Top project sorted by normalized score

The Prover-Account Top 20
Persons by: number score normalized score
Programs by: number score normalized score
Projects by: number score normalized score

At this site we keep several lists of primes, most notably the list of the 5,000 largest known primes. Who found the most of these record primes? We keep separate counts for persons, projects and programs. To see these lists click on 'number' to the right.

Clearly one 100,000,000 digit prime is much harder to discover than quite a few 100,000 digit primes. Based on the usual estimates we score the top persons, provers and projects by adding ‎(log n)3 log log n‎ for each of their primes n. Click on 'score' to see these lists.

Finally, to make sense of the score values, we normalize them by dividing by the current score of the 5000th prime. See these by clicking on 'normalized score' in the table on the right.

normalizedprojectprimesscore
326456 Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search by Woltman & Kurowski 17 57.6971
47168 PrimeGrid 3397 55.7626
22248 Prime Internet Eisenstein Search 53 55.0111
3033 Seventeen or Bust 6.5 53.0183
2537 Conjectures 'R Us 447.5 52.8397
1405 Riesel Prime Search 242 52.2487
649 The Prime Sierpinski Problem 3 51.4763
487 No Prime Left Behind (formerly: PrimeSearch) 238 51.1888
189 Twin Prime Search 50 50.2441
79 12121 Search 3.5 49.3675
78 Private GFN server 18 49.3530
69 Sierpinski/Riesel Base 5 10 49.2306
26 Riesel Sieve Project 9.5 48.2529
19 The Other Prime Search 17 47.9632
11 321search 2.5 47.4309
9 SRBase 2 47.2254
6 Science United 1 46.7531
5 Yves Gallot's GFN Search Project 2.5 46.6601
5 GFN 2^17 Sieving project 2.5 46.6601
3 Rechenkraft.net e.V. 0.5 46.2171
 
 

Notes:

normalized score

Just how do you make sense out of something as vague as our 'score' for primes? One possibility is to compare the amount of effort involved in earning that score, with the effort required to find the 5000th prime on the list. The normalized score does this: it is the number of primes that are the size of the 5000th, required to earn the same score (rounded to the nearest integer).

Note that if a project stops finding primes, its normalized score will steadily drop as the size of the 5000th primes steadily increases. The non-normalized scores drop too, but not as quickly because they only drop when the project's primes are pushed off the list.

Printed from the PrimePages <t5k.org> © Reginald McLean.