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Science

SB Project Announces 4th-Largest Known Prime 39

alien88 writes "The Seventeen or Bust project announced today that they have discovered the fourth largest prime on record. The prime is 1,521,561 digits long and is their sixth discovery since the start of the project. They now have 11 multipliers left to prove that k = 78,557 is the smallest Sierpinski number. Randy Sundquist of Team ExtremeDC's computer discovered the number on December 6th."
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SB Project Announces 4th-Largest Known Prime

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  • by kurosawdust ( 654754 ) on Monday December 15, 2003 @10:03PM (#7730829)
    In a related story, the BCS rankings for prime numbers were also released, with "2" garnering the top spot. Consequently, a lot of journalists got pissed off.
  • by Eevee ( 535658 ) on Monday December 15, 2003 @10:35PM (#7731038)

    Does k have to be odd?

    The page for Sierpinski numbers uses both k and (2k - 1). But the page on Riesel numbers seems to say k needs to be odd.

    What's so neat about Sierpinski numbers?

    Is there a real-life use for numbers that are excessively composite?

    And, finally....

    What's a Sierpinski number of the first kind?

    • by alien88 ( 218348 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2003 @12:15AM (#7731717)
      Chris Caldwell's page pretty much answers your questions concerning Sierpinski numbers and Risel numbers.

      http://primes.utm.edu/glossary/page.php?sort=Sie rp inskiNumber

      http://primes.utm.edu/glossary/page.php?sort=Rie se lNumber

    • Well.. say k not odd. Then k = 2m for some m.
      Then we'd have:

      k(2^n) + 1 = (2m)(2^n) + 1

      which turns into m(2^(n+1)) + 1

      So, then you ask.. what is m ?

      Either you get, (2^(n+r)) if k simply equaled 2^r .. which then gives rise to something that I'm too hungover to recall (probably says that it will eventually spit out a prime ie (2^n) + 1 is prime for some n..

      OR

      you'd eventually terminate at some odd number. The main point is: for all n = 2k , n = (2^r)m for some r > 0 and some odd m > 0

      p
  • It seems as if this test can only prove that a number is not a Sierpinsky number by showing it forms a prime number at some 'n'. But since n has no bounds you can never really prove that a number is a sierpinsky number.
    • Re:Proof (Score:4, Informative)

      by alien88 ( 218348 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2003 @12:20AM (#7731757)
      It is believed that 78557 is the smallest Sierpinski number, and that is what we are trying to prove. There were 17 values, when this project started, that a prime had not been found in. We are working on finding a prime in these values (11 remaining) which will then prove that 78557 is, indeed, the smallest Sierpinski number. See Chris Caldwell's page [utm.edu] for more information.
      • Ok, I am "American", (well, Taiwanese, Russian, and Jewish), and finished Calculus A/B in high school. I have not had to do much advanced math at all, but cannot for the life of me figure out what the use of finding the smallest Sierpinski number is. Real or imaginary. Can I come up with some arbitrary equation and then put my name on it so it sits in the annals of math history for all time? Or does the equation have to have something = 1 somewhere?

        Not trying to be sarcastic, but I have seen tons of "m
        • Re:Proof (Score:3, Insightful)

          by sasami ( 158671 )
          Not trying to be sarcastic, but I have seen tons of "math theorems" and I guess I am not geeky enough to understand the point.

          There's no need to have a point because the assumption is that someone will eventually find a use for it. In mathematics, physics, and all sorts of other disciplines, you don't look at your discovery and say "This would be great for X!" You publish it, forget about it, and then someone else years later has a problem to solve and does a literature search.

          In the mid-1800s some poo
        • To be honest, there really isnt much of a point besides saying "Hey, we proved it."

          The project idea actually came out of a book of a bunch of math theorms that havent been proved yet..
    • Re:Proof (Score:4, Informative)

      by You're All Wrong ( 573825 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2003 @01:14AM (#7732033)
      You can construct an infinite number of provable sierpinski numbers through finding what are called "covering sets". These are sets of factors that repeat in the sequence k*2^n+1, with fixed k, and variable n.
      e.g. as long as k is not divisible by 3, then half of the values k*2^n+1 will be divisible by 3. For some k it will be the even n's, for other k it will be the odd n's. Either way, you've already covered half the possibilities with a known factor. Fill in 1/4 of the values by ensuring that 5 divides half of the ones not divisible by 3, hey presto - only 1/4 now remain. 17 can remove 1/8, leaving 1/8. 65537 can remove 1/16, leaving 1/16. Between them, 241, 97 and 673 can remove 1/16 (as they can each remove 1/48). That's it - there's your covering set {3,5,17,65537,241,97,673}.
      Finding which k values actually use this covering set is an exercise in using the Chinese Remainder Theorem.
      (note - may be errors in the above, I did it off the top of my head, but looks right.)

      If you can't find a covering set, and for the remaining 11 numbers that looks most likely, then you're right, you can't know for sure that there is no prime.

      YAW.

      • ...may be errors in the above...

        If you can't find a covering set, and for the remaining 11 numbers that looks most likely, then you're right, you can't know for sure that there is no prime.

        There may be errors in the below too! You're assuming that there is no proof strategy alternative to covering sets. Maybe no one has thought of an alternative because covering sets have thus far shown the most promise?
        • Maybe, maybe not, depending on whether you admit the concept of infinite covering sets. Any other proof strategy of which you speak could quite probably be reworked just an infinite covering set. (As if it were constructive, for example, it would lead /immediately/ to an (infinite number of) infinite covering set(s).)

          Not everyone espouses infinite covering sets as a possibility, so if you don't you're certainly not on your own.

          My personal view is that pretty much everything to do with prime densities that
    • But since n has no bounds you can never really prove that a number is a sierpinsky number.
      If that were a valid form of argument then you'd never really know if 2n>n for all integers n>0 because n is unbounded. The fact that a value in a proposition is unbounded doesn't prevent something being proved for all such values.
  • by Chuq ( 8564 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2003 @01:47AM (#7732203) Journal
    Does anyone else think www.seventeenorbust.com sounds like a porn site?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 16, 2003 @04:16AM (#7732753)
    Wow! I'm surprised ... coming on the heels of GIMPS 6+ million digit prime. At 1.5+ million digits, it's not only the world's 4th largest known prime, but is the FIRST known prime with more than 1 million digits that's not a Mersenne prime (not of the form 2^p-1)! This is important because the primality of this form, k*2^n+1, (while still allowing some optimizations) is much harder to check than the Mersennes and their close cousins, the Generalized Fermats, who together occupy the other 7 positions in the top 8 largest known primes!

    Greg
  • ... how many prime numbers left and we discover the secrets of life?
  • Largest Prime (Score:5, Informative)

    by Bloodmoon1 ( 604793 ) <be@hyperion.gmail@com> on Tuesday December 16, 2003 @05:26AM (#7732963) Homepage Journal
    And, for those curious, the largest prime curently known is the 40th Mersenne Prime [mersenne.org] 2 to the 20,996,011 -1, which is 6,320,430 decimal digits in length. If you're wondering what that looks like, and don't mind downloading 6.3 MB, wonder no more [mersenne.org].
  • by BallPeenHammer ( 720987 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2003 @09:03AM (#7733565)
    From http://www.prothsearch.net/sierp.html [prothsearch.net]

    "The Sierpinski Problem: Definition and Status In 1960 Waclaw Sierpinski (1882-1969) proved the following interesting result.

    Theorem [S]. There exist infinitely many odd integers k such that k*2n + 1 is composite for every n > 1.

    A multiplier k with this property is called a Sierpinski number. The Sierpinski problem consists in determining the smallest Sierpinski number. In 1962, John Selfridge discovered the Sierpinski number k = 78557, which is now believed to be in fact the smallest such number.

    Conjecture. The integer k = 78557 is the smallest Sierpinski number.

    To prove the conjecture, it suffices to exhibit a prime k*2n + 1 for each k less than 78557. By August 1997, this had been done for all except the following 21 values of k less than 78557. As long as a prime is not found for a listed k, that k might be considered a potential Sierpinski number. However, as the conjecture suggests, in the long run a prime is expected to emerge for each of these k."

    So, what these folks have done is found a prime for another candidate k less than 78557.

    I find the search for primes -- and for more complicated results, like this one, that use primes -- to be fascinating. There is something so pure about this world of mathematics. (As Kronecker is quoted as saying, "God made the integers; all else is the work of Man.") This kind of study says something very deep about the nature of the universe we live in.

    If there are other intelligent beings in the universe, it is fascinating to contemplate that -- no matter what other differences we may have -- they may be finding out these same facts about pure mathematics. It's a language we have in common.

  • I've always thought it is unfair that only odd numbers can be prime. Why not define a number to be prime if its only possible divisors are pm 1, pm itelf, OR possibly pm 2. That way we would have a much richer collection of numbers to consider as prime.
  • but, why do we bother with the search for ever larger prime numbers? Is there any actual point to knowing that 2^20+million-1 is a prime number 6.3 million digits long? I'm genuinely curious about this. I'm an academic, and some of my colleagues do research that seems completely unconnected from any utility whatsoever, so I am familiar with that practice. I'm just wondering if that's what is going on here, or if there is some deeper utility to this, like maybe helping develop the perfect recipe for chocola
    • Usefulness? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by tqft ( 619476 )
      Maybe not immediately.

      However read some of the above stuff & links about the type of number.

      Possible practical application:
      In the fields of cyrptography/encryption - it is not beyond the realms of imagination to want to have a number which is known to be factorable, not necessarily having the factors, but very large. 78557*2^<huge number> + 1 would then be very handy. There is also a search on somewhere for more of these numbers.

      Less obvious:
      Symmetries, algebraic topology stuff. While I know
  • A press release and a decimal expansion of the number are coming soon.
    ...the 1,521,561-digit prime...
    53592^5054502+1

    For Unix (and Linux) users, the bc script:
    5359 * (2 ^ 5054502) + 1
    produces the decimal expansion in about 5 minutes on a PIII/800. As bc works, it's resident set size increases, reaching a maximum of about 6.6 MB of RAM. So, a 386 with 8 MB RAM running Linux could easily compute this result in 2 to 3 hours.

    One could publish the number easily enough. A bzip2 compressed verion is

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