Fermat number

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In mathematics, a Fermat number, named after Pierre de Fermat (1607–1665), the first known to have studied them, is a positive integer of the form:<math>F_{n} = 2^{2^n} + 1,</math> where n is a non-negative integer. The first few Fermat numbers are: 3, 5, 17, 257, 65537, 4294967297, 18446744073709551617, 340282366920938463463374607431768211457, ... (sequence A000215 in the OEIS).

If 2k + 1 is prime and Template:Nowrap, then k itself must be a power of 2,<ref>For any positive odd number <math>m</math>, <math>2^{2^km} + 1 = (a + 1)(a^{m-1} - a^{m-2} + \ldots - a + 1)</math> where <math>a = 2^{2^k}</math>.</ref> so Template:Nowrap is a Fermat number; such primes are called Fermat primes. Template:As of, the only known Fermat primes are Template:Nowrap, Template:Nowrap, Template:Nowrap, Template:Nowrap, and Template:Nowrap (sequence A019434 in the OEIS).

Basic propertiesEdit

The Fermat numbers satisfy the following recurrence relations:

<math>

F_{n} = (F_{n-1}-1)^{2}+1</math>

<math>

F_{n} = F_{0} \cdots F_{n-1} + 2</math>

for n ≥ 1,

<math>

F_{n} = F_{n-1} + 2^{2^{n-1}}F_{0} \cdots F_{n-2}</math>

<math>

F_{n} = F_{n-1}^2 - 2(F_{n-2}-1)^2</math>

for Template:Nowrap. 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 Template:Nowrap and Fi and Fj have a common factor Template:Nowrap. Then a divides both

<math>F_{0} \cdots F_{j-1}</math>

and Fj; hence a divides their difference, 2. Since Template:Nowrap, this forces Template:Nowrap. 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 Template:Mset is an infinite sequence of distinct primes.

Further propertiesEdit

  • 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 decimal 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)

PrimalityEdit

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

<math> F_{5} = 2^{2^5} + 1 = 2^{32} + 1 = 4294967297 = 641 \times 6700417. </math>

Euler proved that every factor of Fn must have the form Template:Nowrap (later improved to Template:Nowrap by Lucas) for Template:Nowrap.

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.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> One common explanation is that Fermat made a computational mistake.

There are no other known Fermat primes Fn with Template:Nowrap, but little is known about Fermat numbers for large n.<ref>Chris Caldwell, "Prime Links++: special forms" Template:Webarchive at The Prime Pages.</ref> In fact, each of the following is an open problem:

Template:As of, it is known that Fn is composite for Template:Nowrap, although of these, complete factorizations of Fn are known only for Template:Nowrap, and there are no known prime factors for Template:Nowrap and Template:Nowrap.<ref name="Keller"/> The largest Fermat number known to be composite is F18233954, and its prime factor Template:Nowrap was discovered in October 2020.

Heuristic argumentsEdit

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 1Template:Space/Template:Spaceln 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

<math> \sum_{n \ge 33} \frac{1}{\ln F_{n}} < \frac{1}{\ln 2} \sum_{n \ge 33} \frac{1}{\log_2(2^{2^n})} = \frac{1}{\ln 2} 2^{-32} < 3.36 \times 10^{-10}.</math>

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.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

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

<math>

\sum_{n \ge 5} \sum_{k \ge 1} \frac{1}{k (k 2^n + 1) \ln(k 2^n)} < \frac{\pi^2}{6 \ln 2} \sum_{n \ge 5} \frac{1}{n 2^n} \approx 0.02576; </math> in other words, there are unlikely to be any non-squarefree Fermat numbers, and in general square factors of <math>a^{2^n} + b^{2^n}</math> are very rare for large n.<ref name="bjorn">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Equivalent conditionsEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

Let <math>F_n=2^{2^n}+1</math> be the nth Fermat number. Pépin's test states that for Template:Nowrap,

<math>F_n</math> is prime if and only if <math>3^{(F_n-1)/2}\equiv-1\pmod{F_n}.</math>

The expression <math>3^{(F_n-1)/2}</math> can be evaluated modulo <math>F_n</math> 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 Template:Nowrap, such as factors of Fermat numbers, for primality.

Proth's theorem (1878). Let Template:Nowrap with odd Template:Nowrap. If there is an integer a such that
<math>a^{(N-1)/2} \equiv -1\pmod{N}</math>
then <math>N</math> is prime. Conversely, if the above congruence does not hold, and in addition
<math>\left(\frac{a}{N}\right)=-1</math> (See Jacobi symbol)
then <math>N</math> is composite.

If Template:Nowrap, then the above Jacobi symbol is always equal to −1 for Template:Nowrap, 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 Template:Nowrap and 24.

FactorizationEdit

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 <math>F_n</math>, with n at least 2, is of the form <math>k\times2^{n+2}+1</math> (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 12 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
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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)

Template:As of, only F0 to F11 have been completely factored.<ref name="Keller"/> The distributed computing project Fermat Search is searching for new factors of Fermat numbers.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> 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 <math>F_5</math> <math>5 \cdot 2^7 + 1</math>
1732 Euler <math>F_5</math> (fully factored) <math>52347 \cdot 2^7 + 1</math>
1855 Clausen <math>F_6</math> <math>1071 \cdot 2^8 + 1</math>
1855 Clausen <math>F_6</math> (fully factored) <math>262814145745 \cdot 2^8 + 1</math>
1877 Pervushin <math>F_{12}</math> <math>7 \cdot 2^{14} + 1</math>
1878 Pervushin <math>F_{23}</math> <math>5 \cdot 2^{25} + 1</math>
1886 Seelhoff <math>F_{36}</math> <math>5 \cdot 2^{39} + 1</math>
1899 Cunningham <math>F_{11}</math> <math>39 \cdot 2^{13} + 1</math>
1899 Cunningham <math>F_{11}</math> <math>119 \cdot 2^{13} + 1</math>
1903 Western <math>F_9</math> <math>37 \cdot 2^{16} + 1</math>
1903 Western <math>F_{12}</math> <math>397 \cdot 2^{16} + 1</math>
1903 Western <math>F_{12}</math> <math>973 \cdot 2^{16} + 1</math>
1903 Western <math>F_{18}</math> <math>13 \cdot 2^{20} + 1</math>
1903 Cullen <math>F_{38}</math> <math>3 \cdot 2^{41} + 1</math>
1906 Morehead <math>F_{73}</math> <math>5 \cdot 2^{75} + 1</math>
1925 Kraitchik <math>F_{15}</math> <math>579 \cdot 2^{21} + 1</math>

Template:As of, 371 prime factors of Fermat numbers are known, and 324 Fermat numbers are known to be composite.<ref name="Keller">Template:Citation</ref> Several new Fermat factors are found each year.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Pseudoprimes and Fermat numbersEdit

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.,

<math>2^{F_n-1} \equiv 1 \pmod{F_n}</math>

for all Fermat numbers.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

In 1904, Cipolla showed that the product of at least two distinct prime or composite Fermat numbers <math>F_{a} F_{b} \dots F_{s},</math> <math>a > b > \dots > s > 1</math> will be a Fermat pseudoprime to base 2 if and only if <math>2^s > a </math>.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Other theorems about Fermat numbersEdit

Template:Math theorem Template:Math theorem Template:Math theorem Template:Math theorem \right)^{2} \equiv 2^{1+2^{n-1}} \pmod p.</math>

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. Template:Harv

The series of reciprocals of all prime divisors of Fermat numbers is convergent. Template:Harv

If Template:Nowrap is prime and <math>n \ge 2</math>, there exists an integer m such that Template:Nowrap. The equation Template:Nowrap holds in that case.<ref>Jeppe Stig Nielsen, "S(n) = n^n + 1".</ref><ref>{{#invoke:Template wrapper|{{#if:|list|wrap}}|_template=cite web |_exclude=urlname, _debug, id |url = https://mathworld.wolfram.com/{{#if:SierpinskiNumberoftheFirstKind%7CSierpinskiNumberoftheFirstKind.html}} |title = Sierpiński Number of the First Kind |author = Weisstein, Eric W. |website = MathWorld |access-date = |ref = Template:SfnRef }}</ref>

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

<math>P(F_n) \ge 2^{n+2}(4n+9) + 1.</math> Template:Harv

Relationship to constructible polygonsEdit

File:Constructible polygon set.svg
Number of sides of known constructible polygons having up to 1000 sides (bold) or odd side count (red)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

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,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> 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 Template:Nowrap or Template:Nowrap, 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 numbersEdit

Pseudorandom number generationEdit

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 Template:Nowrap, 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.

<math>V_{j+1} = (A \times V_j) \bmod P</math> (see linear congruential generator)

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 Template:Nowrap repetitions, the sequence repeats. A poorly chosen multiplier can result in the sequence repeating sooner than Template:Nowrap.

Generalized Fermat numbersEdit

Numbers of the form <math>\frac{a^{2^n}+b^{2^n}}{gcd(a+b,2)}</math> with a, b any coprime integers, Template:Nowrap, 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 Template:Nowrap, so Template:Nowrap \!+ 1</math>}} is not a counterexample.)

An example of a probable prime of this form is 200262144 + 119262144 (found by Kellen Shenton).<ref>PRP Top Records, search for x^262144+y^262144, by Henri & Renaud Lifchitz.</ref>

By analogy with the ordinary Fermat numbers, it is common to write generalized Fermat numbers of the form <math>a^{2^{ \overset{n} {}}} \!\!+ 1</math> 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, <math>a^{2^{ \overset{n} {}}} \!\!+ 1</math>, such primes are called "Fermat primes base a". Of course, these primes exist only if a is even.

If we require Template:Nowrap, 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 Template:Mvar, because if Template:Mvar is odd then every generalized Fermat number will be divisible by 2. The smallest prime number <math>F_n(a)</math> with <math>n>4</math> is <math>F_5(30)</math>, 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 <math>\frac{a^{2^n} \!+ 1}{2}</math>, 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 (<math>F_n(a)</math>) to an even Template:Mvar are <math>a^{2^n} \!+ 1</math>, for odd Template:Mvar, they are <math>\frac{a^{2^n} \!\!+ 1}{2}</math>. If Template:Mvar 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<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> for even bases up to 1000, and<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> for odd bases. For the smallest number <math>n</math> such that <math>F_n(a)</math> is prime, see Template:Oeis.

<math>a</math> numbers <math>n</math>
such that
<math>F_n(a)</math> is prime
<math>a</math> numbers <math>n</math>
such that
<math>F_n(a)</math> is prime
<math>a</math> numbers <math>n</math>
such that
<math>F_n(a)</math> is prime
<math>a</math> numbers <math>n</math>
such that
<math>F_n(a)</math> 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 Template:CNone 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 Template:CNone 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 Template:CNone 48 2, ... 64 Template:CNone
17 2, ... 33 0, 3, ... 49 1, ... 65 1, 2, 5, ...

For the smallest even base Template:Mvar such that <math>F_n(a)</math> is prime, see Template:Oeis.

The generalized Fermat prime F14(71) is the largest known generalized Fermat prime in bases b ≤ 1000, it is proven prime by elliptic curve primality proving.<ref>The entry of the generalized Fermat prime F14(71) in the online factor database</ref>

<math>n</math> bases Template:Mvar such that <math>F_n(a)</math> is prime (only consider even Template:Mvar) 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, 1074542, 1096382, 1113768, 1161054, 1167528, 1169486, 1171824, 1210354, 1217284, 1277444, 1519380, 1755378, 1909372, 1922592, 1986700, ... A226530
16 48594, 108368, 141146, 189590, 255694, 291726, 292550, 357868, 440846, 544118, 549868, 671600, 843832, 857678, 1024390, 1057476, 1087540, 1266062, 1361846, 1374038, 1478036, 1483076, 1540550, 1828502, 1874512, 1927034, 1966374, ... A251597
17 62722, 130816, 228188, 386892, 572186, 689186, 909548, 1063730, 1176694, 1361244, 1372930, 1560730, 1660830, 1717162, 1722230, 1766192, 1955556, 2194180, 2280466, 2639850, 3450080, 3615210, 3814944, 4085818, 4329134, 4893072, 4974408, ... A253854
18 24518, 40734, 145310, 361658, 525094, 676754, 773620, 1415198, 1488256, 1615588, 1828858, 2042774, 2514168, 2611294, 2676404, 3060772, 3547726, 3596074, 3673932, 3853792, 3933508, 4246258, 4489246, ... A244150
19 75898, 341112, 356926, 475856, 1880370, 2061748, 2312092, 2733014, 2788032, 2877652, 2985036, 3214654, 3638450, 4896418, 5897794, 6339004, 8630170, 9332124, 10913140, 11937916, 12693488, 12900356, ... A243959
20 919444, 1059094, 1951734, 1963736, 3843236, ... A321323

The smallest even base b such that Fn(b) = 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)

The smallest odd base b such that Fn(b) = (b2n + 1)/2 (for given n = 0, 1, 2, ...) is prime (or probable prime) are

3, 3, 3, 9, 3, 3, 3, 113, 331, 513, 827, 799, 3291, 5041, 71, 220221, 23891, 11559, 187503, 35963, ... (sequence A275530 in the OEIS)

Conversely, the smallest k 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 Template:Oeis and Template:Oeis)

A more elaborate theory can be used to predict the number of bases for which <math>F_n(a)</math> will be prime for fixed <math>n</math>. The number of generalized Fermat primes can be roughly expected to halve as <math>n</math> 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 <math>a^{2^n} + b^{2^n}</math>. 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 <math>F_n(a,b)</math> (for odd <math>a+b</math>), see also Template:Oeis.

<math>a</math> <math>b</math> citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref><ref name="bjorn"/>

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 <math>F_n(2, 1)</math>)
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 Template:CNone
8 3 0, 1, 2, ...
8 5 0, 1, 2,
8 7 1, 4, ...
9 1 0, 1, 3, 4, 5, ... (equivalent to <math>F_n(3, 1)</math>)
9 2 0, 2, ...
9 4 0, 1, ... (equivalent to <math>F_n(3, 2)</math>)
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 primesEdit

The following is a list of the ten largest known generalized Fermat primes.<ref name="Top Twenty's Generalized Fermat Primes">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The whole top-10 is discovered by participants in the PrimeGrid project.

Rank Prime number Generalized Fermat notation Number of digits Discovery date ref.
1 4×511786358 + 1 F1(2×55893179) 8,238,312 Oct 2024 <ref>4×511786358 + 1</ref>
2 38432361048576 + 1 F20(3843236) 6,904,556 Dec 2024 <ref>38432361048576 + 1</ref>
3 19637361048576 + 1 F20(1963736) 6,598,776 Sep 2022 <ref>19637361048576 + 1</ref>
4 19517341048576 + 1 F20(1951734) 6,595,985 Aug 2022 <ref>19517341048576 + 1</ref>
5 10590941048576 + 1 F20(1059094) 6,317,602 Nov 2018 <ref>10590941048576 + 1</ref>
6 9194441048576 + 1 F20(919444) 6,253,210 Sep 2017 <ref>9194441048576 + 1</ref>
7 81×220498148 + 1 F2(3×25124537) 6,170,560 Jun 2023 <ref>81×220498148 + 1</ref>
8 4×58431178 + 1 F1(2×54215589) 5,893,142 Jan 2024 <ref>4×58431178 + 1</ref>
9 4×311279466 + 1 F1(2×35639733) 5,381,674 Sep 2024 <ref>4×311279466 + 1</ref>
10 25×213719266 + 1 F1(5×26859633) 4,129,912 Sep 2022 <ref>25×213719266 + 1</ref>

On the Prime Pages one can find the current top 20 generalized Fermat primes and the current top 100 generalized Fermat primes.

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

Template:Reflist

ReferencesEdit

External linksEdit

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|_exclude=urlname, _debug, id |url = https://mathworld.wolfram.com/{{#if:GeneralizedFermatNumber%7CGeneralizedFermatNumber.html}} |title = Generalized Fermat Number |author = Weisstein, Eric W. |website = MathWorld |access-date = |ref = Template:SfnRef }}

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