Article 45HZ0 New prime record: 51st Mersenne prime discovered

New prime record: 51st Mersenne prime discovered

by
John
from John D. Cook on (#45HZ0)

A new prime record was announced yesterday. The largest known prime is now

M82589933.svg

Written in hexadecimal the newly discovered prime is

mersenne51.svg

For decades the largest known prime has been a Mersenne prime because there's an efficient test for checking whether a Mersenne number is prime. I explain the test here.

There are now 51 known Mersenne primes. There may be infinitely many Mersenne primes, but this hasn't been proven. Also, the newly discovered Mersenne prime is the 51st known Mersenne prime, but it may not be the 51st Mersenne prime, i.e. there may be undiscovered Mersenne primes hiding between the last few that have been discovered.

Three weeks ago I wrote a post graphing the trend in Mersenne primes. Here's the updated post. Mersenne primes have the form 2p -1 where p is a prime, and this graph plots the values of p on a log scale. See the earlier post for details.

mersenne_trend51.svg

Because there's a one-to-one correspondence between Mersenne primes and even perfect numbers, the new discovery means there is also a new perfect number. M is a Mersenne prime if and only if M(M + 1)/2 is an even perfect number. This is also the Mth triangular number.

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