Largest prime number has 17,000,000 digits

XCALCULATOR_20120213125851_JPG


Photographer: AP Graphics Bank

Advertisement

Posted: 02/07/2013

 

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- University of Central Missouri mathematicians have found the largest prime number ever identified, but good luck remembering it.
 
The researchers identified the 17 million-digit number last month as the 48th known Mersenne prime. A different computer system running on different hardware confirmed that it is a prime number. Primes are whole numbers such as 3, 7 and 11 that can only be divided without a remainder by themselves and 1.
 
This is the third Mersenne prime identified at the university in Warrensburg, about 50 miles east of Kansas City.
 
Mersenne primes are named after their discoverer, 17th century French mathematician Marin Mersenne. They're expressed as 2P-1, or two to the power of "P" minus one. P is itself a prime number. For the new prime, P is 57,885,161.
 

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

  • Comments

 

 


 

Advertisement

Special Reports


  1. SPECIAL REPORT | Day care inspections

    SPECIAL REPORT | Day care inspections

    SPECIAL REPORT | Thousands of child care center inspections reports are NOW AVAILABLE. Find out what inspectors founds inside day care centers across the state.

    • Inside a Criminal Mind | Jason Scott

      Inside a Criminal Mind | Jason Scott

      SPECIAL REPORT | When it's out of your hands, when your life is at the mercy of an armed, masked man staring down at you from the barrel of a gun in your own home, you grasp at whatever it is you can control; breathing, composure, or faith.

    • SPECIAL REPORT | Bad Medicine

      SPECIAL REPORT | Bad Medicine

      SPECIAL REPORT | ABC2 Investigator Joce Sterman has reviewed thousands of pages of documents for her Bad Medicine report.

       
      • Stay Connected