Mirimanoff's congruence explained

In number theory, a branch of mathematics, a Mirimanoff's congruence is one of a collection of expressions in modular arithmetic which, if they hold, entail the truth of Fermat's Last Theorem. Since the theorem has now been proven, these are now of mainly historical significance, though the Mirimanoff polynomials are interesting in their own right. The theorem is due to Dmitry Mirimanoff.

Definition

The nth Mirimanoff polynomial for the prime p is

\phin(t)=1n-1t+2n-1t2+...+(p-1)n-1tp-1.

In terms of these polynomials, if t is one of the six values where Xp+Yp+Zp=0 is a solution to Fermat's Last Theorem, then

...

Other congruences

Mirimanoff also proved the following:

3p-1\equiv\left(-

23

\left\{1+

12
+
13
+
14
+

\ldots+\left\lfloorp/3\right\rfloor-1\right\}\right)p+1\pmod{p2}

so that a prime possesses the Mirimanoff property if it divides the expression within the curly braces. The condition was further refined in an important paper by Emma Lehmer (1938), in which she considered the intriguing and still unanswered question of whether it is possible for a number to satisfy the congruences of Wieferich and Mirimanoff simultaneously. To date, the only known Mirimanoff primes are 11 and 1006003 . The discovery of the second of these appears to be due to K.E. Kloss (1965).

References