8 · 64187701 + 1
At this site we maintain a list of the 5000 Largest Known Primes which is updated hourly. This list is the most important PrimePages database: a collection of research, records and results all about prime numbers. This page summarizes our information about one of these primes.
| Description: | 8 · 64187701 + 1 |
|---|---|
| Verification status (*): | Proven |
| Official Comment (*): | [none] |
| Proof-code(s): (*): | p258 : Batalov, Srsieve, CRUS, OpenPFGW |
| Decimal Digits: | 246166 (log10 is 246165.15913682) |
| Rank (*): | 21644 (digit rank is 1) |
| Entrance Rank (*): | 2014 |
| Currently on list? (*): | no |
| Submitted: | 9/28/2011 04:18:18 CDT |
| Last modified: | 9/28/2011 05:20:23 CDT |
| Removed (*): | 7/17/2012 13:02:59 CDT |
| Database id: | 102237 |
| Status Flags: | none |
| Score (*): | 42.3272 (normalized score 0.1243) |
Verification data:
The Top 5000 Primes is a list for proven primes only. In order to maintain the integrity of this list, we seek to verify the primality of all submissions. We are currently unable to check all proofs (ECPP, KP, ...), but we will at least trial divide and PRP check every entry before it is included in the list.
field value prime_id 102237 person_id 9 machine RedHat P4 P4 what prime notes Command: /home/caldwell/client/pfgw -t -q"8*641^87701+1" 2>&1 PFGW Version 3.4.5.32BIT.20110215.x86_Dev [GWNUM 26.5] Primality testing 8*641^87701+1 [N-1, Brillhart-Lehmer-Selfridge] Running N-1 test using base 3 Calling Brillhart-Lehmer-Selfridge with factored part 100.00% 8*641^87701+1 is prime! (2020.9026s+0.0155s) [Elapsed time: 33.68 minutes] modified 2020-07-07 17:30:30 created 2011-09-28 04:23:01 id 134065
field value prime_id 102237 person_id 9 machine Ditto P4 P4 what trial_divided notes Command: /home/ditto/client/TrialDiv/TrialDiv -q 8 641 87701 1 2>&1 [Elapsed time: 8.927 seconds] modified 2020-07-07 17:30:30 created 2011-09-28 04:35:01 id 134066
Query times: 0.0005 seconds to select prime, 0.0006 seconds to seek comments.
Printed from the PrimePages <primes.utm.edu> © Chris Caldwell.