Skip to main content

All Questions

Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
2 votes
0 answers
157 views

Conjecture: $x^4+1$ is never Wieferich prime

Related to this question and Alexander Kalmynin's answer. For natural $n$ define $J(n)=(2^{n-1}-1) \bmod n^2$ and if $n$ is power of two define $J(2^n)=1$ (this is artificial, just to avoid triviality ...
joro's user avatar
  • 25.4k
3 votes
1 answer
401 views

Probability of finding a prime number between $x-\ln(x)$ and $x+\ln(x)$

Using my computer, I found that in the interval $[1, N]$ the probability of finding a prime number between $x-\ln(x)$ and $x+\ln(x)$ is greater than constant $c$ where $N=10^2, 10^3,...,10^{9}$, $x$ ...
Đào Thanh Oai's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
124 views

Could I possibly exploit distinct odd primes raised to 6 to solve Exact Three Cover, when reducing it in Subset Sum?

I'm solving Exact 3 Cover, given a list with no duplicates $S$ of $3m$ whole numbers and a collection $C$ of subsets of $S$, each containing exactly three elements. The goal is to decide if there are $...
The T's user avatar
  • 101
1 vote
1 answer
325 views

Goldbach conjecture reformulation [closed]

As thought, the question below is a reformulation of the goldbach conjecture. $ S = \{K - ap \mid a \geq 3, p \text{ is prime} < K/2 \} $, where $ a $ is an odd integer greater than or equal to 3, ...
Felix Fowler's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
190 views

Infinitely many $k \in \mathbb{N}$ such that the closed interval $[k, k+99]$ contains from $2$ to $23$ prime numbers

Let $k \in \mathbb{Z}^+$. Is it possible to prove that, for some given $m \in \{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23\}$, there are only finitely many $k$ such that the closed ...
Marco Ripà's user avatar
  • 1,451
0 votes
0 answers
110 views

What will be the set of non-Wieferich numbers if the set of non-Wieferich primes is finite?

Integer $n$ is Wieferich number if $2^{\phi(n)}-1 \equiv 0 \pmod {n^2}$. Wieferich prime is Wieferich number with $n$ prime. It is an open problem if there are infinitely many Wieferich primes and ...
joro's user avatar
  • 25.4k
1 vote
0 answers
243 views

Is there a known connection between Wieferich primes and the Goormaghtigh conjecture?

I posted this question on SE, and was told I should repost it here. The Goormaghtigh conjecture explores the Diophantine equation of the form $$ \frac{a^b-1}{a-1}=\frac{c^d-1}{c-1}, $$ where $a>c&...
Clyde Kertzer's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
2k views

What is the importance of Polignac’s conjecture?

The twin-prime conjecture (also known as Polignac’s conjecture, 1846) states that there are infinitely many twin primes (pairs of primes that differ by 2; for example, 3 and 5, 5 and 7, 11 and 13, and ...
mahdi meisami's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
804 views

Must Mersenne numbers be divisible by arbitrary large primes with exponent one?

Let $M_n$ denote the Mersenne numbers $M_n=2^n-1$. As $n$ varies, must $M_n$ be divisible by arbitrary large prime $p$ with exponent one, i.e. $p \mid M_n, p^2 \nmid M_n$? In other words, must the ...
joro's user avatar
  • 25.4k
14 votes
1 answer
1k views

Normal numbers, Liouville function, and the Riemann Hypothesis

This is a question about whether or not some number $\lambda^*$ is normal in base 2. More specifically, I am wondering if $\lambda^*$ is not normal. Proving it is normal would be next to impossible, ...
Vincent Granville's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
622 views

Ruth-Aaron triples, etc

A Ruth-Aaron pair is two numbers $(n,n+1)$ such that their sum of prime factors is equal, counting repeated prime factors. (The name refers to Hank Aaron's 715 homeruns surpassing Babe Ruth's 714!) So ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
10 votes
1 answer
2k views

What keeps asymptotic Goldbach's conjecture out of reach of current technology?

Despite the rather recent progress in prime number theory (see the proof of the ternary Goldbach conjecture by H.A. Helfgott, and the striking result of Yitang Zhang improved by Tao, Maynard and ...
Sylvain JULIEN's user avatar
19 votes
2 answers
1k views

Floors of rationals to powers: Infinite number of primes?

Let $r=a/b$ be a rational number in lowest terms, larger than $1$, and not an integer (so $b > 1$). Q. Does the sequence $$ \lfloor r \rfloor, \lfloor r^2 \rfloor, \lfloor r^3 \rfloor, \...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
2 votes
4 answers
1k views

Product of exponents of prime factorization

Let $p(n)$ be the product of the exponents of the prime factorization of $n$. For example, $$p(5184) = p(2^6 3^4) = 24 \;,$$ $$p(65536) = p(2^{16}) = 16 \;.$$ Define $P(n)$ as the number of iterations ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
12 votes
1 answer
626 views

A conjecture by Euler about $8n+3$

Euler's conjecture: For any positive integer $n$, $8n+3$ can be represented as a sum $$8n+3=(2k-1)^2+2p,$$ where $k$ is a positive integer, and $p$ is a prime. I want to know whether there has been ...
Ziang Chen's user avatar
11 votes
2 answers
2k views

Distinctive property of the primes 17 and 19?

Consider the question whether it is true that a prime number $p$ divides $1^1+2^2+3^3+....+(p-1)^{p-1}$ if and only if $p \in \{17,19\}$. For the obvious heuristic reasons, for large $n$ one would ...
Mihir Sheth's user avatar
27 votes
1 answer
2k views

The quaternion moat problem

"One cannot walk to infinity on the real line if one uses steps of bounded length and steps on the prime numbers. This is simply a restatement of the classic result that there are arbitrarily ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
667 views

Are there an infinite number of prime Euclid numbers?

A number defined as the product of first $n$ prime numbers $+1$ is called $n$th Euclid number. Are there any survey on the progress for answering the following question: are there an infinite number ...
Oleksandr Bondarenko's user avatar
12 votes
2 answers
2k views

Detecting almost-primes quickly

There are many fast algorithms (deterministic and probabilistic) for detecting primality. Are there any fast algorithms (probabilistic ones allowed) known for detecting whether a number is the product ...
H A Helfgott's user avatar
  • 20.2k
22 votes
1 answer
2k views

Are all primes in a PAP-3?

Van der Corput [1] proved that there are infinitely many arithmetic progressions of primes of length 3 (PAP-3). (Green & Tao [2] famously extended this theorem to length $k$.) But taking this in ...
Charles's user avatar
  • 9,114
25 votes
7 answers
3k views

Question on consecutive integers with similar prime factorizations

Suppose that $n=\prod_{i=1}^{k} p_i^{e_i}$ and $m=\prod_{i=1}^{l} q_i^{f_i}$ are prime factorizations of two positive integers $n$ and $m$, with the primes permuted so that $e_1 \le e_2 \cdots \le e_k$...
David Corwin's user avatar
  • 15.4k
13 votes
2 answers
3k views

Does listing the prime factors always stop?

Take a natural number's prime factors and list them increasingly and repeating them according to multiplicity. Concatenate their decimal (or in any base) representation to get a new number and repeat ...
O.R.'s user avatar
  • 807
14 votes
2 answers
1k views

Prime divisors of numbers 2^n + 3

I'm interested in the following problem: do there exist infinitely many prime numbers $p$ such that $p^2|2^{n}+3$ for some natural number $n$? Some motivation: If we replace the function $2^n + 3$ ...
user3645's user avatar
  • 191
10 votes
1 answer
1k views

Linear equation with primes

Is there an integer $n$ with an infinite number of representations of the form $n=2q-p$, where $p$ and $q$ are both primes? Given a positive integer $k>1$, I would like to know for which (if any) ...
Manuel Silva's user avatar