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#1 |
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Feb 2012
Prague, Czech Republ
2·101 Posts |
In particular, the two prime factors ones, like \(M_{11}, M_{23}\).
Are there finitely many? Infinitely many? We don't know, but we expect some heuristics, like proportional to \(p^r\), for some \(r\)? Is anything else interesting to note about them? |
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#3 |
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"Forget I exist"
Jul 2009
Dartmouth NS
204158 Posts |
If \((2kp+1)(2jp+1)=2(2jkp+k+j)p+1\) then \(2jkp+k+j\) must not be expressible in the same form for different variable values. That's all I state.
Last fiddled with by science_man_88 on 2023-04-26 at 13:38 |
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#4 |
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Dec 2022
3×132 Posts |
The thing is, science_man_88, that as in the other thread your math is correct, but utterly trivial. Presenting it as though it were a real insight seems bizarre.
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#5 |
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"Bob Silverman"
Nov 2003
North of Boston
166158 Posts |
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#6 |
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"Catherine"
Mar 2023
Melbourne
5×11 Posts |
According to mersenne.ca/prp.php, there are currently known to be 89 fully-factored Mersenne numbers with two and only two non-trivial factors; here are their exponents: {11,23,37,41,59,67,83,97,101,103, 109,131,137,139,149,167,197,199,227,241, 269,271,281,293,347,373,379,421,457,487, 523,727,809,881,971,983,997,1061,1063,1427, 1487,1637,1657,2357,2927,3079,3259,3359,4111,4243, 4729,5689,6043,6679,7331,7757,10169,14561,17029,26903, 28759,28771,58199,63703,86371,106391,130439,136883,151013,173867, 221509,245107,271211,271549,406583,432457,611999,684127,1010623,1168183, 1304983,1629469,2327417,3464473,4187251,5240707,7313983,10443557,12588091}
In terms of heuristics about their rarity, the range occupied by the 89 2-factor composites contains the first 38 Mersenne primes, so they might be more plentiful than their prime siblings over a larger range. (The wavefront for PRP testing cofactors of partially-factored Mersennes is considerably behind the waves for first-time primality tests and double checks, as testing is almost as expensive as the first-time primality test for the same exponent.) Last fiddled with by cxc on 2023-04-28 at 03:18 Reason: Breaking up exponent list into tens |
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#7 |
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"TF79LL86GIMPS96gpu17"
Mar 2017
US midwest
782310 Posts |
12558091 is composite.
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#9 | |
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"Bob Silverman"
Nov 2003
North of Boston
5×17×89 Posts |
Quote:
Merely presenting data is not mathematics. I will offer a hint: See Hardy & Wright's derivation for the distribution of p2's. There is a very strong reason why we expect p2 Mersenne's to be more plentiful than the primes themselves. Perhaps you might like to investigate and get back to us? |
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#10 | |
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Apr 2020
3×353 Posts |
Quote:
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#11 |
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"Bob Silverman"
Nov 2003
North of Boston
11101100011012 Posts |
Thank you.
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