• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Record For Largest Known Prime Number Broken By Amateur Mathematician Using Free Software

October 23, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The largest prime number ever discovered has been found by an amateur mathematician using Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS).

Prime numbers, as you likely learned in school, are numbers that can only be divided by one and themselves. There are an infinite number of them, with all numbers greater than 1 being either a prime number or a composite of primes. But having discovered a whole lot of them, new primes are now notoriously difficult to find. 

Advertisement

Mathematicians are not totally ignorant of how to find them, nor forced to go through each individual number and check. Mersenne primes are an example of a prime with a nice pattern to them, as they can be expressed as 2P-1, or 2 to the power of a prime, minus 1. Small ones include 31 (25-1) and 127 (27-1), but they scale pretty quickly – and recent ones have generally been found with the help of computer power.

The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS) looks for these Mersenne primes, allowing anyone to download software and help search for them, with a $3,000 reward for anyone who comes across one. The last 18 Mersenne primes have been found by GIMPS, and now 36-year-old researcher and former NVIDIA employee Luke Durant has found the largest Mersenne prime so far by developing infrastructure that can run GIMPS across many GPU servers.

Durant, from San Jose, California, found the prime number 2136,279,841-1, with the prime number taking the name M136279841.

“Physicists keep talking about, you know, information in the universe being an important first principle, so let me go try to find a new unique piece of big information and see if that helps guide my thinking about large numbers,” Durant told Numberphile, explaining his motivation to try to find it.

Advertisement

“It was it was it actually pretty exciting to me to you know reach a scale of genuinely a global supercomputer put together in my office and [it] found a unique result. It’s pretty fun,” he added.

Proving numbers are prime gets really interesting. With smaller primes, say 11, it’s an easy task. Simply divide it by all the smaller integers (1-10) and see if you are left with any integers. If it is only divisible by 1 and itself, it’s a prime, as it can’t be made from two smaller numbers. That’s what a prime is. But for larger numbers, say 15,678,547,356,947 for example, you can see how it would be more time-consuming. Fortunately, mathematicians have some pretty neat tricks to test if a number is a prime or not, without resorting to working out if 15,678,547,356,947 is divisible by 3,187.

One method, described by Numberphile below, involves calling “witness” numbers to test if the number is prime. This gets complicated, with some numbers being better witnesses than others.



Advertisement

To test this prime number, GIMPS first performs a Fermat Primality Test, which can tell you whether the number is likely to be a prime. The new prime passed, but unfortunately, there are a small fraction of numbers known as “Carmichael numbers” which give false positives for prime numbers, meaning you can’t be fully sure it is a prime using this method. 

They then used the more definitive Lucas-Lehmer primality test for determining if Mersenne numbers are primes, finding again that the candidate is a prime. The team opted for October 12 as the date of discovery, the date that the Lucas-Lehmer test was run.



Credit for the discovery goes to Durant, Mihai Preda, and George Woltman for designing the software, and Aaron Blosser for maintaining the server. The new prime, as well as being the largest known prime number, adds to GIMPS’ dominance in finding Mersenne primes, and becomes only the 52nd known Mersenne prime since they were first studied over 350 years ago.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Cricket-Manchester test likely to be postponed after India COVID-19 case
  2. EU to attend U.S. trade meeting put in doubt by French anger
  3. Soccer-West Ham win again, Leicester and Napoli falter
  4. Was Jesus A Hallucinogenic Mushroom? One Scholar Certainly Thought So

Source Link: Record For Largest Known Prime Number Broken By Amateur Mathematician Using Free Software

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • 5-Million-Year-Old Antarctic Ice Core Contains Sample Of Air From The Pliocene Epoch
  • Flamingos Make Tiny Tornadoes In Water To Trap Their Prey
  • Off The Coast Of California Strange And Regular Circular Structures Line The Ocean Floor
  • Jupiter’s Aurorae Change Faster Than Previously Thought – But There’s Something Even Odder Going On
  • US Measles Cases Pass 1,000, Speeding Towards Worst Outbreaks Since 2019
  • UMa3/U1: Is This The Smallest Galaxy Ever Discovered, Or Something Else?
  • A Flying Car That Can Reach Over 155 MPH In Air Might Come To Market In 2026
  • World-First 3D-Printed Skin Robot Aims To Help Burn Patients In Australia
  • Dramatic Video Shows “First-Ever” Fault Movement Surface Rupture Caught On Camera
  • Migraine Drug Could Be First To Treat Symptoms That Come Before The Headache
  • You’re Not Actually Supposed To Rinse Your Mouth After Brushing Your Teeth
  • 170 Years On, Thoreau’s Detailed Diaries Have A Lot To Teach Us About The Seasons
  • Obsidian Blades At The Main Aztec Temple Came From Enemy Territory
  • Humans Glow, And It’s A Light That Probably Goes Out When We Die
  • The Gannon Storm: What NASA Learned From The Biggest Geomagnetic Storm In Over 2 Decades
  • Hypersonic Rocket Plane Successfully Performs Second Test, Soaring Past Mach 5
  • A 13-Year-Old Boy Found A “Lost Sea” Beneath The US. It’s So Vast, It Has Never Been Fully Explored
  • Pollution Related To Space Is Getting Worse As Trump And Musk Target Research And Regulations
  • Invasive, Venomous Ants Lived Under The Radar In The US For 90 Years – Now They’re Spreading
  • Updated Prognosis: The Universe May End 10¹⁰²² Years Sooner Than We Thought
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version