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MUST READ Chris Caldwell has an absolutely
first-rate page
Mersenne Primes: History, Theorems and Lists. He also maintains the
definitive Largest
Known Primes page. |
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Visit my Mersenne Number Library and Bibliography
with a lot of articles and links to people like Hans Riesel
(M3217), Landon Noll (M21701 and M23209), and Samuel
Wagstaff (distribution of factors). |
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Here's the link everybody is looking for: George Woltman's
Great Internet Mersenne Prime
Search. People all over the world are using his program in an orchestrated
search for the next Mersenne Prime. George has highly Pentium-optimized
a specialized multiplication algorithm by Richard Crandall
(of Perfectly Scientific, Inc -- 'the
scientific algorithm company', and formerly with NeXT) and Barry
Fagin. 486, PowerMac, Alpha, HP users, almost everybody,
can help, too. Dan Gilmore, of the San Jose Mercury News,
wrote a newspaper article about GIMPS, dated June 22, 1996. Also Len Ruth
and his students at The Sinclair Community College are searching. |
GIMPS Mirrors
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GIMPS Home Page
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WIELKIE Internetowe Poszukiwania Liczb Pierwszych Mersenne'a
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The GREAT Internet Mersenne Prime Search |
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La Grande Recherche Internet sur les Nombres Premiers de Mersenne
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Die große Internetsuche nach Mersenne'schen Primzahlen |
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La Grande Ricerca Internet dei Numeri Primi di Mersenne |
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Den STORE Internet Mersenne Primtal Søgning |
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....thanks for the flags, David. |
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(4 December 1996) GIMPS finds a new World's Largest Prime Number! Joel
Armengaud, running George Woltman's program, found M1398269, the 35th known
Mersenne prime. I'm hoping that Joel will send me a photo of himself taken
on rue des Minimes in Paris.
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George Woltman's official press release. |
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Dan Gilmore always writes well. Here is his article in the San
Jose Mercury News (northern California daily newspaper). |
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Of course, Chris Caldwell will
explain it better than I. |
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Ivars Peterson's
well written article in Science News Magazine (American weekly
magazine). |
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Here's a fun newspaper article about M1398269 and Jamie
Foster. He is a GIMPS member in San Luis Obispo, one
of my favorite cities along California's beautiful coast and the gateway
to Highway One. |
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(1 September 1997) 22,976,221 - 1 is Prime! Another new discovery
by GIMPS! The 36th known Mersenne prime is a whopper with 895,932 digits.
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(2 February 1998) Will they ever stop? 23,021,377 - 1 is Prime!
Yet another new discovery by GIMPS! Not quite a million digits long, it
is the 37th known Mersenne prime.
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George Woltman's Press
Release. |
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It was discovered by Roland
Clarkson, a student at Califonia State University, Dominguez Hills.
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Chris Caldwell's Giant
Slaying Refined page. |
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San Jose Mercury News article of 2 Feb, 1998 |
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I'll add a link here as soon as Ivars Peterson writes an article.
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The PrimeNet Server
immediately sent this Special Advance
Notice when M#37 was found. |
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The PrimeNet Server
immediately updated the 'cleared' page. Jean-Yves
Canart downloaded a copy and has made it available for your perusal.
(Search for '3021377' and look at the residue.) |
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(6 Feb 1998 ) A newspaper article CSUDH
student is in his prime (number) (The Press Telegram, Long
Beach, California) [broken link removed] |
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(6 Feb 1998) A newpaper article Student Finds Largest Prime
Number Ever (Los Angeles Times, California) |
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When I get a copy, I'll link to an article in the Daily Breeze
(Torrance, California) |
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(7 Feb 1998) Food
Fight! Kurt Foster wrote the winning
post. [broken links removed] |
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(7 Feb 1998) Record
battu ! [broken link removed] |
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(15 March 1997) George Woltman sends out periodic GIMPS newsletters.
You can read them all on Will Edgington's Mersenne
Newsletters Page. |
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(9 February 1997) How fast is your PC? Lennart
Grebelius now maintains an informative Mersenne
Prime Benchmark page. The page should look familiar to GIMPS members.
Can a Pentium 166 run faster than a Pentium 200? Lennart also tracks GIMPS
progress in P90 CPU years/day. Great page! |
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(17 October 1996) By popular demand, Herb
Savage has created some colorful, graphical
representations of the current status of the Mersenne prime search.
Check back periodically and watch gray turn to blue,
blue to green, and maybe
even a new, red pixel or two! |
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(31 January 1998) The Unofficial GIMPS Graphical Status Page by David
J. Fred. Similar to Herb's images, David graphically shows the current
GIMPS staus to the highest p. |
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(15 March 1997) The February 1997 issue Wired
Magazine has an item on George Woltman and GIMPS. See Wired News: Electric
Word: Prime Time. Unfortunately, they misspelled Joel Armengaud's name.
Here is a scanned image of the original (250Kb).
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The Mersenne Prime
Mailing List. Communicate with people discussing anything and everything
about Mersenne Primes. You don't have to write anything, you are welcome
to just listen in. You can read all of the old posts in the list's archives.
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John Vinopal has been working on a
helpful Mersenne Primes page [the link is no longer valid]. He explains some things
quite well. |
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His Mathematica notebook on Mersenne Primes has been made available by
Paul Wellin. He also has one on searching for perfect
numbers. You don't have Mathematica? To view his notebooks,
get a free copy of MathReader. |
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Susan Stepney discusses
Mersenne
primes, the
Lucas-Lehmer test, Perfect
numbers and more. |
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A post dated 2 Apr 1992 by David Slowinski to comp.sys.super,
comp.unix.cray, and sci.math (with a follow-up by Bob Silverman).
He mentions different machines in the hunt and that M756839 took 19 hours
on a Cray-2. Here is Bob Silverman's reaction to the discovery
of M756839. |
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Courtesy of Eric's Treasure Trove
of Mathematics, a page that lists
"Mersenne numbers" and their factorizations. This page defines
a Mersenne number to be 2^n-1 (n not necessarily prime). |
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This is the FORTRAN program (PrimeZilla) that
found M110503 on the NEC SX-2 at the Houston Advanced Research Center (HARC).
Optimized for the idiosyncrasies of parallel and vectorized computing, it
ran at about 2 gigaflops and took about 11 minutes to test M110503. |
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David Slowinski's
announcement of his and Paul Gage's discovery that
M859433 is prime. Thanks to Warut
Roonguthai for the link. |
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There is a growing list of Mersenne freeware. You should be able to find
something that will run on your computer. The page is now maintained by
and hosted by Conrad Curry.
And a big Thanks! to Michael
Taylor who was the previous host and maintainer.
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Mersenne Freeware Mirrors
Need:
Mississippi flag
height=43 |
Conrad Curry, Southern US master site |
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Ethan M. O'Connor, Eastern US mirror |
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Lennart Grebelius, Sweden, European mirror |
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Some of us Mersenne guys had a meeting at the Tied House and I
took some photos. They turned out pretty well. |
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(1 October 1996) David Slowinski and Paul Gage struck paydirt once again!
They found M1257787, the 34th known Mersenne prime. Here's where you can
read all about it:
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Landon Noll's SGI press release |
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SGI's official hack of Landon's release |
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Chris Caldwell's
outstanding page (and corrections to SGI's hack) |
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Dan Gilmore's excellent article in the San Jose Mercury News (northern
California daily newspaper) |
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Ivar Peterson's also
excellent article in Science News Magazine (American weekly magazine)
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A rather uninspired article from U.S. News And World Report (American
weekly news magazine) |
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A short
announcement on the American Math Society's e-math
site. Thanks (again) to Warut
Roonguthai for the link. |
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(1 Oktober 1996) Von Die Zeit "Auf Primzahl-Jagd im Internet".
Vielen Dank!, Cornelius Caesar. |
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(10 October 1996)Jeffrey O. Shallit has a wonderful Mersenne
Bibliography with many entries that I was not aware of. |
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(29 October 1996) GIMPS's George Woltman was on
Canadian radio. George did a great job, as did the program's host. I decided
that the event warranted its own wwweb page.
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(8 December 1996) I am awarding the Most Beautiful Prime Page Prize to
Marlene Menard. You've seen how professional mathematicians design Mersenne
wwweb pages. Take a look at how a professional graphics artist views the
Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search. |
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(16 January 1997) Herr Factormeister Will Edgington has somehow found
time to do a page
on Mersenne numbers. This page is recommended reading. |
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(26 March 1997) From the 1982 Guinness Book of World Records, Harry Nelson
and David Slowinski "celebrate their discovery,
clothed in computer printouts." |
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(22 April 1997) Psssssst! Yeah, you. Come over here. Do you want to see
a picture of BESK? This baby can crank out nearly three thousand 40-bit
multiplies per second. Learn more from Hans Riesel himself,
plus some stories about his search for M3217.
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(4 July 1997) Largest Known Prime Number Discovered on the Vietnamese
Association for Computing, Engineering Technology, and Science (VACETS)
site. Dated 10 Sept 96, it apparently has been hiding from the search engines
-- I only recently found it. Very well written, I recommend this page even
though my name is misspelled. |
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(4 July 1997) Bekannte Mersenne-Primzahlen von Argee. Kriterium
von Lucas-Lehmer, Kriterium von Euler, Perfekte
(vollkommene) Zahlen, und Literaturnachweis. |
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Here's an article on acoustics that discusses Mersenne's
Laws from the Encylopedia Britannica Online |
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The Wave Theory
of Sound by Allan D. Pierce mentions some of Mersenne's contributions
to acoustics. Courtesy of the Acoustical Society
of America. |
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Mersenne reproduced some experiments of
Marin Getaldic. Which experiments? Visit this devil
in mathematics whose inventions were feared by his compatriots and even
more by his enemies. (Croatian site, .hr = Hrvatska). |
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Pop Quiz: What is a Mersenne telescope? Give an example of a modern application
(NASA site.) Thanks go to Brian Jones.
BTW, Stevick-Paul telescopes are similar to Mersenne telescopes. |
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Coming Attraction: Magnetic Monster! Starring the SWAC
as MANIAC with music by Mersenne and sets by Alex Hurwitz. Can the Earth
be saved? I have it and hope to make a Quicktime clip. |
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A series of five articles on Doctor Robert Fludd (1574-1637) By
Sharon M.W. "A French scientist and author named Marin Mersenne
accused Fludd of being a magician, an atheist and heretic." Articles
1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. Mersenne is mentioned in Articles 4 and 5. |
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Bagpipes?
Mersenne and bagpipes? What? [broken link removed] |
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If you are a young programmer or mathematician and you've never heard
of him, do yourself a favor and visit the
World's Best Programmer. |
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Everybody know what twin primes are, but how many of you have ever
seen prime twins? Walt Colquitt is
going to retaliate against me for this, but it's worth it. |
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Bah! Who cares about World Record Mersenne Primes? Here is a page about
what matters the Most about Mersenne primes! |
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There are photographs
of Mersenius a crater and a rift on the moon named in honor of
Mersenne (US Navy site). The photos are also on a French site
Navigation
sur la LUNE. Susan
Stepney kindly designed a Mersenne
on the Moon page to help you locate the crater on the moon's surface --
in astronomical terms, it's in the lower left-hand corner. Thanks to Richard
Easther for tracking down Mersenius for me. |
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(22 July 1997) Mersenne was a Minim priest and lived in the Minim convent
in Paris. It was destroyed during the French Revolution. But there is still
a street named rue des Minimes. You might
be surprised. |