Wall–Sun–Sun prime
Named after | Donald Dines Wall, Zhi Hong Sun and Zhi Wei Sun |
---|---|
Publication year | 1992 |
Number of known terms | 0 |
Conjectured number of terms | Infinite |
In number theory, a Wall–Sun–Sun prime or Fibonacci–Wieferich prime is a certain kind of prime number which is conjectured to exist, although none are known.
Definition
The period of Fibonacci numbers modulo prime p is called the Pisano period and denoted . It follows that p divides . A prime p such that p2 divides is called Wall–Sun–Sun prime.
For a prime p ≠ 2, 5, the Pisano period is known to divide , where the Legendre symbol has the values
This observation gives rise to an equivalent definition that a prime p is a Wall–Sun–Sun prime if p2 divides the Fibonacci number .[1]
Equivalently, a prime p is a Wall–Sun–Sun prime if Lp ≡ 1 (mod p2), where Lp is the p-th Lucas number.[2]:42
Existence
Unsolved problem in mathematics: Are there any Wall–Sun–Sun primes? If yes, are there an infinite number of them? (more unsolved problems in mathematics) |
Originally, Donald Dines Wall hypothesized the non-existence of Wall–Sun–Sun primes, but could not prove they were impossible, hence the question remains open. It has since been conjectured that there are infinitely many Wall–Sun–Sun primes.[3] No Wall–Sun–Sun primes are known as of April 2016.
In 2007, Richard J. McIntosh and Eric L. Roettger showed that if any exist, they must be > 2×1014.[4] Dorais and Klyve extended this range to 9.7×1014 without finding such a prime.[5]
In December 2011, another search was started by the PrimeGrid project.[6] As of April 2016, PrimeGrid has extended the search limit to 1.9×1017 and continues.[7]
History
Wall–Sun–Sun primes are named after Donald Dines Wall,[8] Zhi Hong Sun and Zhi Wei Sun; Z. H. Sun and Z. W. Sun showed in 1992 that if the first case of Fermat's last theorem was false for a certain prime p, then p would have to be a Wall–Sun–Sun prime.[9] As a result, prior to Andrew Wiles' proof of Fermat's last theorem, the search for Wall–Sun–Sun primes was also the search for a potential counterexample to this centuries-old conjecture.
Generalizations
A tribonacci–Wieferich prime is a prime p satisfying h(p) = h(p2), where h is the least positive integer satisfying [Th,Th+1,Th+2] ≡ [T0, T1, T2] (mod m) and Tn denotes the n-th tribonacci number. No tribonacci–Wieferich prime exists below 1011.[10]
A Pell–Wieferich prime is a prime p satisfying p2 divides Pp−1, when p congruent to 1 or 7 (mod 8), or p2 divides Pp+1, when p congruent to 3 or 5 (mod 8), where Pn denotes the n-th Pell number. For example, 13, 31, and 1546463 are Pell–Wieferich primes, and no others below 109 (sequence A238736 in OEIS). In fact, Pell–Wieferich primes are 2-Wall–Sun–Sun primes.
Near-Wall–Sun–Sun primes
A prime p such that with small |A| is called near-Wall–Sun–Sun prime.[11] Near-Wall–Sun–Sun primes with A = 0 would be Wall–Sun–Sun primes.
Wall–Sun–Sun primes with discriminant D
Wall–Sun–Sun primes can be considered in the field with discriminant D. For the conventional Wall–Sun–Sun primes, D = 5. In the general case, a Lucas–Wieferich prime p associated with (P, Q) is a Wieferich prime to base Q and a Wall–Sun–Sun prime with discriminant D = P2 – 4Q.[1] In this definition, the prime p should be odd and not divide D.
It is conjectured that for every natural number D, there are infinitely many Wall–Sun–Sun primes with discriminant D.
The case of corresponds to the k-Wall–Sun–Sun primes, for which Wall–Sun–Sun primes represent a special case with k = 1. The k-Wall–Sun–Sun primes can be explicitly defined as primes p such that p2 divides the k-Fibonacci number , where Fk(n) = Un(k, −1) is a Lucas sequence of first kind with discriminant D = k2 + 4 and is the Pisano period of k-Fibonacci numbers modulo p.[12] For a prime p ≠ 2 and not dividing D, this condition is equivalent to any of the following two:
- p2 divides , where is the Kronecker symbol;
- Vp(k, −1) ≡ k (mod p2), where Vn(k, −1) is a Lucas sequence of the second kind.
The smallest k-Wall–Sun–Sun prime for k = 2, 3, ... are
- 13, 241, 2, 3, 191, 5, 2, 3, 2683, ...
k | square-free part of D ( A013946) | k-Wall–Sun–Sun primes | notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 5 | ... | |
2 | 2 | 13, 31, 1546463, ... | |
3 | 13 | 241, ... | |
4 | 5 | 2, 3, ... | Since this is the second time for which D=5, thus plus the prime factors of 2*2−1 which does not divide 5. Since k is divisible by 4, thus plus the prime 2. |
5 | 29 | 3, 11, ... | |
6 | 10 | 191, 643, 134339, 25233137, ... | |
7 | 53 | 5, ... | |
8 | 17 | 2, ... | Since k is divisible by 4, thus plus the prime 2. |
9 | 85 | 3, 204520559, ... | |
10 | 26 | 2683, 3967, 18587, ... | |
11 | 5 | ... | Since this is the third time for which D=5, thus plus the prime factors of 2*3−1 which does not divide 5. |
12 | 37 | 2, 7, 89, 257, 631, ... | Since k is divisible by 4, thus plus the prime 2. |
13 | 173 | 3, 227, 392893, ... | |
14 | 2 | 3, 13, 31, 1546463, ... | Since this is the second time for which D=2, thus plus the prime factors of 2*2−1 which does not divide 2. |
15 | 229 | 29, 4253, ... | |
16 | 65 | 2, 1327, 8831, 569831, ... | Since k is divisible by 4, thus plus the prime 2. |
17 | 293 | 1192625911, ... | |
18 | 82 | 3, 5, 11, 769, 256531, 624451181, ... | |
19 | 365 | 11, 233, 165083, ... | |
20 | 101 | 2, 7, 19301, ... | Since k is divisible by 4, thus plus the prime 2. |
21 | 445 | 23, 31, 193, ... | |
22 | 122 | 3, 281, ... | |
23 | 533 | 3, 103, ... | |
24 | 145 | 2, 7, 11, 17, 37, 41, 1319, ... | Since k is divisible by 4, thus plus the prime 2. |
25 | 629 | 5, 7, 2687, ... | |
26 | 170 | 79, ... | |
27 | 733 | 3, 1663, ... | |
28 | 197 | 2, 1431615389, ... | Since k is divisible by 4, thus plus the prime 2. |
29 | 5 | 7, ... | Since this is the fourth time for which D=5, thus plus the prime factors of 2*4−1 which does not divide 5. |
30 | 226 | 23, 1277, ... |
D | Wall–Sun–Sun primes with discriminant D (checked up to 109) | OEIS sequence |
---|---|---|
1 | 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, ... (All odd primes) | A065091 |
2 | 13, 31, 1546463, ... | A238736 |
3 | 103, 2297860813, ... | A238490 |
4 | 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, ... (All odd primes) | |
5 | ... | |
6 | (3), 7, 523, ... | |
7 | ... | |
8 | 13, 31, 1546463, ... | |
9 | (3), 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, ... (All odd primes) | |
10 | 191, 643, 134339, 25233137, ... | |
11 | ... | |
12 | 103, 2297860813, ... | |
13 | 241, ... | |
14 | 6707879, 93140353, ... | |
15 | (3), 181, 1039, 2917, 2401457, ... | |
16 | 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, ... (All odd primes) | |
17 | ... | |
18 | 13, 31, 1546463, ... | |
19 | 79, 1271731, 13599893, 31352389, ... | |
20 | 3, ... | |
21 | 46179311, ... | |
22 | 43, 73, 409, 28477, ... | |
23 | 7, 733, ... | |
24 | 7, 523, ... | |
25 | 3, (5), 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, ... (All odd primes) | |
26 | 2683, 3967, 18587, ... | |
27 | 103, 2297860813, ... | |
28 | ... | |
29 | 3, 11, ... | |
30 | ... |
See also
- Wieferich prime
- Wolstenholme prime
- Wilson prime
- PrimeGrid
- Fibonacci prime
- Pisano period
- Table of congruences
References
- 1 2 A.-S. Elsenhans, J. Jahnel (2010). "The Fibonacci sequence modulo p2 -- An investigation by computer for p < 1014". arXiv:1006.0824.
- ↑ Andrejić, V. (2006). "On Fibonacci powers" (PDF). Univ. Beograd Publ. Elektrotehn. Fak. Ser. Mat. 17: 38–44. doi:10.2298/PETF0617038A.
- ↑ Klaška, Jiří (2007), "Short remark on Fibonacci−Wieferich primes", Acta Mathematica Universitatis Ostraviensis 15 (1): 21–25.
- ↑ McIntosh, R. J.; Roettger, E. L. (2007). "A search for Fibonacci−Wieferich and Wolstenholme primes" (PDF). Mathematics of Computation 76 (260): 2087–2094. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-07-01955-2.
- ↑ Dorais, F. G.; Klyve, D. W. (2010). "Near Wieferich primes up to 6.7 × 1015" (PDF).
- ↑ Wall–Sun–Sun Prime Search project at PrimeGrid
- ↑ Wall–Sun–Sun Prime Search statistics at PrimeGrid
- ↑ Wall, D. D. (1960), "Fibonacci Series Modulo m", American Mathematical Monthly 67 (6): 525–532, doi:10.2307/2309169
- ↑ Sun, Zhi-Hong; Sun, Zhi-Wei (1992), "Fibonacci numbers and Fermat’s last theorem" (PDF), Acta Arithmetica 60 (4): 371–388
- ↑ Klaška, Jiří (2008). "A search for Tribonacci–Wieferich primes". Acta Mathematica Universitatis Ostraviensis 16 (1): 15–20.
- ↑ McIntosh, R. J.; Roettger, E. L. (2007), "A search for Fibonacci–Wieferich and Wolstenholme primes", Mathematics of Computation (AMS) 76 (260): 2087–2094, doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-07-01955-2, archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-12-10
- ↑ S. Falcon, A. Plaza (2009). "k-Fibonacci sequence modulo m". Chaos, Solitons & Fractals 41 (1): 497–504. doi:10.1016/j.chaos.2008.02.014.
Further reading
- Crandall, Richard E.; Pomerance, Carl (2001). Prime Numbers: A Computational Perspective. Springer. p. 29. ISBN 0-387-94777-9.
- Saha, Arpan; Karthik, C. S. (2011). "A Few Equivalences of Wall–Sun–Sun Prime Conjecture". Working paper. arXiv:1102.1636.
External links
- Chris Caldwell, The Prime Glossary: Wall–Sun–Sun prime at the Prime Pages.
- Weisstein, Eric W., "Wall–Sun–Sun prime", MathWorld.
- Richard McIntosh, Status of the search for Wall–Sun–Sun primes (October 2003)
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