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Fermat number

In mathematics, a Fermat number, named after Pierre de Fermat, the first known to have studied them, is a positive integer of the form: where n is a non-negative integer. The first few Fermat numbers are: 3, 5, 17, 257, 65537, 4294967297, 18446744073709551617, ... (sequence A000215 in the OEIS).

Fermat prime
Named afterPierre de Fermat
No. of known terms5
Conjectured no. of terms5
Subsequence ofFermat numbers
First terms3, 5, 17, 257, 65537
Largest known term65537
OEIS indexA019434

If 2k + 1 is prime and k > 0, then k itself must be a power of 2,[1] so 2k + 1 is a Fermat number; such primes are called Fermat primes. As of 2023, the only known Fermat primes are F0 = 3, F1 = 5, F2 = 17, F3 = 257, and F4 = 65537 (sequence A019434 in the OEIS).

Basic properties edit

The Fermat numbers satisfy the following recurrence relations:

 
 

for n ≥ 1,

 
 

for n ≥ 2. Each of these relations can be proved by mathematical induction. From the second equation, we can deduce Goldbach's theorem (named after Christian Goldbach): no two Fermat numbers share a common integer factor greater than 1. To see this, suppose that 0 ≤ i < j and Fi and Fj have a common factor a > 1. Then a divides both

 

and Fj; hence a divides their difference, 2. Since a > 1, this forces a = 2. This is a contradiction, because each Fermat number is clearly odd. As a corollary, we obtain another proof of the infinitude of the prime numbers: for each Fn, choose a prime factor pn; then the sequence {pn} is an infinite sequence of distinct primes.

Further properties edit

Primality edit

Fermat numbers and Fermat primes were first studied by Pierre de Fermat, who conjectured that all Fermat numbers are prime. Indeed, the first five Fermat numbers F0, ..., F4 are easily shown to be prime. Fermat's conjecture was refuted by Leonhard Euler in 1732 when he showed that

 

Euler proved that every factor of Fn must have the form k2n+1 + 1 (later improved to k2n+2 + 1 by Lucas) for n ≥ 2.

That 641 is a factor of F5 can be deduced from the equalities 641 = 27 × 5 + 1 and 641 = 24 + 54. It follows from the first equality that 27 × 5 ≡ −1 (mod 641) and therefore (raising to the fourth power) that 228 × 54 ≡ 1 (mod 641). On the other hand, the second equality implies that 54 ≡ −24 (mod 641). These congruences imply that 232 ≡ −1 (mod 641).

Fermat was probably aware of the form of the factors later proved by Euler, so it seems curious that he failed to follow through on the straightforward calculation to find the factor.[2] One common explanation is that Fermat made a computational mistake.

There are no other known Fermat primes Fn with n > 4, but little is known about Fermat numbers for large n.[3] In fact, each of the following is an open problem:

As of 2024, it is known that Fn is composite for 5 ≤ n ≤ 32, although of these, complete factorizations of Fn are known only for 0 ≤ n ≤ 11, and there are no known prime factors for n = 20 and n = 24.[5] The largest Fermat number known to be composite is F18233954, and its prime factor 7 × 218233956 + 1 was discovered in October 2020.

Heuristic arguments edit

Heuristics suggest that F4 is the last Fermat prime.

The prime number theorem implies that a random integer in a suitable interval around N is prime with probability 1/ln N. If one uses the heuristic that a Fermat number is prime with the same probability as a random integer of its size, and that F5, ..., F32 are composite, then the expected number of Fermat primes beyond F4 (or equivalently, beyond F32) should be

 

One may interpret this number as an upper bound for the probability that a Fermat prime beyond F4 exists.

This argument is not a rigorous proof. For one thing, it assumes that Fermat numbers behave "randomly", but the factors of Fermat numbers have special properties. Boklan and Conway published a more precise analysis suggesting that the probability that there is another Fermat prime is less than one in a billion.[6]

Anders Bjorn and Hans Riesel estimated the number of square factors of Fermat numbers from F5 onward as

 

in other words, there are unlikely to be any non-squarefree Fermat numbers, and in general square factors of   are very rare for large n.[7]

Equivalent conditions edit

Let   be the nth Fermat number. Pépin's test states that for n > 0,

  is prime if and only if  

The expression   can be evaluated modulo   by repeated squaring. This makes the test a fast polynomial-time algorithm. But Fermat numbers grow so rapidly that only a handful of them can be tested in a reasonable amount of time and space.

There are some tests for numbers of the form k2m + 1, such as factors of Fermat numbers, for primality.

Proth's theorem (1878). Let N = k2m + 1 with odd k < 2m. If there is an integer a such that
 
then   is prime. Conversely, if the above congruence does not hold, and in addition
  (See Jacobi symbol)
then   is composite.

If N = Fn > 3, then the above Jacobi symbol is always equal to −1 for a = 3, and this special case of Proth's theorem is known as Pépin's test. Although Pépin's test and Proth's theorem have been implemented on computers to prove the compositeness of some Fermat numbers, neither test gives a specific nontrivial factor. In fact, no specific prime factors are known for n = 20 and 24.

Factorization edit

Because of Fermat numbers' size, it is difficult to factorize or even to check primality. Pépin's test gives a necessary and sufficient condition for primality of Fermat numbers, and can be implemented by modern computers. The elliptic curve method is a fast method for finding small prime divisors of numbers. Distributed computing project Fermatsearch has found some factors of Fermat numbers. Yves Gallot's proth.exe has been used to find factors of large Fermat numbers. Édouard Lucas, improving Euler's above-mentioned result, proved in 1878 that every factor of the Fermat number  , with n at least 2, is of the form   (see Proth number), where k is a positive integer. By itself, this makes it easy to prove the primality of the known Fermat primes.

Factorizations of the first 13 Fermat numbers are:

F0 = 21 + 1 = 3 is prime
F1 = 22 + 1 = 5 is prime
F2 = 24 + 1 = 17 is prime
F3 = 28 + 1 = 257 is prime
F4 = 216 + 1 = 65,537 is the largest known Fermat prime
F5 = 232 + 1 = 4,294,967,297
= 641 × 6,700,417 (fully factored 1732[8])
F6 = 264 + 1 = 18,446,744,073,709,551,617 (20 digits)
= 274,177 × 67,280,421,310,721 (14 digits) (fully factored 1855)
F7 = 2128 + 1 = 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,457 (39 digits)
= 59,649,589,127,497,217 (17 digits) × 5,704,689,200,685,129,054,721 (22 digits) (fully factored 1970)
F8 = 2256 + 1 = 115,792,089,237,316,195,423,570,985,008,687,907,853,269,984,665,640,564,039,457,584,007,913,129,
639,937 (78 digits)
= 1,238,926,361,552,897 (16 digits) ×
93,461,639,715,357,977,769,163,558,199,606,896,584,051,237,541,638,188,580,280,321 (62 digits) (fully factored 1980)
F9 = 2512 + 1 = 13,407,807,929,942,597,099,574,024,998,205,846,127,479,365,820,592,393,377,723,561,443,721,764,0
30,073,546,976,801,874,298,166,903,427,690,031,858,186,486,050,853,753,882,811,946,569,946,433,6
49,006,084,097 (155 digits)
= 2,424,833 × 7,455,602,825,647,884,208,337,395,736,200,454,918,783,366,342,657 (49 digits) ×
741,640,062,627,530,801,524,787,141,901,937,474,059,940,781,097,519,023,905,821,316,144,415,759,
504,705,008,092,818,711,693,940,737 (99 digits) (fully factored 1990)
F10 = 21024 + 1 = 179,769,313,486,231,590,772,930...304,835,356,329,624,224,137,217 (309 digits)
= 45,592,577 × 6,487,031,809 × 4,659,775,785,220,018,543,264,560,743,076,778,192,897 (40 digits) ×
130,439,874,405,488,189,727,484...806,217,820,753,127,014,424,577 (252 digits) (fully factored 1995)
F11 = 22048 + 1 = 32,317,006,071,311,007,300,714,8...193,555,853,611,059,596,230,657 (617 digits)
= 319,489 × 974,849 × 167,988,556,341,760,475,137 (21 digits) × 3,560,841,906,445,833,920,513 (22 digits) ×
173,462,447,179,147,555,430,258...491,382,441,723,306,598,834,177 (564 digits) (fully factored 1988)

As of April 2023, only F0 to F11 have been completely factored.[5] The distributed computing project Fermat Search is searching for new factors of Fermat numbers.[9] The set of all Fermat factors is A050922 (or, sorted, A023394) in OEIS.

The following factors of Fermat numbers were known before 1950 (since then, digital computers have helped find more factors):

Year Finder Fermat number Factor
1732 Euler    
1732 Euler   (fully factored)  
1855 Clausen    
1855 Clausen   (fully factored)  
1877 Pervushin    
1878 Pervushin    
1886 Seelhoff    
1899 Cunningham    
1899 Cunningham    
1903 Western    
1903 Western    
1903 Western    
1903 Western    
1903 Cullen    
1906 Morehead    
1925 Kraitchik    

As of July 2023, 368 prime factors of Fermat numbers are known, and 324 Fermat numbers are known to be composite.[5] Several new Fermat factors are found each year.[10]

Pseudoprimes and Fermat numbers edit

Like composite numbers of the form 2p − 1, every composite Fermat number is a strong pseudoprime to base 2. This is because all strong pseudoprimes to base 2 are also Fermat pseudoprimes – i.e.,

 

for all Fermat numbers.[11]

In 1904, Cipolla showed that the product of at least two distinct prime or composite Fermat numbers     will be a Fermat pseudoprime to base 2 if and only if  .[12]

Other theorems about Fermat numbers edit

Lemma. — If n is a positive integer,

 
Proof

 

Theorem —  If   is an odd prime, then   is a power of 2.

Proof

If   is a positive integer but not a power of 2, it must have an odd prime factor  , and we may write   where  .

By the preceding lemma, for positive integer  ,

 

where   means "evenly divides". Substituting  , and   and using that   is odd,

 

and thus

 

Because  , it follows that   is not prime. Therefore, by contraposition   must be a power of 2.

Theorem —  A Fermat prime cannot be a Wieferich prime.

Proof

We show if   is a Fermat prime (and hence by the above, m is a power of 2), then the congruence   does not hold.

Since   we may write  . If the given congruence holds, then  , and therefore

 

Hence  , and therefore  . This leads to  , which is impossible since  .

Theorem (Édouard Lucas) —  Any prime divisor p of   is of the form   whenever n > 1.

Sketch of proof

Let Gp denote the group of non-zero integers modulo p under multiplication, which has order p − 1. Notice that 2 (strictly speaking, its image modulo p) has multiplicative order equal to   in Gp (since   is the square of   which is −1 modulo Fn), so that, by Lagrange's theorem, p − 1 is divisible by   and p has the form   for some integer k, as Euler knew. Édouard Lucas went further. Since n > 1, the prime p above is congruent to 1 modulo 8. Hence (as was known to Carl Friedrich Gauss), 2 is a quadratic residue modulo p, that is, there is integer a such that   Then the image of a has order   in the group Gp and (using Lagrange's theorem again), p − 1 is divisible by   and p has the form   for some integer s.

In fact, it can be seen directly that 2 is a quadratic residue modulo p, since

 

Since an odd power of 2 is a quadratic residue modulo p, so is 2 itself.

A Fermat number cannot be a perfect number or part of a pair of amicable numbers. (Luca 2000)

The series of reciprocals of all prime divisors of Fermat numbers is convergent. (Křížek, Luca & Somer 2002)

If nn + 1 is prime, there exists an integer m such that n = 22m. The equation nn + 1 = F(2m+m) holds in that case.[13][14]

Let the largest prime factor of the Fermat number Fn be P(Fn). Then,

  (Grytczuk, Luca & Wójtowicz 2001)

Relationship to constructible polygons edit

 
Number of sides of known constructible polygons having up to 1000 sides (bold) or odd side count (red)

Carl Friedrich Gauss developed the theory of Gaussian periods in his Disquisitiones Arithmeticae and formulated a sufficient condition for the constructibility of regular polygons. Gauss stated that this condition was also necessary,[15] but never published a proof. Pierre Wantzel gave a full proof of necessity in 1837. The result is known as the Gauss–Wantzel theorem:

An n-sided regular polygon can be constructed with compass and straightedge if and only if n is either a power of 2 or the product of a power of 2 and distinct Fermat primes: in other words, if and only if n is of the form n = 2k or n = 2kp1p2...ps, where k, s are nonnegative integers and the pi are distinct Fermat primes.

A positive integer n is of the above form if and only if its totient φ(n) is a power of 2.

Applications of Fermat numbers edit

Pseudorandom number generation edit

Fermat primes are particularly useful in generating pseudo-random sequences of numbers in the range 1, ..., N, where N is a power of 2. The most common method used is to take any seed value between 1 and P − 1, where P is a Fermat prime. Now multiply this by a number A, which is greater than the square root of P and is a primitive root modulo P (i.e., it is not a quadratic residue). Then take the result modulo P. The result is the new value for the RNG.

  (see linear congruential generator, RANDU)

This is useful in computer science, since most data structures have members with 2X possible values. For example, a byte has 256 (28) possible values (0–255). Therefore, to fill a byte or bytes with random values, a random number generator that produces values 1–256 can be used, the byte taking the output value −1. Very large Fermat primes are of particular interest in data encryption for this reason. This method produces only pseudorandom values, as after P − 1 repetitions, the sequence repeats. A poorly chosen multiplier can result in the sequence repeating sooner than P − 1.

Generalized Fermat numbers edit

Numbers of the form   with a, b any coprime integers, a > b > 0, are called generalized Fermat numbers. An odd prime p is a generalized Fermat number if and only if p is congruent to 1 (mod 4). (Here we consider only the case n > 0, so 3 =   is not a counterexample.)

An example of a probable prime of this form is 1215131072 + 242131072 (found by Kellen Shenton).[16]

By analogy with the ordinary Fermat numbers, it is common to write generalized Fermat numbers of the form   as Fn(a). In this notation, for instance, the number 100,000,001 would be written as F3(10). In the following we shall restrict ourselves to primes of this form,  , such primes are called "Fermat primes base a". Of course, these primes exist only if a is even.

If we require n > 0, then Landau's fourth problem asks if there are infinitely many generalized Fermat primes Fn(a).

Generalized Fermat primes of the form Fn(a) edit

Because of the ease of proving their primality, generalized Fermat primes have become in recent years a topic for research within the field of number theory. Many of the largest known primes today are generalized Fermat primes.

Generalized Fermat numbers can be prime only for even a, because if a is odd then every generalized Fermat number will be divisible by 2. The smallest prime number   with   is  , or 3032 + 1. Besides, we can define "half generalized Fermat numbers" for an odd base, a half generalized Fermat number to base a (for odd a) is  , and it is also to be expected that there will be only finitely many half generalized Fermat primes for each odd base.

In this list, the generalized Fermat numbers ( ) to an even a are  , for odd a, they are  . If a is a perfect power with an odd exponent (sequence A070265 in the OEIS), then all generalized Fermat number can be algebraic factored, so they cannot be prime.

See[17][18] for even bases up to 1000, and[19] for odd bases. For the smallest number   such that   is prime, see OEISA253242.

  numbers  
such that
  is prime
  numbers  
such that
  is prime
  numbers  
such that
  is prime
  numbers  
such that
  is prime
2 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, ... 18 0, ... 34 2, ... 50 ...
3 0, 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, ... 19 1, ... 35 1, 2, 6, ... 51 1, 3, 6, ...
4 0, 1, 2, 3, ... 20 1, 2, ... 36 0, 1, ... 52 0, ...
5 0, 1, 2, ... 21 0, 2, 5, ... 37 0, ... 53 3, ...
6 0, 1, 2, ... 22 0, ... 38 ... 54 1, 2, 5, ...
7 2, ... 23 2, ... 39 1, 2, ... 55 ...
8 (none) 24 1, 2, ... 40 0, 1, ... 56 1, 2, ...
9 0, 1, 3, 4, 5, ... 25 0, 1, ... 41 4, ... 57 0, 2, ...
10 0, 1, ... 26 1, ... 42 0, ... 58 0, ...
11 1, 2, ... 27 (none) 43 3, ... 59 1, ...
12 0, ... 28 0, 2, ... 44 4, ... 60 0, ...
13 0, 2, 3, ... 29 1, 2, 4, ... 45 0, 1, ... 61 0, 1, 2, ...
14 1, ... 30 0, 5, ... 46 0, 2, 9, ... 62 ...
15 1, ... 31 ... 47 3, ... 63 ...
16 0, 1, 2, ... 32 (none) 48 2, ... 64 (none)
17 2, ... 33 0, 3, ... 49 1, ... 65 1, 2, 5, ...

For the smallest even base a such that   is prime, see OEISA056993.

  bases a such that   is prime (only consider even a) OEIS sequence
0 2, 4, 6, 10, 12, 16, 18, 22, 28, 30, 36, 40, 42, 46, 52, 58, 60, 66, 70, 72, 78, 82, 88, 96, 100, 102, 106, 108, 112, 126, 130, 136, 138, 148, 150, ... A006093
1 2, 4, 6, 10, 14, 16, 20, 24, 26, 36, 40, 54, 56, 66, 74, 84, 90, 94, 110, 116, 120, 124, 126, 130, 134, 146, 150, 156, 160, 170, 176, 180, 184, ... A005574
2 2, 4, 6, 16, 20, 24, 28, 34, 46, 48, 54, 56, 74, 80, 82, 88, 90, 106, 118, 132, 140, 142, 154, 160, 164, 174, 180, 194, 198, 204, 210, 220, 228, ... A000068
3 2, 4, 118, 132, 140, 152, 208, 240, 242, 288, 290, 306, 378, 392, 426, 434, 442, 508, 510, 540, 542, 562, 596, 610, 664, 680, 682, 732, 782, ... A006314
4 2, 44, 74, 76, 94, 156, 158, 176, 188, 198, 248, 288, 306, 318, 330, 348, 370, 382, 396, 452, 456, 470, 474, 476, 478, 560, 568, 598, 642, ... A006313
5 30, 54, 96, 112, 114, 132, 156, 332, 342, 360, 376, 428, 430, 432, 448, 562, 588, 726, 738, 804, 850, 884, 1068, 1142, 1198, 1306, 1540, 1568, ... A006315
6 102, 162, 274, 300, 412, 562, 592, 728, 1084, 1094, 1108, 1120, 1200, 1558, 1566, 1630, 1804, 1876, 2094, 2162, 2164, 2238, 2336, 2388, ... A006316
7 120, 190, 234, 506, 532, 548, 960, 1738, 1786, 2884, 3000, 3420, 3476, 3658, 4258, 5788, 6080, 6562, 6750, 7692, 8296, 9108, 9356, 9582, ... A056994
8 278, 614, 892, 898, 1348, 1494, 1574, 1938, 2116, 2122, 2278, 2762, 3434, 4094, 4204, 4728, 5712, 5744, 6066, 6508, 6930, 7022, 7332, ... A056995
9 46, 1036, 1318, 1342, 2472, 2926, 3154, 3878, 4386, 4464, 4474, 4482, 4616, 4688, 5374, 5698, 5716, 5770, 6268, 6386, 6682, 7388, 7992, ... A057465
10 824, 1476, 1632, 2462, 2484, 2520, 3064, 3402, 3820, 4026, 6640, 7026, 7158, 9070, 12202, 12548, 12994, 13042, 15358, 17646, 17670, ... A057002
11 150, 2558, 4650, 4772, 11272, 13236, 15048, 23302, 26946, 29504, 31614, 33308, 35054, 36702, 37062, 39020, 39056, 43738, 44174, 45654, ... A088361
12 1534, 7316, 17582, 18224, 28234, 34954, 41336, 48824, 51558, 51914, 57394, 61686, 62060, 89762, 96632, 98242, 100540, 101578, 109696, ... A088362
13 30406, 71852, 85654, 111850, 126308, 134492, 144642, 147942, 150152, 165894, 176206, 180924, 201170, 212724, 222764, 225174, 241600, ... A226528
14 67234, 101830, 114024, 133858, 162192, 165306, 210714, 216968, 229310, 232798, 422666, 426690, 449732, 462470, 468144, 498904, 506664, ... A226529
15 70906, 167176, 204462, 249830, 321164, 330716, 332554, 429370, 499310, 524552, 553602, 743788, 825324, 831648, 855124, 999236, 1041870, ... A226530
16 48594, 108368, 141146, 189590, 255694, 291726, 292550, 357868, 440846, 544118, 549868, 671600, 843832, 857678, 1024390, 1057476, 1087540, ... A251597
17 62722, 130816, 228188, 386892, 572186, 689186, 909548, 1063730, 1176694, 1361244, 1372930, 1560730, 1660830, 1717162, 1722230, 1766192, ... A253854
18 24518, 40734, 145310, 361658, 525094, 676754, 773620, 1415198, 1488256, 1615588, 1828858, 2042774, 2514168, 2611294, 2676404, 3060772, ... A244150
19 75898, 341112, 356926, 475856, 1880370, 2061748, 2312092, 2733014, 2788032, 2877652, 2985036, 3214654, 3638450, 4896418, 5897794, ... A243959
20 919444, 1059094, 1951734, 1963736, ... A321323

The smallest bases b=b(n) such that b2n + 1 (for given n= 0,1,2, ...) is prime are

2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 30, 102, 120, 278, 46, 824, 150, 1534, 30406, 67234, 70906, 48594, 62722, 24518, 75898, 919444, ... (sequence A056993 in the OEIS)

Conversely, the smallest k=k(n) such that (2n)k + 1 (for given n) is prime are

1, 1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 1, 1, 0, 4, 1, ... (The next term is unknown) (sequence A079706 in the OEIS) (also see OEISA228101 and OEISA084712)

A more elaborate theory can be used to predict the number of bases for which   will be prime for fixed  . The number of generalized Fermat primes can be roughly expected to halve as   is increased by 1.

Generalized Fermat primes of the form Fn(a, b) edit

It is also possible to construct generalized Fermat primes of the form  . As in the case where b=1, numbers of this form will always be divisible by 2 if a+b is even, but it is still possible to define generalized half-Fermat primes of this type. For the smallest prime of the form   (for odd  ), see also OEISA111635.

    numbers   such that
 
is prime[20][7]
2 1 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, ...
3 1 0, 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, ...
3 2 0, 1, 2, ...
4 1 0, 1, 2, 3, ... (equivalent to  )
4 3 0, 2, 4, ...
5 1 0, 1, 2, ...
5 2 0, 1, 2, ...
5 3 1, 2, 3, ...
5 4 1, 2, ...
6 1 0, 1, 2, ...
6 5 0, 1, 3, 4, ...
7 1 2, ...
7 2 1, 2, ...
7 3 0, 1, 8, ...
7 4 0, 2, ...
7 5 1, 4,
7 6 0, 2, 4, ...
8 1 (none)
8 3 0, 1, 2, ...
8 5 0, 1, 2,
8 7 1, 4, ...
9 1 0, 1, 3, 4, 5, ... (equivalent to  )
9 2 0, 2, ...
9 4 0, 1, ... (equivalent to  )
9 5 0, 1, 2, ...
9 7 2, ...
9 8 0, 2, 5, ...
10 1 0, 1, ...
10 3 0, 1, 3, ...
10 7 0, 1, 2, ...
10 9 0, 1, 2, ...
11 1 1, 2, ...
11 2 0, 2, ...
11 3 0, 3, ...
11 4 1, 2, ...
11 5 1, ...
11 6 0, 1, 2, ...
11 7 2, 4, 5, ...
11 8 0, 6, ...
11 9 1, 2, ...
11 10 5, ...
12 1 0, ...
12 5 0, 4, ...
12 7 0, 1, 3, ...
12 11 0, ...

Largest known generalized Fermat primes edit

The following is a list of the five largest known generalized Fermat primes.[21] The whole top-5 is discovered by participants in the PrimeGrid project.

Rank Prime number Generalized Fermat notation Number of digits Discovery date ref.
1 19637361048576 + 1 F20(1963736) 6,598,776 Sep 2022 [22]
2 19517341048576 + 1 F20(1951734) 6,595,985 Aug 2022 [23]
3 10590941048576 + 1 F20(1059094) 6,317,602 Nov 2018 [24]
4 9194441048576 + 1 F20(919444) 6,253,210 Sep 2017 [25]
5 81 × 220498148 + 1 F2(3 × 25124537) 6,170,560 Jun 2023 [26]

On the Prime Pages one can find the current top 100 generalized Fermat primes.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ For any positive odd number  ,   where  .
  2. ^ Křížek, Luca & Somer 2001, p. 38, Remark 4.15
  3. ^ Chris Caldwell, "Prime Links++: special forms" 2013-12-24 at the Wayback Machine at The Prime Pages.
  4. ^ Ribenboim 1996, p. 88.
  5. ^ a b c Keller, Wilfrid (January 18, 2021), "Prime Factors of Fermat Numbers", ProthSearch.com, retrieved January 19, 2021
  6. ^ Boklan, Kent D.; Conway, John H. (2017). "Expect at most one billionth of a new Fermat Prime!". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 39 (1): 3–5. arXiv:1605.01371. doi:10.1007/s00283-016-9644-3. S2CID 119165671.
  7. ^ a b Björn, Anders; Riesel, Hans (1998). "Factors of generalized Fermat numbers". Mathematics of Computation. 67 (221): 441–446. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-98-00891-6. ISSN 0025-5718.
  8. ^ Sandifer, Ed. "How Euler Did it" (PDF). MAA Online. Mathematical Association of America. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  9. ^ ":: F E R M A T S E A R C H . O R G :: Home page". www.fermatsearch.org. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  10. ^ "::FERMATSEARCH.ORG:: News". www.fermatsearch.org. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  11. ^ Schroeder, M. R. (2006). Number theory in science and communication: with applications in cryptography, physics, digital information, computing, and self-similarity. Springer series in information sciences (4th ed.). Berlin ; New York: Springer. p. 216. ISBN 978-3-540-26596-2. OCLC 61430240.
  12. ^ Krizek, Michal; Luca, Florian; Somer, Lawrence (14 March 2013). 17 Lectures on Fermat Numbers: From Number Theory to Geometry. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9780387218502. Retrieved 7 April 2018 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ Jeppe Stig Nielsen, "S(n) = n^n + 1".
  14. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Sierpiński Number of the First Kind". MathWorld.
  15. ^ Gauss, Carl Friedrich (1966). Disquisitiones arithmeticae. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 458–460. Retrieved 25 January 2023.
  16. ^ PRP Top Records, search for x^131072+y^131072, by Henri & Renaud Lifchitz.
  17. ^ "Generalized Fermat Primes". jeppesn.dk. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  18. ^ "Generalized Fermat primes for bases up to 1030". noprimeleftbehind.net. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  19. ^ "Generalized Fermat primes in odd bases". fermatquotient.com. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  20. ^ "Original GFN factors". www.prothsearch.com.
  21. ^ Caldwell, Chris K. "The Top Twenty: Generalized Fermat". The Prime Pages. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  22. ^ 19637361048576 + 1
  23. ^ 19517341048576 + 1
  24. ^ 10590941048576 + 1
  25. ^ 9194441048576 + 1
  26. ^ 81*220498148 + 1

References edit

  • Golomb, S. W. (January 1, 1963), "On the sum of the reciprocals of the Fermat numbers and related irrationalities", Canadian Journal of Mathematics, 15: 475–478, doi:10.4153/CJM-1963-051-0, S2CID 123138118
  • Grytczuk, A.; Luca, F. & Wójtowicz, M. (2001), "Another note on the greatest prime factors of Fermat numbers", Southeast Asian Bulletin of Mathematics, 25 (1): 111–115, doi:10.1007/s10012-001-0111-4, S2CID 122332537
  • Guy, Richard K. (2004), Unsolved Problems in Number Theory, Problem Books in Mathematics, vol. 1 (3rd ed.), New York: Springer Verlag, pp. A3, A12, B21, ISBN 978-0-387-20860-2
  • Křížek, Michal; Luca, Florian & Somer, Lawrence (2001), 17 Lectures on Fermat Numbers: From Number Theory to Geometry, CMS books in mathematics, vol. 10, New York: Springer, ISBN 978-0-387-95332-8 - This book contains an extensive list of references.
  • Křížek, Michal; Luca, Florian & Somer, Lawrence (2002), "On the convergence of series of reciprocals of primes related to the Fermat numbers", Journal of Number Theory, 97 (1): 95–112, doi:10.1006/jnth.2002.2782
  • Luca, Florian (2000), "The anti-social Fermat number", American Mathematical Monthly, 107 (2): 171–173, doi:10.2307/2589441, JSTOR 2589441
  • Ribenboim, Paulo (1996), The New Book of Prime Number Records (3rd ed.), New York: Springer, ISBN 978-0-387-94457-9
  • Robinson, Raphael M. (1954), "Mersenne and Fermat Numbers", Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 5 (5): 842–846, doi:10.2307/2031878, JSTOR 2031878
  • Yabuta, M. (2001), "A simple proof of Carmichael's theorem on primitive divisors" (PDF), Fibonacci Quarterly, 39: 439–443, archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09

External links edit

  • Chris Caldwell, The Prime Glossary: Fermat number at The Prime Pages.
  • Luigi Morelli, History of Fermat Numbers
  • John Cosgrave, Unification of Mersenne and Fermat Numbers
  • Wilfrid Keller, Prime Factors of Fermat Numbers
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Fermat Number". MathWorld.
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Fermat Prime". MathWorld.
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Generalized Fermat Number". MathWorld.
  • Yves Gallot, Generalized Fermat Prime Search
  • Mark S. Manasse, Complete factorization of the ninth Fermat number (original announcement)
  • Peyton Hayslette, Largest Known Generalized Fermat Prime Announcement

fermat, number, mathematics, named, after, pierre, fermat, first, known, have, studied, them, positive, integer, form, displaystyle, where, negative, integer, first, 65537, 4294967297, 18446744073709551617, sequence, a000215, oeis, fermat, primenamed, afterpie. In mathematics a Fermat number named after Pierre de Fermat the first known to have studied them is a positive integer of the form F n 2 2 n 1 displaystyle F n 2 2 n 1 where n is a non negative integer The first few Fermat numbers are 3 5 17 257 65537 4294967297 18446744073709551617 sequence A000215 in the OEIS Fermat primeNamed afterPierre de FermatNo of known terms5Conjectured no of terms5Subsequence ofFermat numbersFirst terms3 5 17 257 65537Largest known term65537OEIS indexA019434 If 2k 1 is prime and k gt 0 then k itself must be a power of 2 1 so 2k 1 is a Fermat number such primes are called Fermat primes As of 2023 update the only known Fermat primes are F0 3 F1 5 F2 17 F3 257 and F4 65537 sequence A019434 in the OEIS Contents 1 Basic properties 1 1 Further properties 2 Primality 2 1 Heuristic arguments 2 2 Equivalent conditions 3 Factorization 4 Pseudoprimes and Fermat numbers 5 Other theorems about Fermat numbers 6 Relationship to constructible polygons 7 Applications of Fermat numbers 7 1 Pseudorandom number generation 8 Generalized Fermat numbers 8 1 Generalized Fermat primes of the form Fn a 8 2 Generalized Fermat primes of the form Fn a b 8 3 Largest known generalized Fermat primes 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksBasic properties editThe Fermat numbers satisfy the following recurrence relations F n F n 1 1 2 1 displaystyle F n F n 1 1 2 1 nbsp F n F 0 F n 1 2 displaystyle F n F 0 cdots F n 1 2 nbsp for n 1 F n F n 1 2 2 n 1 F 0 F n 2 displaystyle F n F n 1 2 2 n 1 F 0 cdots F n 2 nbsp F n F n 1 2 2 F n 2 1 2 displaystyle F n F n 1 2 2 F n 2 1 2 nbsp for n 2 Each of these relations can be proved by mathematical induction From the second equation we can deduce Goldbach s theorem named after Christian Goldbach no two Fermat numbers share a common integer factor greater than 1 To see this suppose that 0 i lt j and Fi and Fj have a common factor a gt 1 Then a divides both F 0 F j 1 displaystyle F 0 cdots F j 1 nbsp and Fj hence a divides their difference 2 Since a gt 1 this forces a 2 This is a contradiction because each Fermat number is clearly odd As a corollary we obtain another proof of the infinitude of the prime numbers for each Fn choose a prime factor pn then the sequence pn is an infinite sequence of distinct primes Further properties edit No Fermat prime can be expressed as the difference of two pth powers where p is an odd prime With the exception of F0 and F1 the last digit of a Fermat number is 7 The sum of the reciprocals of all the Fermat numbers sequence A051158 in the OEIS is irrational Solomon W Golomb 1963 Primality editFermat numbers and Fermat primes were first studied by Pierre de Fermat who conjectured that all Fermat numbers are prime Indeed the first five Fermat numbers F0 F4 are easily shown to be prime Fermat s conjecture was refuted by Leonhard Euler in 1732 when he showed that F 5 2 2 5 1 2 32 1 4294967297 641 6700417 displaystyle F 5 2 2 5 1 2 32 1 4294967297 641 times 6700417 nbsp Euler proved that every factor of Fn must have the form k 2n 1 1 later improved to k 2n 2 1 by Lucas for n 2 That 641 is a factor of F5 can be deduced from the equalities 641 27 5 1 and 641 24 54 It follows from the first equality that 27 5 1 mod 641 and therefore raising to the fourth power that 228 54 1 mod 641 On the other hand the second equality implies that 54 24 mod 641 These congruences imply that 232 1 mod 641 Fermat was probably aware of the form of the factors later proved by Euler so it seems curious that he failed to follow through on the straightforward calculation to find the factor 2 One common explanation is that Fermat made a computational mistake There are no other known Fermat primes Fn with n gt 4 but little is known about Fermat numbers for large n 3 In fact each of the following is an open problem Is Fn composite for all n gt 4 Are there infinitely many Fermat primes Eisenstein 1844 4 Are there infinitely many composite Fermat numbers Does a Fermat number exist that is not square free As of 2024 update it is known that Fn is composite for 5 n 32 although of these complete factorizations of Fn are known only for 0 n 11 and there are no known prime factors for n 20 and n 24 5 The largest Fermat number known to be composite is F18233954 and its prime factor 7 218233956 1 was discovered in October 2020 Heuristic arguments edit Heuristics suggest that F4 is the last Fermat prime The prime number theorem implies that a random integer in a suitable interval around N is prime with probability 1 ln N If one uses the heuristic that a Fermat number is prime with the same probability as a random integer of its size and that F5 F32 are composite then the expected number of Fermat primes beyond F4 or equivalently beyond F32 should be n 33 1 ln F n lt 1 ln 2 n 33 1 log 2 2 2 n 1 ln 2 2 32 lt 3 36 10 10 displaystyle sum n geq 33 frac 1 ln F n lt frac 1 ln 2 sum n geq 33 frac 1 log 2 2 2 n frac 1 ln 2 2 32 lt 3 36 times 10 10 nbsp One may interpret this number as an upper bound for the probability that a Fermat prime beyond F4 exists This argument is not a rigorous proof For one thing it assumes that Fermat numbers behave randomly but the factors of Fermat numbers have special properties Boklan and Conway published a more precise analysis suggesting that the probability that there is another Fermat prime is less than one in a billion 6 Anders Bjorn and Hans Riesel estimated the number of square factors of Fermat numbers from F5 onward as n 5 k 1 1 k k 2 n 1 ln k 2 n lt p 2 6 ln 2 n 5 1 n 2 n 0 02576 displaystyle sum n geq 5 sum k geq 1 frac 1 k k2 n 1 ln k2 n lt frac pi 2 6 ln 2 sum n geq 5 frac 1 n2 n approx 0 02576 nbsp in other words there are unlikely to be any non squarefree Fermat numbers and in general square factors of a 2 n b 2 n displaystyle a 2 n b 2 n nbsp are very rare for large n 7 Equivalent conditions edit Main article Pepin s test Let F n 2 2 n 1 displaystyle F n 2 2 n 1 nbsp be the nth Fermat number Pepin s test states that for n gt 0 F n displaystyle F n nbsp is prime if and only if 3 F n 1 2 1 mod F n displaystyle 3 F n 1 2 equiv 1 pmod F n nbsp The expression 3 F n 1 2 displaystyle 3 F n 1 2 nbsp can be evaluated modulo F n displaystyle F n nbsp by repeated squaring This makes the test a fast polynomial time algorithm But Fermat numbers grow so rapidly that only a handful of them can be tested in a reasonable amount of time and space There are some tests for numbers of the form k 2m 1 such as factors of Fermat numbers for primality Proth s theorem 1878 Let N k 2m 1 with odd k lt 2m If there is an integer a such thata N 1 2 1 mod N displaystyle a N 1 2 equiv 1 pmod N nbsp dd then N displaystyle N nbsp is prime Conversely if the above congruence does not hold and in addition a N 1 displaystyle left frac a N right 1 nbsp See Jacobi symbol dd then N displaystyle N nbsp is composite If N Fn gt 3 then the above Jacobi symbol is always equal to 1 for a 3 and this special case of Proth s theorem is known as Pepin s test Although Pepin s test and Proth s theorem have been implemented on computers to prove the compositeness of some Fermat numbers neither test gives a specific nontrivial factor In fact no specific prime factors are known for n 20 and 24 Factorization editBecause of Fermat numbers size it is difficult to factorize or even to check primality Pepin s test gives a necessary and sufficient condition for primality of Fermat numbers and can be implemented by modern computers The elliptic curve method is a fast method for finding small prime divisors of numbers Distributed computing project Fermatsearch has found some factors of Fermat numbers Yves Gallot s proth exe has been used to find factors of large Fermat numbers Edouard Lucas improving Euler s above mentioned result proved in 1878 that every factor of the Fermat number F n displaystyle F n nbsp with n at least 2 is of the form k 2 n 2 1 displaystyle k times 2 n 2 1 nbsp see Proth number where k is a positive integer By itself this makes it easy to prove the primality of the known Fermat primes Factorizations of the first 13 Fermat numbers are F0 21 1 3 is prime F1 22 1 5 is prime F2 24 1 17 is prime F3 28 1 257 is prime F4 216 1 65 537 is the largest known Fermat prime F5 232 1 4 294 967 297 641 6 700 417 fully factored 1732 8 F6 264 1 18 446 744 073 709 551 617 20 digits 274 177 67 280 421 310 721 14 digits fully factored 1855 F7 2128 1 340 282 366 920 938 463 463 374 607 431 768 211 457 39 digits 59 649 589 127 497 217 17 digits 5 704 689 200 685 129 054 721 22 digits fully factored 1970 F8 2256 1 115 792 089 237 316 195 423 570 985 008 687 907 853 269 984 665 640 564 039 457 584 007 913 129 639 937 78 digits 1 238 926 361 552 897 16 digits 93 461 639 715 357 977 769 163 558 199 606 896 584 051 237 541 638 188 580 280 321 62 digits fully factored 1980 F9 2512 1 13 407 807 929 942 597 099 574 024 998 205 846 127 479 365 820 592 393 377 723 561 443 721 764 030 073 546 976 801 874 298 166 903 427 690 031 858 186 486 050 853 753 882 811 946 569 946 433 649 006 084 097 155 digits 2 424 833 7 455 602 825 647 884 208 337 395 736 200 454 918 783 366 342 657 49 digits 741 640 062 627 530 801 524 787 141 901 937 474 059 940 781 097 519 023 905 821 316 144 415 759 504 705 008 092 818 711 693 940 737 99 digits fully factored 1990 F10 21024 1 179 769 313 486 231 590 772 930 304 835 356 329 624 224 137 217 309 digits 45 592 577 6 487 031 809 4 659 775 785 220 018 543 264 560 743 076 778 192 897 40 digits 130 439 874 405 488 189 727 484 806 217 820 753 127 014 424 577 252 digits fully factored 1995 F11 22048 1 32 317 006 071 311 007 300 714 8 193 555 853 611 059 596 230 657 617 digits 319 489 974 849 167 988 556 341 760 475 137 21 digits 3 560 841 906 445 833 920 513 22 digits 173 462 447 179 147 555 430 258 491 382 441 723 306 598 834 177 564 digits fully factored 1988 As of April 2023 update only F0 to F11 have been completely factored 5 The distributed computing project Fermat Search is searching for new factors of Fermat numbers 9 The set of all Fermat factors is A050922 or sorted A023394 in OEIS The following factors of Fermat numbers were known before 1950 since then digital computers have helped find more factors Year Finder Fermat number Factor 1732 Euler F 5 displaystyle F 5 nbsp 5 2 7 1 displaystyle 5 cdot 2 7 1 nbsp 1732 Euler F 5 displaystyle F 5 nbsp fully factored 52347 2 7 1 displaystyle 52347 cdot 2 7 1 nbsp 1855 Clausen F 6 displaystyle F 6 nbsp 1071 2 8 1 displaystyle 1071 cdot 2 8 1 nbsp 1855 Clausen F 6 displaystyle F 6 nbsp fully factored 262814145745 2 8 1 displaystyle 262814145745 cdot 2 8 1 nbsp 1877 Pervushin F 12 displaystyle F 12 nbsp 7 2 14 1 displaystyle 7 cdot 2 14 1 nbsp 1878 Pervushin F 23 displaystyle F 23 nbsp 5 2 25 1 displaystyle 5 cdot 2 25 1 nbsp 1886 Seelhoff F 36 displaystyle F 36 nbsp 5 2 39 1 displaystyle 5 cdot 2 39 1 nbsp 1899 Cunningham F 11 displaystyle F 11 nbsp 39 2 13 1 displaystyle 39 cdot 2 13 1 nbsp 1899 Cunningham F 11 displaystyle F 11 nbsp 119 2 13 1 displaystyle 119 cdot 2 13 1 nbsp 1903 Western F 9 displaystyle F 9 nbsp 37 2 16 1 displaystyle 37 cdot 2 16 1 nbsp 1903 Western F 12 displaystyle F 12 nbsp 397 2 16 1 displaystyle 397 cdot 2 16 1 nbsp 1903 Western F 12 displaystyle F 12 nbsp 973 2 16 1 displaystyle 973 cdot 2 16 1 nbsp 1903 Western F 18 displaystyle F 18 nbsp 13 2 20 1 displaystyle 13 cdot 2 20 1 nbsp 1903 Cullen F 38 displaystyle F 38 nbsp 3 2 41 1 displaystyle 3 cdot 2 41 1 nbsp 1906 Morehead F 73 displaystyle F 73 nbsp 5 2 75 1 displaystyle 5 cdot 2 75 1 nbsp 1925 Kraitchik F 15 displaystyle F 15 nbsp 579 2 21 1 displaystyle 579 cdot 2 21 1 nbsp As of July 2023 update 368 prime factors of Fermat numbers are known and 324 Fermat numbers are known to be composite 5 Several new Fermat factors are found each year 10 Pseudoprimes and Fermat numbers editLike composite numbers of the form 2p 1 every composite Fermat number is a strong pseudoprime to base 2 This is because all strong pseudoprimes to base 2 are also Fermat pseudoprimes i e 2 F n 1 1 mod F n displaystyle 2 F n 1 equiv 1 pmod F n nbsp for all Fermat numbers 11 In 1904 Cipolla showed that the product of at least two distinct prime or composite Fermat numbers F a F b F s displaystyle F a F b dots F s nbsp a gt b gt gt s gt 1 displaystyle a gt b gt dots gt s gt 1 nbsp will be a Fermat pseudoprime to base 2 if and only if 2 s gt a displaystyle 2 s gt a nbsp 12 Other theorems about Fermat numbers editLemma If n is a positive integer a n b n a b k 0 n 1 a k b n 1 k displaystyle a n b n a b sum k 0 n 1 a k b n 1 k nbsp dd Proof a b k 0 n 1 a k b n 1 k k 0 n 1 a k 1 b n 1 k k 0 n 1 a k b n k a n k 1 n 1 a k b n k k 1 n 1 a k b n k b n a n b n displaystyle begin aligned a b sum k 0 n 1 a k b n 1 k amp sum k 0 n 1 a k 1 b n 1 k sum k 0 n 1 a k b n k amp a n sum k 1 n 1 a k b n k sum k 1 n 1 a k b n k b n amp a n b n end aligned nbsp Theorem If 2 k 1 displaystyle 2 k 1 nbsp is an odd prime then k displaystyle k nbsp is a power of 2 Proof If k displaystyle k nbsp is a positive integer but not a power of 2 it must have an odd prime factor s gt 2 displaystyle s gt 2 nbsp and we may write k r s displaystyle k rs nbsp where 1 r lt k displaystyle 1 leq r lt k nbsp By the preceding lemma for positive integer m displaystyle m nbsp a b a m b m displaystyle a b mid a m b m nbsp where displaystyle mid nbsp means evenly divides Substituting a 2 r b 1 displaystyle a 2 r b 1 nbsp and m s displaystyle m s nbsp and using that s displaystyle s nbsp is odd 2 r 1 2 r s 1 displaystyle 2 r 1 mid 2 rs 1 nbsp and thus 2 r 1 2 k 1 displaystyle 2 r 1 mid 2 k 1 nbsp Because 1 lt 2 r 1 lt 2 k 1 displaystyle 1 lt 2 r 1 lt 2 k 1 nbsp it follows that 2 k 1 displaystyle 2 k 1 nbsp is not prime Therefore by contraposition k displaystyle k nbsp must be a power of 2 Theorem A Fermat prime cannot be a Wieferich prime Proof We show if p 2 m 1 displaystyle p 2 m 1 nbsp is a Fermat prime and hence by the above m is a power of 2 then the congruence 2 p 1 1 mod p 2 displaystyle 2 p 1 equiv 1 bmod p 2 nbsp does not hold Since 2 m p 1 displaystyle 2m p 1 nbsp we may write p 1 2 m l displaystyle p 1 2m lambda nbsp If the given congruence holds then p 2 2 2 m l 1 displaystyle p 2 2 2m lambda 1 nbsp and therefore 0 2 2 m l 1 2 m 1 2 m 1 1 2 2 m 2 4 m 2 2 l 1 m 2 l mod 2 m 1 displaystyle 0 equiv frac 2 2m lambda 1 2 m 1 2 m 1 left 1 2 2m 2 4m cdots 2 2 lambda 1 m right equiv 2 lambda pmod 2 m 1 nbsp Hence 2 m 1 2 l displaystyle 2 m 1 2 lambda nbsp and therefore 2 l 2 m 1 displaystyle 2 lambda geq 2 m 1 nbsp This leads to p 1 m 2 m 1 displaystyle p 1 geq m 2 m 1 nbsp which is impossible since m 2 displaystyle m geq 2 nbsp Theorem Edouard Lucas Any prime divisor p of F n 2 2 n 1 displaystyle F n 2 2 n 1 nbsp is of the form k 2 n 2 1 displaystyle k2 n 2 1 nbsp whenever n gt 1 Sketch of proof Let Gp denote the group of non zero integers modulo p under multiplication which has order p 1 Notice that 2 strictly speaking its image modulo p has multiplicative order equal to 2 n 1 displaystyle 2 n 1 nbsp in Gp since 2 2 n 1 displaystyle 2 2 n 1 nbsp is the square of 2 2 n displaystyle 2 2 n nbsp which is 1 modulo Fn so that by Lagrange s theorem p 1 is divisible by 2 n 1 displaystyle 2 n 1 nbsp and p has the form k 2 n 1 1 displaystyle k2 n 1 1 nbsp for some integer k as Euler knew Edouard Lucas went further Since n gt 1 the prime p above is congruent to 1 modulo 8 Hence as was known to Carl Friedrich Gauss 2 is a quadratic residue modulo p that is there is integer a such that p a 2 2 displaystyle p a 2 2 nbsp Then the image of a has order 2 n 2 displaystyle 2 n 2 nbsp in the group Gp and using Lagrange s theorem again p 1 is divisible by 2 n 2 displaystyle 2 n 2 nbsp and p has the form s 2 n 2 1 displaystyle s2 n 2 1 nbsp for some integer s In fact it can be seen directly that 2 is a quadratic residue modulo p since 1 2 2 n 1 2 2 1 2 n 1 mod p displaystyle left 1 2 2 n 1 right 2 equiv 2 1 2 n 1 pmod p nbsp Since an odd power of 2 is a quadratic residue modulo p so is 2 itself A Fermat number cannot be a perfect number or part of a pair of amicable numbers Luca 2000 The series of reciprocals of all prime divisors of Fermat numbers is convergent Krizek Luca amp Somer 2002 If nn 1 is prime there exists an integer m such that n 22m The equation nn 1 F 2m m holds in that case 13 14 Let the largest prime factor of the Fermat number Fn be P Fn Then P F n 2 n 2 4 n 9 1 displaystyle P F n geq 2 n 2 4n 9 1 nbsp Grytczuk Luca amp Wojtowicz 2001 Relationship to constructible polygons edit nbsp Number of sides of known constructible polygons having up to 1000 sides bold or odd side count red Main article Constructible polygon Carl Friedrich Gauss developed the theory of Gaussian periods in his Disquisitiones Arithmeticae and formulated a sufficient condition for the constructibility of regular polygons Gauss stated that this condition was also necessary 15 but never published a proof Pierre Wantzel gave a full proof of necessity in 1837 The result is known as the Gauss Wantzel theorem An n sided regular polygon can be constructed with compass and straightedge if and only if n is either a power of 2 or the product of a power of 2 and distinct Fermat primes in other words if and only if n is of the form n 2k or n 2kp1p2 ps where k s are nonnegative integers and the pi are distinct Fermat primes A positive integer n is of the above form if and only if its totient f n is a power of 2 Applications of Fermat numbers editPseudorandom number generation edit Fermat primes are particularly useful in generating pseudo random sequences of numbers in the range 1 N where N is a power of 2 The most common method used is to take any seed value between 1 and P 1 where P is a Fermat prime Now multiply this by a number A which is greater than the square root of P and is a primitive root modulo P i e it is not a quadratic residue Then take the result modulo P The result is the new value for the RNG V j 1 A V j mod P displaystyle V j 1 A times V j bmod P nbsp see linear congruential generator RANDU This is useful in computer science since most data structures have members with 2X possible values For example a byte has 256 28 possible values 0 255 Therefore to fill a byte or bytes with random values a random number generator that produces values 1 256 can be used the byte taking the output value 1 Very large Fermat primes are of particular interest in data encryption for this reason This method produces only pseudorandom values as after P 1 repetitions the sequence repeats A poorly chosen multiplier can result in the sequence repeating sooner than P 1 Generalized Fermat numbers editNumbers of the form a 2 n b 2 n displaystyle a 2 overset n b 2 overset n nbsp with a b any coprime integers a gt b gt 0 are called generalized Fermat numbers An odd prime p is a generalized Fermat number if and only if p is congruent to 1 mod 4 Here we consider only the case n gt 0 so 3 2 2 0 1 displaystyle 2 2 0 1 nbsp is not a counterexample An example of a probable prime of this form is 1215131072 242131072 found by Kellen Shenton 16 By analogy with the ordinary Fermat numbers it is common to write generalized Fermat numbers of the form a 2 n 1 displaystyle a 2 overset n 1 nbsp as Fn a In this notation for instance the number 100 000 001 would be written as F3 10 In the following we shall restrict ourselves to primes of this form a 2 n 1 displaystyle a 2 overset n 1 nbsp such primes are called Fermat primes base a Of course these primes exist only if a is even If we require n gt 0 then Landau s fourth problem asks if there are infinitely many generalized Fermat primes Fn a Generalized Fermat primes of the form Fn a edit Because of the ease of proving their primality generalized Fermat primes have become in recent years a topic for research within the field of number theory Many of the largest known primes today are generalized Fermat primes Generalized Fermat numbers can be prime only for even a because if a is odd then every generalized Fermat number will be divisible by 2 The smallest prime number F n a displaystyle F n a nbsp with n gt 4 displaystyle n gt 4 nbsp is F 5 30 displaystyle F 5 30 nbsp or 3032 1 Besides we can define half generalized Fermat numbers for an odd base a half generalized Fermat number to base a for odd a is a 2 n 1 2 displaystyle frac a 2 n 1 2 nbsp and it is also to be expected that there will be only finitely many half generalized Fermat primes for each odd base In this list the generalized Fermat numbers F n a displaystyle F n a nbsp to an even a are a 2 n 1 displaystyle a 2 n 1 nbsp for odd a they are a 2 n 1 2 displaystyle frac a 2 n 1 2 nbsp If a is a perfect power with an odd exponent sequence A070265 in the OEIS then all generalized Fermat number can be algebraic factored so they cannot be prime See 17 18 for even bases up to 1000 and 19 for odd bases For the smallest number n displaystyle n nbsp such that F n a displaystyle F n a nbsp is prime see OEIS A253242 a displaystyle a nbsp numbers n displaystyle n nbsp such thatF n a displaystyle F n a nbsp is prime a displaystyle a nbsp numbers n displaystyle n nbsp such thatF n a displaystyle F n a nbsp is prime a displaystyle a nbsp numbers n displaystyle n nbsp such thatF n a displaystyle F n a nbsp is prime a displaystyle a nbsp numbers n displaystyle n nbsp such thatF n a displaystyle F n a nbsp is prime 2 0 1 2 3 4 18 0 34 2 50 3 0 1 2 4 5 6 19 1 35 1 2 6 51 1 3 6 4 0 1 2 3 20 1 2 36 0 1 52 0 5 0 1 2 21 0 2 5 37 0 53 3 6 0 1 2 22 0 38 54 1 2 5 7 2 23 2 39 1 2 55 8 none 24 1 2 40 0 1 56 1 2 9 0 1 3 4 5 25 0 1 41 4 57 0 2 10 0 1 26 1 42 0 58 0 11 1 2 27 none 43 3 59 1 12 0 28 0 2 44 4 60 0 13 0 2 3 29 1 2 4 45 0 1 61 0 1 2 14 1 30 0 5 46 0 2 9 62 15 1 31 47 3 63 16 0 1 2 32 none 48 2 64 none 17 2 33 0 3 49 1 65 1 2 5 For the smallest even base a such that F n a displaystyle F n a nbsp is prime see OEIS A056993 n displaystyle n nbsp bases a such that F n a displaystyle F n a nbsp is prime only consider even a OEIS sequence 0 2 4 6 10 12 16 18 22 28 30 36 40 42 46 52 58 60 66 70 72 78 82 88 96 100 102 106 108 112 126 130 136 138 148 150 A006093 1 2 4 6 10 14 16 20 24 26 36 40 54 56 66 74 84 90 94 110 116 120 124 126 130 134 146 150 156 160 170 176 180 184 A005574 2 2 4 6 16 20 24 28 34 46 48 54 56 74 80 82 88 90 106 118 132 140 142 154 160 164 174 180 194 198 204 210 220 228 A000068 3 2 4 118 132 140 152 208 240 242 288 290 306 378 392 426 434 442 508 510 540 542 562 596 610 664 680 682 732 782 A006314 4 2 44 74 76 94 156 158 176 188 198 248 288 306 318 330 348 370 382 396 452 456 470 474 476 478 560 568 598 642 A006313 5 30 54 96 112 114 132 156 332 342 360 376 428 430 432 448 562 588 726 738 804 850 884 1068 1142 1198 1306 1540 1568 A006315 6 102 162 274 300 412 562 592 728 1084 1094 1108 1120 1200 1558 1566 1630 1804 1876 2094 2162 2164 2238 2336 2388 A006316 7 120 190 234 506 532 548 960 1738 1786 2884 3000 3420 3476 3658 4258 5788 6080 6562 6750 7692 8296 9108 9356 9582 A056994 8 278 614 892 898 1348 1494 1574 1938 2116 2122 2278 2762 3434 4094 4204 4728 5712 5744 6066 6508 6930 7022 7332 A056995 9 46 1036 1318 1342 2472 2926 3154 3878 4386 4464 4474 4482 4616 4688 5374 5698 5716 5770 6268 6386 6682 7388 7992 A057465 10 824 1476 1632 2462 2484 2520 3064 3402 3820 4026 6640 7026 7158 9070 12202 12548 12994 13042 15358 17646 17670 A057002 11 150 2558 4650 4772 11272 13236 15048 23302 26946 29504 31614 33308 35054 36702 37062 39020 39056 43738 44174 45654 A088361 12 1534 7316 17582 18224 28234 34954 41336 48824 51558 51914 57394 61686 62060 89762 96632 98242 100540 101578 109696 A088362 13 30406 71852 85654 111850 126308 134492 144642 147942 150152 165894 176206 180924 201170 212724 222764 225174 241600 A226528 14 67234 101830 114024 133858 162192 165306 210714 216968 229310 232798 422666 426690 449732 462470 468144 498904 506664 A226529 15 70906 167176 204462 249830 321164 330716 332554 429370 499310 524552 553602 743788 825324 831648 855124 999236 1041870 A226530 16 48594 108368 141146 189590 255694 291726 292550 357868 440846 544118 549868 671600 843832 857678 1024390 1057476 1087540 A251597 17 62722 130816 228188 386892 572186 689186 909548 1063730 1176694 1361244 1372930 1560730 1660830 1717162 1722230 1766192 A253854 18 24518 40734 145310 361658 525094 676754 773620 1415198 1488256 1615588 1828858 2042774 2514168 2611294 2676404 3060772 A244150 19 75898 341112 356926 475856 1880370 2061748 2312092 2733014 2788032 2877652 2985036 3214654 3638450 4896418 5897794 A243959 20 919444 1059094 1951734 1963736 A321323 The smallest bases b b n such that b2n 1 for given n 0 1 2 is prime are 2 2 2 2 2 30 102 120 278 46 824 150 1534 30406 67234 70906 48594 62722 24518 75898 919444 sequence A056993 in the OEIS Conversely the smallest k k n such that 2n k 1 for given n is prime are 1 1 1 0 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 2 2 1 1 0 4 1 The next term is unknown sequence A079706 in the OEIS also see OEIS A228101 and OEIS A084712 A more elaborate theory can be used to predict the number of bases for which F n a displaystyle F n a nbsp will be prime for fixed n displaystyle n nbsp The number of generalized Fermat primes can be roughly expected to halve as n displaystyle n nbsp is increased by 1 Generalized Fermat primes of the form Fn a b edit It is also possible to construct generalized Fermat primes of the form a 2 n b 2 n displaystyle a 2 n b 2 n nbsp As in the case where b 1 numbers of this form will always be divisible by 2 if a b is even but it is still possible to define generalized half Fermat primes of this type For the smallest prime of the form F n a b displaystyle F n a b nbsp for odd a b displaystyle a b nbsp see also OEIS A111635 a displaystyle a nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp numbers n displaystyle n nbsp such thatF n a b a 2 n b 2 n gcd a b 2 displaystyle F n a b frac a 2 n b 2 n gcd a b 2 nbsp is prime 20 7 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 3 1 0 1 2 4 5 6 3 2 0 1 2 4 1 0 1 2 3 equivalent to F n 2 1 displaystyle F n 2 1 nbsp 4 3 0 2 4 5 1 0 1 2 5 2 0 1 2 5 3 1 2 3 5 4 1 2 6 1 0 1 2 6 5 0 1 3 4 7 1 2 7 2 1 2 7 3 0 1 8 7 4 0 2 7 5 1 4 7 6 0 2 4 8 1 none 8 3 0 1 2 8 5 0 1 2 8 7 1 4 9 1 0 1 3 4 5 equivalent to F n 3 1 displaystyle F n 3 1 nbsp 9 2 0 2 9 4 0 1 equivalent to F n 3 2 displaystyle F n 3 2 nbsp 9 5 0 1 2 9 7 2 9 8 0 2 5 10 1 0 1 10 3 0 1 3 10 7 0 1 2 10 9 0 1 2 11 1 1 2 11 2 0 2 11 3 0 3 11 4 1 2 11 5 1 11 6 0 1 2 11 7 2 4 5 11 8 0 6 11 9 1 2 11 10 5 12 1 0 12 5 0 4 12 7 0 1 3 12 11 0 Largest known generalized Fermat primes edit The following is a list of the five largest known generalized Fermat primes 21 The whole top 5 is discovered by participants in the PrimeGrid project Rank Prime number Generalized Fermat notation Number of digits Discovery date ref 1 19637361048576 1 F20 1963736 6 598 776 Sep 2022 22 2 19517341048576 1 F20 1951734 6 595 985 Aug 2022 23 3 10590941048576 1 F20 1059094 6 317 602 Nov 2018 24 4 9194441048576 1 F20 919444 6 253 210 Sep 2017 25 5 81 220498148 1 F2 3 25124537 6 170 560 Jun 2023 26 On the Prime Pages one can find the current top 100 generalized Fermat primes See also editConstructible polygon which regular polygons are constructible partially depends on Fermat primes Double exponential function Lucas theorem Mersenne prime Pierpont prime Primality test Proth s theorem Pseudoprime Sierpinski number Sylvester s sequenceNotes edit For any positive odd number m displaystyle m nbsp 2 2 k m 1 a 1 a m 1 a m 2 a 1 displaystyle 2 2 k m 1 a 1 a m 1 a m 2 ldots a 1 nbsp where a 2 2 k displaystyle a 2 2 k nbsp Krizek Luca amp Somer 2001 p 38 Remark 4 15 Chris Caldwell Prime Links special forms Archived 2013 12 24 at the Wayback Machine at The Prime Pages Ribenboim 1996 p 88 a b c Keller Wilfrid January 18 2021 Prime Factors of Fermat Numbers ProthSearch com retrieved January 19 2021 Boklan Kent D Conway John H 2017 Expect at most one billionth of a new Fermat Prime The Mathematical Intelligencer 39 1 3 5 arXiv 1605 01371 doi 10 1007 s00283 016 9644 3 S2CID 119165671 a b Bjorn Anders Riesel Hans 1998 Factors of generalized Fermat numbers Mathematics of Computation 67 221 441 446 doi 10 1090 S0025 5718 98 00891 6 ISSN 0025 5718 Sandifer Ed How Euler Did it PDF MAA Online Mathematical Association of America Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 2020 06 13 F E R M A T S E A R C H O R G Home page www fermatsearch org Retrieved 7 April 2018 FERMATSEARCH ORG News www fermatsearch org Retrieved 7 April 2018 Schroeder M R 2006 Number theory in science and communication with applications in cryptography physics digital information computing and self similarity Springer series in information sciences 4th ed Berlin New York Springer p 216 ISBN 978 3 540 26596 2 OCLC 61430240 Krizek Michal Luca Florian Somer Lawrence 14 March 2013 17 Lectures on Fermat Numbers From Number Theory to Geometry Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9780387218502 Retrieved 7 April 2018 via Google Books Jeppe Stig Nielsen S n n n 1 Weisstein Eric W Sierpinski Number of the First Kind MathWorld Gauss Carl Friedrich 1966 Disquisitiones arithmeticae New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 458 460 Retrieved 25 January 2023 PRP Top Records search for x 131072 y 131072 by Henri amp Renaud Lifchitz Generalized Fermat Primes jeppesn dk Retrieved 7 April 2018 Generalized Fermat primes for bases up to 1030 noprimeleftbehind net Retrieved 7 April 2018 Generalized Fermat primes in odd bases fermatquotient com Retrieved 7 April 2018 Original GFN factors www prothsearch com Caldwell Chris K The Top Twenty Generalized Fermat The Prime Pages Retrieved 11 July 2019 19637361048576 1 19517341048576 1 10590941048576 1 9194441048576 1 81 220498148 1References editGolomb S W January 1 1963 On the sum of the reciprocals of the Fermat numbers and related irrationalities Canadian Journal of Mathematics 15 475 478 doi 10 4153 CJM 1963 051 0 S2CID 123138118 Grytczuk A Luca F amp Wojtowicz M 2001 Another note on the greatest prime factors of Fermat numbers Southeast Asian Bulletin of Mathematics 25 1 111 115 doi 10 1007 s10012 001 0111 4 S2CID 122332537 Guy Richard K 2004 Unsolved Problems in Number Theory Problem Books in Mathematics vol 1 3rd ed New York Springer Verlag pp A3 A12 B21 ISBN 978 0 387 20860 2 Krizek Michal Luca Florian amp Somer Lawrence 2001 17 Lectures on Fermat Numbers From Number Theory to Geometry CMS books in mathematics vol 10 New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 95332 8 This book contains an extensive list of references Krizek Michal Luca Florian amp Somer Lawrence 2002 On the convergence of series of reciprocals of primes related to the Fermat numbers Journal of Number Theory 97 1 95 112 doi 10 1006 jnth 2002 2782 Luca Florian 2000 The anti social Fermat number American Mathematical Monthly 107 2 171 173 doi 10 2307 2589441 JSTOR 2589441 Ribenboim Paulo 1996 The New Book of Prime Number Records 3rd ed New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 94457 9 Robinson Raphael M 1954 Mersenne and Fermat Numbers Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society 5 5 842 846 doi 10 2307 2031878 JSTOR 2031878 Yabuta M 2001 A simple proof of Carmichael s theorem on primitive divisors PDF Fibonacci Quarterly 39 439 443 archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09External links editChris Caldwell The Prime Glossary Fermat number at The Prime Pages Luigi Morelli History of Fermat Numbers John Cosgrave Unification of Mersenne and Fermat Numbers Wilfrid Keller Prime Factors of Fermat Numbers Weisstein Eric W Fermat Number MathWorld Weisstein Eric W Fermat Prime MathWorld Weisstein Eric W Generalized Fermat Number MathWorld Yves Gallot Generalized Fermat Prime Search Mark S Manasse Complete factorization of the ninth Fermat number original announcement Peyton Hayslette Largest Known Generalized Fermat Prime Announcement Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fermat number amp oldid 1222899751, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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