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#386 |
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Aug 2006
3×1,993 Posts |
Ding ding ding! kar_bon wins the prize. In this case I calculated it as N=(2^109+1)/3/104124649 and checked it with a quick GP script that finds the appropriate residue classes mod 8p. The running time was about 10 minutes on a slow computer.
My current project, 7984559573504259856359124657, is similar. |
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#387 |
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Aug 2006
3×1,993 Posts |
Indeed, demonstrating this was my purpose.
Honestly, even aside from what Pi calls "trickery" (and I call "using math"), I'd love to see a good definition of general here that works, um, in general. |
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#388 |
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Mar 2006
Germany
22·727 Posts |
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#389 | |
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May 2010
Prime hunting commission.
110100100002 Posts |
Quote:
Arguably, if you tried this trick, every prime would be a special-form number. Next! Last fiddled with by 3.14159 on 2010-09-07 at 19:44 |
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#390 | |
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Mar 2006
Germany
290810 Posts |
Quote:
CRG gave the test he done to determine and it was not pure trial devision (test all primes from 3 to sqrt(N))! And this prime has a special form, too! If you declare this as 'general' why excluding Mersennes then? Last fiddled with by kar_bon on 2010-09-07 at 19:47 |
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#391 |
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"Forget I exist"
Jul 2009
Dumbassville
26·131 Posts |
are you saying we have to give you numbers of the general form of the ones on the list ? = general number ? I'm too confused to use logic anymore.
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#392 |
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Aug 2006
3·1,993 Posts |
There's no way either of my numbers should count, in this context, as general numbers. The first one is 16 times easier to test than numbers of a comparable size; the second one is 19 times easier.
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#393 | |
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May 2010
Prime hunting commission.
32208 Posts |
Quote:
835287624561584641455555490282511. Here are 15 more examples: 348487007766634158834636277 46560109657576346735092487 277045504717467997710674401 216353885495012554061838517 632417547715984582289542201 624143746064634996383204353 90337507053320000006494187 54641588316034625817275383 157930264101508085911914083 737009482404243882804250081 601816399408713215418216769 833980612206480789317355653 167460761731424310078485189 547615446859522251920656277 820438575567154351773751057 Last fiddled with by 3.14159 on 2010-09-07 at 20:35 |
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#394 |
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Aug 2006
3×1,993 Posts |
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#395 |
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Aug 2006
10111010110112 Posts |
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#396 | |
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May 2010
Prime hunting commission.
168010 Posts |
See here. There is nothing special about 835287624561584641455555490282511.
Quote:
As I was saying: The only property I would consider "special" of 835287624561584641455555490282511 is that 835287624561584641455555490282510! + 1 is divisible by 835287624561584641455555490282511. Last fiddled with by 3.14159 on 2010-09-07 at 20:43 |
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