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#45 | ||
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
10010001000112 Posts |
Quote:
For any prime p > 5, the proportion of terms divisible by p can be found (though which terms are divisible by p is not easily predicted). The rate of growth of the sequence is fairly clear. There is a formula to calculate the terms of the sequence. True, the sequence has no obvious divisibility properties like a^n - 1. And, alas, the sequence has no obvious theoretical importance, so there is little impetus to throw a lot of resources at determining which terms are prp's. I have no sense of how many prp's one might "expect" to find for n <= X for large X. Quote:
BTW, since the constant log(2)/log(10) = log102 plays a role in defining the terms of this sequence, I will mention that this number is not only irrational (easily proved by invoking unique factorization), but transcendental (easily proved by invoking the Gelfond-Schneider Theorem). Last fiddled with by Dr Sardonicus on 2018-06-26 at 13:44 Reason: fixing typos |
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#46 |
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Aug 2006
3×1,993 Posts |
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#47 | |
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Mar 2018
10000100102 Posts |
Quote:
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#48 |
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Mar 2018
21216 Posts |
log(2)/log(10) = log102 how does it play a role in the terms of the sequence?
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#49 |
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Mar 2018
2·5·53 Posts |
Why this sequence there wasn't in Oeis if you say that it is yet known?
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#50 |
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Mar 2018
10000100102 Posts |
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#51 |
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Mar 2018
2·5·53 Posts |
Why we found 3 probable primes with residue 1 when the residue 1 occurs with half the frequency of the residue 6?
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#52 | |
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
4,643 Posts |
Quote:
f(k) = 10^m * (2^k - 1) + 2^(k-1) - 1, where m is the number of decimal digits in 2^(k-1). The value of m is m = 1 + floor((k-1)*log10(2)), i.e. m = 1 + floor((k-1)*log(2)/log(10)). |
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#53 | |
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Aug 2006
3×1,993 Posts |
Quote:
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/StrongL...llNumbers.html https://www.ime.usp.br/~rbrito/docs/2322249.pdf |
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#54 | |
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
464310 Posts |
Quote:
f(k) = 10^m*(2^k - 1) + 2^(k-1) - 1, where m = 1 + floor((k-1)*log(2)/log(10)), the number of decimal digits in 2^(k-1), is 1 (mod 2) for n > 1, and 1 (mod 3) for all n. Since 10 is divisible by 5, the sequence is also periodic (mod 5) with period 5-1 = 4, the sequence of remainders (mod 5) being 0, 1, 3, 2, 0, 1, 3, 2,... For p > 5, the sequence is not periodic (mod p), but there is one specific remainder, namely (p - 1)/2, that does recur when n is divisible by the multiplicative order of 2 (mod p), which multiplies the factor 10^m (mod p) by 0 (mod p), taking it out of consideration. (I am too lazy to work out whether this remainder can also occur at other values of n.) The reason the sequence is not periodic (mod p) for any p > 5 is, first of all, the terms 2^k - 1 and 2^(k-1) - 1 are periodic (mod p), with period equal to the multiplicative order h of 2 (mod p). The non-periodicity of f(k) comes from the non-periodicity of m (mod h). (This problem disappears when p divides 2^k - 1, as noted above.) To show that m is not periodic modulo any integer N > 1, we show that, for any given positive positive irrational constant c, and any given positive integer L, floor((n + L)*c) - floor(n*c) is not constant. We use frac(x) to denote x - floor(x). Clearly, (n + L)*c = floor(n*c) + frac(n*c) + floor(L*c) + frac(L*c), so that floor((n+L)*c) = floor(n*c) + floor(L*c) if frac(n*c) + frac(L*c) < 1, and floor(n*c) + floor(L*c) + 1, if frac(n*c) + frac(L*c) > 1. Now it is a well known result that frac(n*c) is uniformly distributed in (0, 1), so both possibilities occur (and, given the value of frac(L*c), we can say how often). Thus, floor((n + L)*c) - floor(n*c) is not constant, so m is not periodic modulo any integer N greater than 1. Hence f(k) is not periodic (mod p) for any prime p > 5. |
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#55 |
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Mar 2018
2×5×53 Posts |
And so residue 6 mod 7 cannot occur?
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