![]() |
Phone Book Numbers from 103,374,001 to 103,374,989 that don't mean anything.
How do you call this specific group of prime numbers?
103,374,163 103,374,361 103,374,613 103,374,631 Also wondering who has "Intel® Core™ Processor i9-10980XE Eighteen-Core 3.0GHz (Turbo 4.8GHz) 24.75MB"? |
[QUOTE=tuckerkao;559015]How do you call this specific group of prime numbers?
103,374,163 103,374,361 103,374,613 103,374,631[/QUOTE]It doesn't matter how you call them, because they still won't come when you call them. :davar55: |
[QUOTE=tuckerkao;559015]How do you call this specific group of prime numbers?
103,374,163 103,374,361 103,374,613 103,374,631 [/QUOTE] I would say "partially incompletely permutable primes", as only part of numbers digits are permutable, and not all permutations of these digits within the number result in prime. |
[QUOTE=Viliam Furik;559065]I would say "partially incompletely permutable primes", as only part of numbers digits are permutable, and not all permutations of these digits within the number result in prime.[/QUOTE]
I searched [URL="https://www.mersenne.org/report_recent_cleared/"]https://www.mersenne.org/report_recent_cleared/[/URL] and I cannot find any number strings with 103374 in it. Just wondering how many M103,374,xxx have already been identified as non-primes? |
[QUOTE=tuckerkao;559087]I searched [URL="https://www.mersenne.org/report_recent_cleared/"]https://www.mersenne.org/report_recent_cleared/[/URL] and I cannot find any number strings with 103374 in it.
Just wondering how many M103,374,xxx have already been identified as non-primes?[/QUOTE]Just go to the Results / Detailed Results / Exponent Status and you will have your answer. Jacob [url]https://www.mersenne.org/report_exponent/?exp_lo=103374000&exp_hi=103375000[/url] [url]https://www.mersenne.org/report_exponent/?exp_lo=103374000&exp_hi=103375000[/url] |
[QUOTE=tuckerkao;559087]I searched [URL="https://www.mersenne.org/report_recent_cleared/"]https://www.mersenne.org/report_recent_cleared/[/URL] and I cannot find any number strings with 103374 in it.
Just wondering how many M103,374,xxx have already been identified as non-primes?[/QUOTE] [url]https://www.mersenne.org/report_factoring_effort/?exp_lo=103374000&exp_hi=103374999&bits_lo=1&bits_hi=99&tftobits=72[/url] |
[QUOTE=tuckerkao;559087]I searched [URL="https://www.mersenne.org/report_recent_cleared/"]https://www.mersenne.org/report_recent_cleared/[/URL] and I cannot find any number strings with 103374 in it.
Just wondering how many M103,374,xxx have already been identified as non-primes?[/QUOTE]If I count the "factored" entries in the report for that range, 33 out of the 61 M[sub]p[/sub] have known factors. |
[QUOTE=Dr Sardonicus;559098]If I count the "factored" entries in the report for that range, 33 out of the 61 M[sub]p[/sub] have known factors.[/QUOTE]
Only some of the prime entries show "No Factors under 2^74". What types of the tests are to check the factors within a specific range? |
[QUOTE=tuckerkao;559099]Only some of the prime entries show "No Factors under 2^74". What types of the tests are to check the factors within a specific range?[/QUOTE]
Use colored balls to do the checking. That should do the job. Oh, wait, maybe find a little bit about the project whose board you are posting on and you will know. [url]https://www.mersenne.org/various/math.php[/url] |
I already figured out
Factor=103374163,74,75 in worktodo.txt or AdvancedTest=103374163 for the complete test |
[QUOTE=S485122;559096]Just go to the Results / Detailed Results / Exponent Status and you will have your answer.
Jacob [url]https://www.mersenne.org/report_exponent/?exp_lo=103374000&exp_hi=103375000[/url] [/QUOTE] I need some explanations, what are the residue and shift on those tables? Also, if I finish 1 LL sequence, do I post screenshots or something? |
All times are UTC. The time now is 07:27. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.