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Sierpiński number

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In number theory, a Sierpiński number is an odd natural number k such that is composite for all natural numbers n. In 1960, Wacław Sierpiński proved that there are infinitely many odd integers k which have this property.

In other words, when k is a Sierpiński number, all members of the following set are composite:

If the form is instead , then k is a Riesel number.

Known Sierpiński numbers

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The sequence of currently known Sierpiński numbers begins with:

78557, 271129, 271577, 322523, 327739, 482719, 575041, 603713, 903983, 934909, 965431, 1259779, 1290677, 1518781, 1624097, 1639459, 1777613, 2131043, 2131099, 2191531, 2510177, 2541601, 2576089, 2931767, 2931991, ... (sequence A076336 in the OEIS).

The number 78557 was proved to be a Sierpiński number by John Selfridge in 1962, who showed that all numbers of the form 78557⋅2n + 1 have a factor in the covering set {3, 5, 7, 13, 19, 37, 73}. For another known Sierpiński number, 271129, the covering set is {3, 5, 7, 13, 17, 241}. Most currently known Sierpiński numbers possess similar covering sets.[1]

However, in 1995 A. S. Izotov showed that some fourth powers could be proved to be Sierpiński numbers without establishing a covering set for all values of n. His proof depends on the aurifeuillean factorization t4⋅24m+2 + 1 = (t2⋅22m+1 + t⋅2m+1 + 1)⋅(t2⋅22m+1t⋅2m+1 + 1). This establishes that all n ≡ 2 (mod 4) give rise to a composite, and so it remains to eliminate only n ≡ 0, 1, 3 (mod 4) using a covering set.[2]

Sierpiński problem

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Unsolved problem in mathematics:
Is 78,557 the smallest Sierpiński number?

The Sierpiński problem asks for the value of the smallest Sierpiński number. In private correspondence with Paul Erdős, Selfridge conjectured that 78,557 was the smallest Sierpiński number.[3] No smaller Sierpiński numbers have been discovered, and it is now believed that 78,557 is the smallest number.[4]

To show that 78,557 really is the smallest Sierpiński number, one must show that all the odd numbers smaller than 78,557 are not Sierpiński numbers. That is, for every odd k below 78,557, there needs to exist a positive integer n such that k2n + 1 is prime.[1]

k = 21181, 22699, 24737, 55459, and 67607.

The distributed volunteer computing project PrimeGrid is attempting to eliminate all the remaining values of k.[5]

Prime Sierpiński problem

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Unsolved problem in mathematics:
Is 271,129 the smallest prime Sierpiński number?

In 1976, Nathan Mendelsohn determined that the second provable Sierpiński number is the prime k = 271129. The prime Sierpiński problem asks for the value of the smallest prime Sierpiński number, and there is an ongoing "Prime Sierpiński search" which tries to prove that 271129 is the first Sierpiński number which is also a prime.[6]

Extended Sierpiński problem

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Unsolved problem in mathematics:
Is 271,129 the second Sierpiński number?

Suppose that both preceding Sierpiński problems had finally been solved, showing that 78557 is the smallest Sierpiński number and that 271129 is the smallest prime Sierpiński number. This still leaves unsolved the question of the second Sierpinski number; there could exist a composite Sierpiński number k such that . An ongoing search is trying to prove that 271129 is the second Sierpiński number, by testing all k values between 78557 and 271129, prime or not.[7]

Simultaneously Sierpiński and Riesel

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A number may be simultaneously Sierpiński and Riesel. These are called Brier numbers. The smallest five known examples are 3316923598096294713661, 10439679896374780276373, 11615103277955704975673, 12607110588854501953787, 17855036657007596110949, ... (A076335).[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Sierpinski number at The Prime Glossary
  2. ^ Anatoly S. Izotov (1995). "Note on Sierpinski Numbers" (PDF). Fibonacci Quarterly. 33 (3): 206.
  3. ^ Erdős, Paul; Odlyzko, Andrew Michael (May 1, 1979). "On the density of odd integers of the form (p − 1)2n and related questions". Journal of Number Theory. 11 (2). Elsevier: 258. doi:10.1016/0022-314X(79)90043-X. ISSN 0022-314X.
  4. ^ Guy, Richard Kenneth (2005). Unsolved Problems in Number Theory. New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. B21:119–121, F13:383–385. ISBN 978-0-387-20860-2. OCLC 634701581.
  5. ^ "Seventeen or Bust statistics". PrimeGrid. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  6. ^ Goetz, Michael (July 10, 2008). "About the Prime Sierpinski Problem". PrimeGrid. Retrieved September 12, 2019.
  7. ^ Goetz, Michael (6 April 2018). "Welcome to the Extended Sierpinski Problem". PrimeGrid. Retrieved 21 August 2019.
  8. ^ Problem 29.- Brier Numbers

Further reading

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