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An illegal prime is an illegal number which is also prime.One of the earliest illegal prime numbers was generated in March 2001 by Phil Carmody.Its binary representation corresponds to a compressed version of the C source code of a computer program implementing the DeCSS decryption algorithm, which can be used by a computer to circumvent a DVD's copy protection.
This is a list of articles about prime numbers. A prime number (or prime) is a natural number greater than 1 that has no positive divisors other than 1 and itself. By Euclid's theorem, there are an infinite number of prime numbers. Subsets of the prime numbers may be generated with various formulas for primes.
An emirp (an anadrome of prime) is a prime number that results in a different prime when its decimal digits are reversed. [1] This definition excludes the related palindromic primes . The term reversible prime is used to mean the same as emirp, but may also, ambiguously, include the palindromic primes.
The table below lists the largest currently known prime numbers and probable primes (PRPs) as tracked by the PrimePages and by Henri & Renaud Lifchitz's PRP Records. Numbers with more than 2,000,000 digits are shown.
The following table lists the progression of the largest known prime number in ascending order. [3] Here M p = 2 p − 1 is the Mersenne number with exponent p, where p is a prime number. The longest record-holder known was M 19 = 524,287, which was the largest known prime for 144 years. No records are known prior to 1456.
Pseudoprimes are of primary importance in public-key cryptography, which makes use of the difficulty of factoring large numbers into their prime factors. Carl Pomerance estimated in 1988 that it would cost $10 million to factor a number with 144 digits, and $100 billion to factor a 200-digit number (the cost today is dramatically lower but ...
In number theory, Bertrand's postulate is the theorem that for any integer >, there exists at least one prime number with n < p < 2 n − 2. {\displaystyle n<p<2n-2.} A less restrictive formulation is: for every n > 1 {\displaystyle n>1} , there is always at least one prime p {\displaystyle p} such that
An odd prime number p is defined to be regular if it does not divide the class number of the pth cyclotomic field Q(ζ p), where ζ p is a primitive pth root of unity. The prime number 2 is often considered regular as well. The class number of the cyclotomic field is the number of ideals of the ring of integers Z(ζ p) up to equivalence.