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#1 |
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Jun 2015
Vallejo, CA/.
2×7×71 Posts |
The largest generalized repunit has been proven prime.
(3877843 - 1)/2 This number has 418838 digits and it dwarfs the second largest generalized prime repunit which has only 95202 digits. (717624691 - 1)/7175 It is also the most "elegant" generalized proven prime repunit with the probable exception of mersenne numbers. As far as I know there are no Prime Generalized Repunits of base 3 in the Chris Caldwell list except (34177 - 1)/2 On base 10 there is (101031-1)/9 On base 6 there is (66883 - 1)/5 On base 7 there is (71699 - 1)/6 This are the only primes Generalized repunits published on the Chris Caldwell page (with 2<bases<11) but I suspect that at least (336913-1) 2 with 17612 digits has to be a proven prime. There are also other base 3 numbers that could be proven primes (343063-1)/2 (349681-1)/2 (357917-1/2 (3483611-1)/2 |
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#2 |
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Sep 2002
Database er0rr
72338 Posts |
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#3 |
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May 2004
FRANCE
10010001002 Posts |
Hi,
jpenne@crazycomp:~$ llr64 -a10 -d grepunit.txt Starting probable prime test of (3^877843-1)/2 Using FMA3 FFT length 72K, Pass1=384, Pass2=192, a = 3 (3^877843-1)/2 is base 3-Fermat PRP! (418838 decimal digits) Time : 600.917 sec. Starting Lucas sequence Using FMA3 FFT length 72K, Pass1=384, Pass2=192, P = 4, Q = 2 (3^877843-1)/2 is Fermat and Lucas PRP, Starting Frobenius test sequence Using FMA3 FFT length 72K, Pass1=384, Pass2=192, Q = 2 (3^877843-1)/2 is Fermat, Lucas and Frobenius PRP! (P = 4, Q = 2, D = 8) Time : 3000.669 sec. jpenne@crazycomp:~$ llr64 -a10 -d -oBPSW=1 grepunit.txt Starting probable prime test of (3^877843-1)/2 Using FMA3 FFT length 72K, Pass1=384, Pass2=192, a = 2 (3^877843-1)/2 is base 2-Fermat PRP! (418838 decimal digits) Time : 631.337 sec. Starting Lucas sequence Using FMA3 FFT length 72K, Pass1=384, Pass2=192, P = 1, Q = 4 (3^877843-1)/2 is Fermat and BPSW PRP, Starting Frobenius test sequence Using FMA3 FFT length 72K, Pass1=384, Pass2=192, Q = 4 (3^877843-1)/2 is Fermat, BPSW and Frobenius PRP! (P = 1, Q = 4, D = -15) Time : 2923.518 sec. jpenne@crazycomp:~$ Indeed, this number is likely to be prime, but the very proof seems not to be known for now... Regards, Jean |
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#4 | |
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Jun 2015
Vallejo, CA/.
11111000102 Posts |
This is what Chris Caldwell'slist of primes says.
Quote:
So there is some inconsistency there. |
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#5 | |
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Sep 2002
Database er0rr
3,739 Posts |
Quote:
![]() Incidentally, Paul Bourdelais found this PRP in 2010, long before Jinyuan Wang's recent claim. |
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#6 |
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Sep 2003
A1916 Posts |
The Repunit article on Wikipedia has sections on repunit probable-primes of various bases.
It provides helpful links to OEIS sequences. For exponents of base 3 repunit probable primes, this is A028491. EDIT: wait a minute. The A028491 page states "a(18) has been proved prime by Jinyuan Wang". Didn't someone at OEIS check that before allowing it to be added?? Is there an article somewhere about the proof. Jinyuan Wang's profile page on OEIS says "I am a fan of mathematics and astronomy. I believe that mathematical discoveries do not necessarily be made by mathematicians, amateurs can also contribute to mathematics". That does not exactly inspire confidence. It is old news that 877843 is a base-3-repunit probable prime exponent. See for instance the Lifchitz page for PRPs of this form. If you're claiming that this has been certified prime, rather than merely probable prime... either you're a time traveler from the future, or you've discovered some deterministic algorithm similar to Lucas-Lehmer but applicable to arbitrary bases.
Last fiddled with by GP2 on 2018-09-08 at 17:09 |
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#7 | ||
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Jun 2015
Vallejo, CA/.
3E216 Posts |
Quote:
Quote:
Last fiddled with by rudy235 on 2018-09-08 at 21:15 |
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#8 | |
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Sep 2003
A1916 Posts |
Quote:
If a proof is claimed, the prover should have provided a primality certificate of some kind. There is no link to any certificate. For inclusion in the sequence A028491, it's good enough that it's PRP to a sufficient number of bases. The real problem is at the bottom of that page, where it says "a(18) has been proved prime by Jinyuan Wang, Sep 07 2018". That is an unsubstantiated claim. That shouldn't have made it into the page. Barring any unexpected mathematical breakthroughs, this exponent is far too large for primality proving. Such breakthroughs rarely come from self-proclaimed amateur non-mathematicians. It is perfectly reasonable to express skepticism. Last fiddled with by GP2 on 2018-09-08 at 23:21 |
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#9 | |
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Jun 2015
Vallejo, CA/.
11111000102 Posts |
Quote:
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#10 |
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Sep 2002
Database er0rr
3,739 Posts |
The PRP has been removed from the top5000 primes. Jinyuan must learn to know the difference between 100% sure and (100-1/10^10^10^10^10)% sure
The database's GRU top20 table has been restored.
Last fiddled with by paulunderwood on 2018-09-09 at 13:46 |
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#11 |
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Jun 2015
Vallejo, CA/.
2×7×71 Posts |
Yes. This ends the issue. The OEIS sequence annotation will also be restored and the number a(18) will be a considered a PRP.
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