primorial prime
Clearly the primorial numbers themselves, n#, are rarely prime (in fact just for n = 2 where 2# = 2). So when defining primorial primes authors considered two different flavors--primorials plus one: p#+1 and primorials minus one: p#-1. We call primes of both of these forms primorial primes.- p#+1 is prime for the primes p=2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 31, 379, 1019, 1021, 2657, 3229, 4547, 4787, 11549, 13649, 18523, 23801, 24029, and 42209, 145823, 366439 and 392113 (169966 digits).
- p#-1 is prime for primes p=3, 5, 11, 13, 41, 89, 317, 337, 991, 1873, 2053, 2377, 4093, 4297, 4583, 6569, 13033, and 15877 (6845 digits).
The study of these numbers may have originated with Euclid's proof that there are infinitely many primes which uses p#.
See Also: FactorialPrime, MultifactorialPrime
Related pages (outside of this work)
- Euclid's proof that there are infinitely many primes
- The top twenty primorial primes
- The top twenty factorial primes
- The top twenty multi-factorial primes
- Deficient factorials by Rene Dohmen
References:
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- Borning72
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- C. Caldwell, "On the primality of n! ± 1 and 2 · 3 · 5 ... p ± 1," Math. Comp., 64:2 (1995) 889--890. MR 95g:11003
- CG2000
- C. Caldwell and Y. Gallot, "On the primality of n! ± 1 and 2 × 3 × 5 × ... × p ± 1," Math. Comp., 71:237 (2002) 441--448. MR 2002g:11011 (Abstract available) (Annotation available)
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- Templer80
- M. Templer, "On the primality of k! + 1 and 2 * 3 * 5 * ... * p + 1," Math. Comp., 34 (1980) 303-304. MR 80j:10010
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