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| View Poll Results: The next exponent after n=333333 will be... | |||
| under n=400K |
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2 | 8.70% |
| between n=400K and 460K |
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4 | 17.39% |
| between n=460K and 520K |
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12 | 52.17% |
| between n=520K and 580K |
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1 | 4.35% |
| above n=580K |
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4 | 17.39% |
| Voters: 23. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#23 |
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Dec 2006
Anchorage, Alaska
2×3×13 Posts |
I'd like to change my vote to 460-520.
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#24 |
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Nov 2006
Earth
26 Posts |
As for where the twin and single primes will be in the Top 5000 list (as of 29 Jan 07):
Code:
n= 333,333 Rank in list 3003 n= 400,000 Rank in list 1415 n= 500,000 Rank in list 820 n= 666,666 Rank in list 386 n= 750,000 Rank in list 257 n= 1,000,000 Rank in list 150 n= 1,500,000 Rank in list 54 n= 2,000,000 Rank in list 32 n= 3,000,000 Rank in list 13 n= 5,000,000 Rank in list 11 n=10,000,000 Rank in list 7 n=25,000,000 Rank in list 4 n=33,000,000 Rank in list 1 A proposed roadmap: Code:
Goal : Digits : n : Remarks : ------- --------- ---------- --------- 1 58,710 195,000 2 100,000 332,190 3 175,258 582,192 > 500,000 exponent* 4 200,000 664,383 5 400,515 1,330,480 >1,000,000 exponent* 6 500,000 1,660,961 7 801,030 2,660,962 >2,000,000 exponent* 8 1,000,000 3,321,925 9 3,252,575 10,804,819 >5,000,000 exponent* 10 5,000,000 16,609,638 Benchmark Computer: P4 3.6 GHz (from benchmark page) Sieving information: How long will it take to sieve? The sieving speed does not depend on the size of the range. Nevertheless, the size of the array is limited by the memory. The increasing size could make it difficult to merge over the web. This list shows the sieving time (sieving speed 100 Million/ second) and the number of twin candidates per G. Code:
bits | candidates | sieving time 40 545700 3 hours 45 431170 3.7 days 50 349248 3.8 months 55 288634 10 years 60 242533 320 years 65 206655 10 K years 70 178187 330 K years 75 155221 10 million years 80 136425 320 million years 85 120847 10 billion years Code:
n=172500 FFT size: 16K Time 1 test: 51.75 s Optimal sieve bits: 51 Tests per twin: 3.73M Twin every G: 10.69 90% chance after G: 24.6 CPU years per twin: 5.9 n=195000 FFT size: 20K Time 1 test: 72.15 s Optimal sieve bits: 52 Tests per twin: 4.41M Twin every G: 13.6 90% chance after G: 31.4 CPU years per twin: 10.1 n=250000 FFT size: 24K Time 1 test: 115 s Optimal sieve bits: 53 Tests per twin: 7M Twin every G: 22.45 90% chance after G: 51.7 CPU years per twin: 25.4 n=333333 FFT size: 32K Time 1 test: 200 s Optimal sieve bits: 55 Tests per twin: 11.5M Twin every G: 39.9 90% chance after G: 91.9 CPU years per twin: 73 n=500000 FFT size: 48K Time 1 test: 500 s Optimal sieve bits: 57.5 Tests per twin: 23.7M Twin every G: 90 90% chance after G: 207 CPU years per twin: 376 n=1000000 FFT size: 112K Time 1 test: 2800 s Optimal sieve bits: 62 Tests per twin: 82M Twin every G: 359 90% chance after G: 827 CPU years per twin: 7243 n=3330000 FFT size: 384K Time 1 test: 30303 Optimal sieve bits: 69 Tests per twin: 730M Twin every G: 3983 90% chance after G: 9170 CPU years per twin: 702000 n=33300000 FFT size: 3584K Time 1 test: 3506490 Optimal sieve bits: 82 Tests per twin: 51.7G Twin every G: 398300 90% chance after G: 917000 CPU years per twin: 5750 M - Optimal sieving goes deeper than expected. - Sieving 1Mdigit twins requires 32G Ram (At the beginning more) - Time complexity: 10 times more digits requires more than 10000 times more processing time. - Sieving memory complexity: 10 times more digits requires 100 times more space. Last fiddled with by jmblazek on 2007-01-29 at 06:31 |
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#25 |
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"Michael Kwok"
Mar 2006
1,181 Posts |
The poll has closed, and the n after n=333,333 will be n=500,000.
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