, <431421191, 1>, <13007798103359, 1> ] Total time: 6.549 seconds, Total memory usage: 17.75MB |
|
|
|
|
|
#40 |
|
Jul 2003
So Cal
2,111 Posts |
So using the default B2, a B1 of 8e8 would have been sufficient to find this factor.
Interesting sigmas: 4000027779 3000085158 3000000588 Stepping sequentially from a starting value rather than relying on random numbers not to repeat? Not sure I'd have that much confidence in my coordination skills. |
|
|
|
|
|
#41 | |
|
Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
47·229 Posts |
Quote:
Paul |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#42 | |
|
Jun 2005
lehigh.edu
210 Posts |
Quote:
aren't two repetitions. GMP-ECM has kept 32-bit sigmas, perhaps on the expection that no single number would be run far enough to have more than one or two duplicate sigma. The BKLM runs have been doing 30000 curves, as in Thorsten's report on the first p73 ... well, still not much chance of more than one or two; but none-for-sure going sequentially. I had an impression that there was confidence in 32-bits of randomness, less so about 64-bits worth. (Being carefull to the new forum protocol on public attribution of private conversation. The above version as an "impression" is my own, extrapolated from several sources.) If DES is our best analyzed attempt at 56-bits, we know that 2^47 chosen plain texts sufficies to determine the 56-bits --- not that brute force wasn't far quicker, but under "perfect security" requirements that might be taken as only 47-bits of randomness achieved? Then there's the "internal" cipher in the fiestal, using 48-bit keys. I asked an expert on random numbers about this view (cf. the "Numerical Recipes in C" CD), and got back "47-bits is pretty good!", rather than a dispute. I was just looking at 3 months of ecm spread over [c234-c289 plus "the Mn, Pn up to c366"], with B1 = 260M; and found 62K curves without any repeated sigma. That's 7t55 or 1.4t60, without finding any more of Aoki's p50/p51 factors; just a single p54. Nevermind. On Greg's point, B1=8e8 is rather close to the value B1=850M sometimes given as p65-optimal, with the ECM-GMP default B2. Using B1=260M instead, Alex's "expected number of curves" to find a p65 is 263K. That's after I gave up on being able to run a sufficient number of 850M-curves to give ecm a chance. With hindsight, the curves that first broke 50-digits (p53) and 60-digits (p66) using substantially suboptimal B1's may not have been reliable indicators for an effort to break 70-digits. I'm not entirely sure that 3 years of ecm on 500 fast pcs (1500 cpuyears, more or less) is a sufficient test of the effectiveness of p60-limits at finding a p70; but this second BKLM p73 might suggest that access to sufficiently many pcs to run step2 with p65-optimal limits for several hundred cpuyears might have a better chance. (The Cunningham targets here were mostly < c234, to keep the curve counts up.) -Bruce PS - Alternatively, if p60-optimal is insufficient for a plausible chance at a p70; and the expected factor size in the portion of the current Cunningham list from c234-c366 is closer to p55, dropping back to p55-limits might be better use of the (public) cptime. Cf. Jason's reference to my post in favor of the objective of effectively hitting singles -vs- "swinging for the fences". It's baseball season over here. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#43 |
|
"Forget I exist"
Jul 2009
Dumbassville
26·131 Posts |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#44 |
|
Just call me Henry
"David"
Sep 2007
Cambridge (GMT/BST)
5,881 Posts |
|
|
|
|
![]() |
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Factor a 108-digit number | sweety439 | Factoring | 9 | 2016-12-21 21:22 |
| New 70 digit factor | R.D. Silverman | Cunningham Tables | 16 | 2016-01-23 22:16 |
| 44-digit factor found using ECM w/ B1=1e6 & B2=1e8 | WVU Mersenneer | Factoring | 8 | 2010-04-24 17:01 |
| Probability of n-digit factor? | roger | Factoring | 3 | 2007-05-09 22:51 |
| 160 digit factor found of 366 digit (PRP-1) | AntonVrba | Factoring | 7 | 2005-12-06 22:02 |