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Primes in arithmetic progression

In number theory, primes in arithmetic progression are any sequence of at least three prime numbers that are consecutive terms in an arithmetic progression. An example is the sequence of primes (3, 7, 11), which is given by for .

According to the Green–Tao theorem, there exist arbitrarily long sequences of primes in arithmetic progression. Sometimes the phrase may also be used about primes which belong to an arithmetic progression which also contains composite numbers. For example, it can be used about primes in an arithmetic progression of the form , where a and b are coprime which according to Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions contains infinitely many primes, along with infinitely many composites.

For integer k ≥ 3, an AP-k (also called PAP-k) is any sequence of k primes in arithmetic progression. An AP-k can be written as k primes of the form a·n + b, for fixed integers a (called the common difference) and b, and k consecutive integer values of n. An AP-k is usually expressed with n = 0 to k − 1. This can always be achieved by defining b to be the first prime in the arithmetic progression.

Properties

Any given arithmetic progression of primes has a finite length. In 2004, Ben J. Green and Terence Tao settled an old conjecture by proving the Green–Tao theorem: The primes contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions.[1] It follows immediately that there are infinitely many AP-k for any k.

If an AP-k does not begin with the prime k, then the common difference is a multiple of the primorial k# = 2·3·5·...·j, where j is the largest prime ≤ k.

Proof: Let the AP-k be a·n + b for k consecutive values of n. If a prime p does not divide a, then modular arithmetic says that p will divide every p'th term of the arithmetic progression. (From H.J. Weber, Cor.10 in ``Exceptional Prime Number Twins, Triplets and Multiplets," arXiv:1102.3075[math.NT]. See also Theor.2.3 in ``Regularities of Twin, Triplet and Multiplet Prime Numbers," arXiv:1103.0447[math.NT], Global J.P.A.Math 8(2012), in press.) If the AP is prime for k consecutive values, then a must therefore be divisible by all primes pk.

This also shows that an AP with common difference a cannot contain more consecutive prime terms than the value of the smallest prime that does not divide a.

If k is prime then an AP-k can begin with k and have a common difference which is only a multiple of (k−1)# instead of k#. (From H. J. Weber, ``Less Regular Exceptional and Repeating Prime Number Multiplets," arXiv:1105.4092[math.NT], Sect.3.) For example, the AP-3 with primes {3, 5, 7} and common difference 2# = 2, or the AP-5 with primes {5, 11, 17, 23, 29} and common difference 4# = 6. It is conjectured that such examples exist for all primes k. As of 2018, the largest prime for which this is confirmed is k = 19, for this AP-19 found by Wojciech Iżykowski in 2013:

19 + 4244193265542951705·17#·n, for n = 0 to 18.[2]

It follows from widely believed conjectures, such as Dickson's conjecture and some variants of the prime k-tuple conjecture, that if p > 2 is the smallest prime not dividing a, then there are infinitely many AP-(p−1) with common difference a. For example, 5 is the smallest prime not dividing 6, so there is expected to be infinitely many AP-4 with common difference 6, which is called a sexy prime quadruplet. When a = 2, p = 3, it is the twin prime conjecture, with an "AP-2" of 2 primes (b, b + 2).

Minimal primes in AP

We minimize the last term.[3]

Minimal AP-k
k Primes for n = 0 to k−1
3 3 + 2n
4 5 + 6n
5 5 + 6n
6 7 + 30n
7 7 + 150n
8 199 + 210n
9 199 + 210n
10 199 + 210n
11 110437 + 13860n
12 110437 + 13860n
13 4943 + 60060n
14 31385539 + 420420n
15 115453391 + 4144140n
16 53297929 + 9699690n
17 3430751869 + 87297210n
18 4808316343 + 717777060n
19 8297644387 + 4180566390n
20 214861583621 + 18846497670n
21 5749146449311 + 26004868890n

Largest known primes in AP

For prime q, q# denotes the primorial 2·3·5·7·...·q.

As of September 2019, the longest known AP-k is an AP-27. Several examples are known for AP-26. The first to be discovered was found on April 12, 2010 by Benoît Perichon on a PlayStation 3 with software by Jarosław Wróblewski and Geoff Reynolds, ported to the PlayStation 3 by Bryan Little, in a distributed PrimeGrid project:[2]

43142746595714191 + 23681770·23#·n, for n = 0 to 25. (23# = 223092870) (sequence A204189 in the OEIS)

By the time the first AP-26 was found the search was divided into 131,436,182 segments by PrimeGrid[4] and processed by 32/64bit CPUs, Nvidia CUDA GPUs, and Cell microprocessors around the world.

Before that, the record was an AP-25 found by Raanan Chermoni and Jarosław Wróblewski on May 17, 2008:[2]

6171054912832631 + 366384·23#·n, for n = 0 to 24. (23# = 223092870)

The AP-25 search was divided into segments taking about 3 minutes on Athlon 64 and Wróblewski reported "I think Raanan went through less than 10,000,000 such segments"[5] (this would have taken about 57 cpu years on Athlon 64).

The earlier record was an AP-24 found by Jarosław Wróblewski alone on January 18, 2007:

468395662504823 + 205619·23#·n, for n = 0 to 23.

For this Wróblewski reported he used a total of 75 computers: 15 64-bit Athlons, 15 dual core 64-bit Pentium D 805, 30 32-bit Athlons 2500, and 15 Durons 900.[6]

The following table shows the largest known AP-k with the year of discovery and the number of decimal digits in the ending prime. Note that the largest known AP-k may be the end of an AP-(k+1). Some record setters choose to first compute a large set of primes of form c·p#+1 with fixed p, and then search for AP's among the values of c that produced a prime. This is reflected in the expression for some records. The expression can easily be rewritten as a·n + b.

Largest known AP-k as of January 2023[2]
k Primes for n = 0 to k−1 Digits Year Discoverer
3 (503·21092022−1) + (1103·23558176 − 503·21092022n 1071122 2022 Ryan Propper, Serge Batalov
4 (263093407 + 928724769·n)·299901−1 30083 2022 Serge Batalov
5 (440012137 + 18195056·n)·30941#+1 13338 2022 Serge Batalov
6 (1445494494 + 141836149·n)·16301# + 1 7036 2018 Ken Davis
7 (2554152639 + 577051223·n)·7927# + 1 3407 2022 Serge Batalov
8 (48098104751 + 3026809034·n)·5303# + 1 2271 2019 Norman Luhn, Paul Underwood, Ken Davis
9 (65502205462 + 6317280828·n)·2371# + 1 1014 2012 Ken Davis, Paul Underwood
10 (20794561384 + 1638155407·n)·1050# + 1 450 2019 Norman Luhn
11 (16533786790 + 1114209832·n)·666# + 1 289 2019 Norman Luhn
12 (15079159689 + 502608831·n)·420# + 1 180 2019 Norman Luhn
13 (50448064213 + 4237116495·n)·229# + 1 103 2019 Norman Luhn
14 (55507616633 + 670355577·n)·229# + 1 103 2019 Norman Luhn
15 (14512034548 + 87496195·n)·149# + 1 68 2019 Norman Luhn
16 (9700128038 + 75782144·(n+1))·83# + 1 43 2019 Norman Luhn
17 (9700128038 + 75782144·n)·83# + 1 43 2019 Norman Luhn
18 (33277396902 + 139569962·(n+1))·53# + 1 31 2019 Norman Luhn
19 (33277396902 + 139569962·n)·53# + 1 31 2019 Norman Luhn
20 23 + 134181089232118748020·19#·n 29 2017 Wojciech Izykowski
21 5547796991585989797641 + 29#·n 22 2014 Jarosław Wróblewski
22 22231637631603420833 + 8·41#·(n + 1) 20 2014 Jarosław Wróblewski
23 22231637631603420833 + 8·41#·n 20 2014 Jarosław Wróblewski
24 101708243916042007 + 283615451·23#·(n + 1) 19 2023 Rob Gahan, PrimeGrid
25 101708243916042007 + 283615451·23#·n 19 2023 Rob Gahan, PrimeGrid
26 14430610470703957 + 283169697·23#·n 19 2023 Rob Gahan, PrimeGrid
27 224584605939537911 + 81292139·23#·n 18 2019 Rob Gahan, PrimeGrid

Consecutive primes in arithmetic progression

Consecutive primes in arithmetic progression refers to at least three consecutive primes which are consecutive terms in an arithmetic progression. Note that unlike an AP-k, all the other numbers between the terms of the progression must be composite. For example, the AP-3 {3, 7, 11} does not qualify, because 5 is also a prime.

For an integer k ≥ 3, a CPAP-k is k consecutive primes in arithmetic progression. It is conjectured there are arbitrarily long CPAP's. This would imply infinitely many CPAP-k for all k. The middle prime in a CPAP-3 is called a balanced prime. The largest known as of 2022 has 15004 digits.

The first known CPAP-10 was found in 1998 by Manfred Toplic in the distributed computing project CP10 which was organized by Harvey Dubner, Tony Forbes, Nik Lygeros, Michel Mizony and Paul Zimmermann.[7] This CPAP-10 has the smallest possible common difference, 7# = 210. The only other known CPAP-10 as of 2018 was found by the same people in 2008.

If a CPAP-11 exists then it must have a common difference which is a multiple of 11# = 2310. The difference between the first and last of the 11 primes would therefore be a multiple of 23100. The requirement for at least 23090 composite numbers between the 11 primes makes it appear extremely hard to find a CPAP-11. Dubner and Zimmermann estimate it would be at least 1012 times harder than a CPAP-10.[8]

Minimal consecutive primes in AP

The first occurrence of a CPAP-k is only known for k ≤ 6 (sequence A006560 in the OEIS).

Minimal CPAP-k[9]
k Primes for n = 0 to k−1
3 3 + 2n
4 251 + 6n
5 9843019 + 30n
6 121174811 + 30n

Largest known consecutive primes in AP

The table shows the largest known case of k consecutive primes in arithmetic progression, for k = 3 to 10.

Largest known CPAP-k as of May 2022[10],[11]
k Primes for n = 0 to k−1 Digits Year Discoverer
3 2494779036241 · 249800 + 1 + 6n 15004 2022 Serge Batalov
4 62399583639 · 9923# - 3399421607 + 30n 4285 2021 Serge Batalov
5 2738129459017 · 4211# + 3399421517 + 30n 1805 2022 Serge Batalov
6 533098369554 · 2357# + 3399421517 + 30n 1012 2021 Serge Batalov
7 145706980166212 · 1069# + x253 + 420 + 210n 466 2021 Serge Batalov
8 8081110034864 · 619# + x253 + 210 + 210n 272 2021 Serge Batalov
9 7661619169627 · 379# + x153 + 210n 167 2021 Serge Batalov
10 189382061960492204 · 257# + x106 + 210n 121 2021 Serge Batalov

xd is a d-digit number used in one of the above records to ensure a small factor in unusually many of the required composites between the primes.
x106 = 115376 22283279672627497420 78637565852209646810 56709682233916942487 50925234318597647097 08315833909447378791
x153 = 9656383640115 03965472274037609810 69585305769447451085 87635040605371157826 98320398681243637298 57205796522034199218 09817841129732061363 55565433981118807417 = x253 % 379#
x253 = 1617599298905 320471304802538356587398499979 836255156671030473751281181199 911312259550734373874520536148 519300924327947507674746679858 816780182478724431966587843672 408773388445788142740274329621 811879827349575247851843514012 399313201211101277175684636727

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Green, Ben; Tao, Terence (2008), "The primes contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions", Annals of Mathematics, 167 (2): 481–547, arXiv:math.NT/0404188, doi:10.4007/annals.2008.167.481, MR 2415379, S2CID 1883951
  2. ^ a b c d Jens Kruse Andersen and Norman Luhn, Primes in Arithmetic Progression Records. Retrieved 2020-08-31.
  3. ^ OEIS sequence A133277
  4. ^ John, AP26 Forum. Retrieved 2013-10-20.
  5. ^ Wróblewski, Jarosław (2008-05-17). "AP25". primenumbers (Mailing list). Retrieved 2008-05-17.
  6. ^ Wróblewski, Jarosław (2007-01-18). "AP24". primeform (Mailing list). Retrieved 2007-06-17.
  7. ^ H. Dubner, T. Forbes, N. Lygeros, M. Mizony, H. Nelson, P. Zimmermann, Ten consecutive primes in arithmetic progression, Mathematics of Computation 71 (2002), 1323–1328.
  8. ^ Manfred Toplic, The nine and ten primes project. Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
  9. ^ Jens Kruse Andersen and Norman Luhn, The minimal & the smallest known CPAP-k. Retrieved 2022-12-20.
  10. ^ Jens Kruse Andersen and Norman Luhn, The Largest Known CPAP's. Retrieved on 2022-12-20.
  11. ^ Chris K. Caldwell, The Largest Known CPAP's. Retrieved on 2021-01-28.

References

  • Chris Caldwell, The Prime Glossary: arithmetic sequence, The Top Twenty: Arithmetic Progressions of Primes and The Top Twenty: Consecutive Primes in Arithmetic Progression, all from the Prime Pages.
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Prime Arithmetic Progression". MathWorld.
  • Jarosław Wróblewski, How to search for 26 primes in arithmetic progression?
  • P. Erdős and P. Turán, On some sequences of integers, J. London Math. Soc. 11 (1936), 261–264.

primes, arithmetic, progression, number, theory, primes, arithmetic, progression, sequence, least, three, prime, numbers, that, consecutive, terms, arithmetic, progression, example, sequence, primes, which, given, displaystyle, displaystyle, according, green, . In number theory primes in arithmetic progression are any sequence of at least three prime numbers that are consecutive terms in an arithmetic progression An example is the sequence of primes 3 7 11 which is given by a n 3 4 n displaystyle a n 3 4n for 0 n 2 displaystyle 0 leq n leq 2 According to the Green Tao theorem there exist arbitrarily long sequences of primes in arithmetic progression Sometimes the phrase may also be used about primes which belong to an arithmetic progression which also contains composite numbers For example it can be used about primes in an arithmetic progression of the form a n b displaystyle an b where a and b are coprime which according to Dirichlet s theorem on arithmetic progressions contains infinitely many primes along with infinitely many composites For integer k 3 an AP k also called PAP k is any sequence of k primes in arithmetic progression An AP k can be written as k primes of the form a n b for fixed integers a called the common difference and b and k consecutive integer values of n An AP k is usually expressed with n 0 to k 1 This can always be achieved by defining b to be the first prime in the arithmetic progression Contents 1 Properties 2 Minimal primes in AP 3 Largest known primes in AP 4 Consecutive primes in arithmetic progression 5 Minimal consecutive primes in AP 6 Largest known consecutive primes in AP 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesProperties EditAny given arithmetic progression of primes has a finite length In 2004 Ben J Green and Terence Tao settled an old conjecture by proving the Green Tao theorem The primes contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions 1 It follows immediately that there are infinitely many AP k for any k If an AP k does not begin with the prime k then the common difference is a multiple of the primorial k 2 3 5 j where j is the largest prime k Proof Let the AP k be a n b for k consecutive values of n If a prime p does not divide a then modular arithmetic says that p will divide every p th term of the arithmetic progression From H J Weber Cor 10 in Exceptional Prime Number Twins Triplets and Multiplets arXiv 1102 3075 math NT See also Theor 2 3 in Regularities of Twin Triplet and Multiplet Prime Numbers arXiv 1103 0447 math NT Global J P A Math 8 2012 in press If the AP is prime for k consecutive values then a must therefore be divisible by all primes p k This also shows that an AP with common difference a cannot contain more consecutive prime terms than the value of the smallest prime that does not divide a If k is prime then an AP k can begin with k and have a common difference which is only a multiple of k 1 instead of k From H J Weber Less Regular Exceptional and Repeating Prime Number Multiplets arXiv 1105 4092 math NT Sect 3 For example the AP 3 with primes 3 5 7 and common difference 2 2 or the AP 5 with primes 5 11 17 23 29 and common difference 4 6 It is conjectured that such examples exist for all primes k As of 2018 update the largest prime for which this is confirmed is k 19 for this AP 19 found by Wojciech Izykowski in 2013 19 4244193265542951705 17 n for n 0 to 18 2 It follows from widely believed conjectures such as Dickson s conjecture and some variants of the prime k tuple conjecture that if p gt 2 is the smallest prime not dividing a then there are infinitely many AP p 1 with common difference a For example 5 is the smallest prime not dividing 6 so there is expected to be infinitely many AP 4 with common difference 6 which is called a sexy prime quadruplet When a 2 p 3 it is the twin prime conjecture with an AP 2 of 2 primes b b 2 Minimal primes in AP EditWe minimize the last term 3 Minimal AP k k Primes for n 0 to k 13 3 2n4 5 6n5 5 6n6 7 30n7 7 150n8 199 210n9 199 210n10 199 210n11 110437 13860n12 110437 13860n13 4943 60060n14 31385539 420420n15 115453391 4144140n16 53297929 9699690n17 3430751869 87297210n18 4808316343 717777060n19 8297644387 4180566390n20 214861583621 18846497670n21 5749146449311 26004868890nLargest known primes in AP EditFor prime q q denotes the primorial 2 3 5 7 q As of September 2019 update the longest known AP k is an AP 27 Several examples are known for AP 26 The first to be discovered was found on April 12 2010 by Benoit Perichon on a PlayStation 3 with software by Jaroslaw Wroblewski and Geoff Reynolds ported to the PlayStation 3 by Bryan Little in a distributed PrimeGrid project 2 43142746595714191 23681770 23 n for n 0 to 25 23 223092870 sequence A204189 in the OEIS By the time the first AP 26 was found the search was divided into 131 436 182 segments by PrimeGrid 4 and processed by 32 64bit CPUs Nvidia CUDA GPUs and Cell microprocessors around the world Before that the record was an AP 25 found by Raanan Chermoni and Jaroslaw Wroblewski on May 17 2008 2 6171054912832631 366384 23 n for n 0 to 24 23 223092870 The AP 25 search was divided into segments taking about 3 minutes on Athlon 64 and Wroblewski reported I think Raanan went through less than 10 000 000 such segments 5 this would have taken about 57 cpu years on Athlon 64 The earlier record was an AP 24 found by Jaroslaw Wroblewski alone on January 18 2007 468395662504823 205619 23 n for n 0 to 23 For this Wroblewski reported he used a total of 75 computers 15 64 bit Athlons 15 dual core 64 bit Pentium D 805 30 32 bit Athlons 2500 and 15 Durons 900 6 The following table shows the largest known AP k with the year of discovery and the number of decimal digits in the ending prime Note that the largest known AP k may be the end of an AP k 1 Some record setters choose to first compute a large set of primes of form c p 1 with fixed p and then search for AP s among the values of c that produced a prime This is reflected in the expression for some records The expression can easily be rewritten as a n b Largest known AP k as of January 2023 update 2 k Primes for n 0 to k 1 Digits Year Discoverer3 503 21092022 1 1103 23558176 503 21092022 n 1071122 2022 Ryan Propper Serge Batalov4 263093407 928724769 n 299901 1 30083 2022 Serge Batalov5 440012137 18195056 n 30941 1 13338 2022 Serge Batalov6 1445494494 141836149 n 16301 1 7036 2018 Ken Davis7 2554152639 577051223 n 7927 1 3407 2022 Serge Batalov8 48098104751 3026809034 n 5303 1 2271 2019 Norman Luhn Paul Underwood Ken Davis9 65502205462 6317280828 n 2371 1 1014 2012 Ken Davis Paul Underwood10 20794561384 1638155407 n 1050 1 450 2019 Norman Luhn11 16533786790 1114209832 n 666 1 289 2019 Norman Luhn12 15079159689 502608831 n 420 1 180 2019 Norman Luhn13 50448064213 4237116495 n 229 1 103 2019 Norman Luhn14 55507616633 670355577 n 229 1 103 2019 Norman Luhn15 14512034548 87496195 n 149 1 68 2019 Norman Luhn16 9700128038 75782144 n 1 83 1 43 2019 Norman Luhn17 9700128038 75782144 n 83 1 43 2019 Norman Luhn18 33277396902 139569962 n 1 53 1 31 2019 Norman Luhn19 33277396902 139569962 n 53 1 31 2019 Norman Luhn20 23 134181089232118748020 19 n 29 2017 Wojciech Izykowski21 5547796991585989797641 29 n 22 2014 Jaroslaw Wroblewski22 22231637631603420833 8 41 n 1 20 2014 Jaroslaw Wroblewski23 22231637631603420833 8 41 n 20 2014 Jaroslaw Wroblewski24 101708243916042007 283615451 23 n 1 19 2023 Rob Gahan PrimeGrid25 101708243916042007 283615451 23 n 19 2023 Rob Gahan PrimeGrid26 14430610470703957 283169697 23 n 19 2023 Rob Gahan PrimeGrid27 224584605939537911 81292139 23 n 18 2019 Rob Gahan PrimeGridConsecutive primes in arithmetic progression EditConsecutive primes in arithmetic progression refers to at least three consecutive primes which are consecutive terms in an arithmetic progression Note that unlike an AP k all the other numbers between the terms of the progression must be composite For example the AP 3 3 7 11 does not qualify because 5 is also a prime For an integer k 3 a CPAP k is k consecutive primes in arithmetic progression It is conjectured there are arbitrarily long CPAP s This would imply infinitely many CPAP k for all k The middle prime in a CPAP 3 is called a balanced prime The largest known as of 2022 update has 15004 digits The first known CPAP 10 was found in 1998 by Manfred Toplic in the distributed computing project CP10 which was organized by Harvey Dubner Tony Forbes Nik Lygeros Michel Mizony and Paul Zimmermann 7 This CPAP 10 has the smallest possible common difference 7 210 The only other known CPAP 10 as of 2018 was found by the same people in 2008 If a CPAP 11 exists then it must have a common difference which is a multiple of 11 2310 The difference between the first and last of the 11 primes would therefore be a multiple of 23100 The requirement for at least 23090 composite numbers between the 11 primes makes it appear extremely hard to find a CPAP 11 Dubner and Zimmermann estimate it would be at least 1012 times harder than a CPAP 10 8 Minimal consecutive primes in AP EditThe first occurrence of a CPAP k is only known for k 6 sequence A006560 in the OEIS Minimal CPAP k 9 k Primes for n 0 to k 13 3 2n4 251 6n5 9843019 30n6 121174811 30nLargest known consecutive primes in AP EditThe table shows the largest known case of k consecutive primes in arithmetic progression for k 3 to 10 Largest known CPAP k as of May 2022 update 10 11 k Primes for n 0 to k 1 Digits Year Discoverer3 2494779036241 249800 1 6n 15004 2022 Serge Batalov4 62399583639 9923 3399421607 30n 4285 2021 Serge Batalov5 2738129459017 4211 3399421517 30n 1805 2022 Serge Batalov6 533098369554 2357 3399421517 30n 1012 2021 Serge Batalov7 145706980166212 1069 x253 420 210n 466 2021 Serge Batalov8 8081110034864 619 x253 210 210n 272 2021 Serge Batalov9 7661619169627 379 x153 210n 167 2021 Serge Batalov10 189382061960492204 257 x106 210n 121 2021 Serge Batalovxd is a d digit number used in one of the above records to ensure a small factor in unusually many of the required composites between the primes x106 115376 22283279672627497420 78637565852209646810 56709682233916942487 50925234318597647097 08315833909447378791x153 9656383640115 03965472274037609810 69585305769447451085 87635040605371157826 98320398681243637298 57205796522034199218 09817841129732061363 55565433981118807417 x253 379 x253 1617599298905 320471304802538356587398499979 836255156671030473751281181199 911312259550734373874520536148 519300924327947507674746679858 816780182478724431966587843672 408773388445788142740274329621 811879827349575247851843514012 399313201211101277175684636727See also EditCunningham chain Szemeredi s theorem PrimeGrid Problems involving arithmetic progressionsNotes Edit Green Ben Tao Terence 2008 The primes contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions Annals of Mathematics 167 2 481 547 arXiv math NT 0404188 doi 10 4007 annals 2008 167 481 MR 2415379 S2CID 1883951 a b c d Jens Kruse Andersen and Norman Luhn Primes in Arithmetic Progression Records Retrieved 2020 08 31 OEIS sequence A133277 John AP26 Forum Retrieved 2013 10 20 Wroblewski Jaroslaw 2008 05 17 AP25 primenumbers Mailing list Retrieved 2008 05 17 Wroblewski Jaroslaw 2007 01 18 AP24 primeform Mailing list Retrieved 2007 06 17 H Dubner T Forbes N Lygeros M Mizony H Nelson P Zimmermann Ten consecutive primes in arithmetic progression Mathematics of Computation 71 2002 1323 1328 Manfred Toplic The nine and ten primes project Retrieved on 2007 06 17 Jens Kruse Andersen and Norman Luhn The minimal amp the smallest known CPAP k Retrieved 2022 12 20 Jens Kruse Andersen and Norman Luhn The Largest Known CPAP s Retrieved on 2022 12 20 Chris K Caldwell The Largest Known CPAP s Retrieved on 2021 01 28 References EditChris Caldwell The Prime Glossary arithmetic sequence The Top Twenty Arithmetic Progressions of Primes and The Top Twenty Consecutive Primes in Arithmetic Progression all from the Prime Pages Weisstein Eric W Prime Arithmetic Progression MathWorld Jaroslaw Wroblewski How to search for 26 primes in arithmetic progression P Erdos and P Turan On some sequences of integers J London Math Soc 11 1936 261 264 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Primes in arithmetic progression amp oldid 1133374200 Consecutive primes in arithmetic progression, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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