Named After: | James Pierpont |
Terms Number: | Thousands |
Con Number: | Infinite |
Parentsequence: | Pierpont number |
First Terms: | 2, 3, 5, 7, 13, 17, 19, 37, 73, 97, 109, 163, 193, 257, 433, 487, 577, 769, 1153, 1297, 1459, 2593, 2917, 3457, 3889 |
Oeis: | A005109 |
In number theory, a Pierpont prime is a prime number of the formfor some nonnegative integers and . That is, they are the prime numbers for which is 3-smooth. They are named after the mathematician James Pierpont, who used them to characterize the regular polygons that can be constructed using conic sections. The same characterization applies to polygons that can be constructed using ruler, compass, and angle trisector, or using paper folding.
Except for 2 and the Fermat primes, every Pierpont prime must be 1 modulo 6. The first few Pierpont primes are:It has been conjectured that there are infinitely many Pierpont primes, but this remains unproven.
A Pierpont prime with is of the form
2u+1
3v+1
Empirically, the Pierpont primes do not seem to be particularly rare or sparsely distributed; there are 42 Pierpont primes less than 106, 65 less than 109, 157 less than 1020, and 795 less than 10100. There are few restrictions from algebraic factorisations on the Pierpont primes, so there are no requirements like the Mersenne prime condition that the exponent must be prime. Thus, it is expected that among -digit numbers of the correct form
2u ⋅ 3v+1
\Theta(n2)
\Theta(n)
Andrew M. Gleason made this reasoning explicit, conjecturing there are infinitely many Pierpont primes, and more specifically that there should be approximately Pierpont primes up to .[1] According to Gleason's conjecture there are
\Theta(logN)
O(loglogN)
When
2u>3v
2u ⋅ 3v+1
2u<3v
M=2u ⋅ 3v+1
M-1
As part of the ongoing worldwide search for factors of Fermat numbers, some Pierpont primes have been announced as factors. The following table[3] gives values of m, k, and n such that
The left-hand side is a Fermat number; the right-hand side is a Pierpont prime.
38 | 1 | 41 | 1903 | Cullen, Cunningham & Western | |
63 | 2 | 67 | 1956 | Robinson | |
207 | 1 | 209 | 1956 | Robinson | |
452 | 3 | 455 | 1956 | Robinson | |
9428 | 2 | 9431 | 1983 | Keller | |
12185 | 4 | 12189 | 1993 | Dubner | |
28281 | 4 | 28285 | 1996 | Taura | |
157167 | 1 | 157169 | 1995 | Young | |
213319 | 1 | 213321 | 1996 | Young | |
303088 | 1 | 303093 | 1998 | Young | |
382447 | 1 | 382449 | 1999 | Cosgrave & Gallot | |
461076 | 1 | 461081 | 2003 | Nohara, Jobling, Woltman & Gallot | |
495728 | 5 | 495732 | 2007 | Keiser, Jobling, Penné & Fougeron | |
672005 | 3 | 672007 | 2005 | Cooper, Jobling, Woltman & Gallot | |
2145351 | 1 | 2145353 | 2003 | Cosgrave, Jobling, Woltman & Gallot | |
2478782 | 1 | 2478785 | 2003 | Cosgrave, Jobling, Woltman & Gallot | |
2543548 | 2 | 2543551 | 2011 | Brown, Reynolds, Penné & Fougeron |
, the largest known Pierpont prime is 81 × 220498148 + 1 (6,170,560 decimal digits), whose primality was discovered in June 2023.
In the mathematics of paper folding, the Huzita axioms define six of the seven types of fold possible. It has been shown that these folds are sufficient to allow the construction of the points that solve any cubic equation.[4] It follows that they allow any regular polygon of sides to be formed, as long as and is of the form, where is a product of distinct Pierpont primes. This is the same class of regular polygons as those that can be constructed with a compass, straightedge, and angle trisector.[1] Regular polygons which can be constructed with only compass and straightedge (constructible polygons) are the special case where and is a product of distinct Fermat primes, themselves a subset of Pierpont primes.
In 1895, James Pierpont studied the same class of regular polygons; his work is what gives the name to the Pierpont primes. Pierpont generalized compass and straightedge constructions in a different way, by adding the ability to draw conic sections whose coefficients come from previously constructed points. As he showed, the regular -gons that can be constructed with these operations are the ones such that the totient of is 3-smooth. Since the totient of a prime is formed by subtracting one from it, the primes for which Pierpont's construction works are exactly the Pierpont primes. However, Pierpont did not describe the form of the composite numbers with 3-smooth totients.[5] As Gleason later showed, these numbers are exactly the ones of the form given above.[1]
The smallest prime that is not a Pierpont (or Fermat) prime is 11; therefore, the hendecagon is the first regular polygon that cannot be constructed with compass, straightedge and angle trisector (or origami, or conic sections). All other regular with can be constructed with compass, straightedge and trisector.[1]
A Pierpont prime of the second kind is a prime number of the form 2u3v − 1. These numbers are
The largest known primes of this type are Mersenne primes; currently the largest known is
2136279841-1
3 ⋅ 222103376-1
A generalized Pierpont prime is a prime of the form
n1 | |
p | |
1 |
⋅
n2 | |
p | |
2 |
⋅
n3 | |
p | |
3 |
⋅ \ldots ⋅
nk | |
p | |
k |
+1
n1 | |
p | |
1 |
⋅
n2 | |
p | |
2 |
⋅
n3 | |
p | |
3 |
⋅ \ldots ⋅
nk | |
p | |
k |
-1
N=k ⋅ 2n+1
k
2n>k.