The Top Twenty--a Prime Page Collection

Mersenne

This page : Definition(s) | Records | References | Related Pages | RSS 2.0 Feed
  View this page in:   language help
The Prime Pages keeps a list of the 5000 largest known primes, plus a few each of certain selected archivable forms and classes. These forms are defined in this collection's home page. This page is about one of those forms. Comments and suggestions requested.

(up) Definitions and Notes

Mersenne primes are primes of the form 2p-1. The first few are 3, 7, 31, 127, 8191, 131071 and 524287 (with exponents p=2, 3, 5, 7, 13, 17, and 19). The Mersennes are also prime for p=31, 61, 89, 107, 127, 521, 607, 1279, 2203, 2281, 3217, 4253, 4423, 9689, 9941, 11213, 19937, 21701, 23209, 44497, 86243, 110503, 132049, 216091, 756839, 859433, 1257787, 1398269, 2976221 3021377 and 6972593. See our page on Mersenne numbers for more information, history and theorems. Luke's web page on Marin Mersenne is also and excellent starting place.

(up) Record Primes of this Type

rankprime digitswhowhencomment
1232582657-1 9808358 G9 Sep 2006 Mersenne 44??
2230402457-1 9152052 G9 Dec 2005 Mersenne 43??
3225964951-1 7816230 G8 Feb 2005 Mersenne 42??
4224036583-1 7235733 G7 May 2004 Mersenne 41??
5220996011-1 6320430 G6 Nov 2003 Mersenne 40?
6213466917-1 4053946 G5 Dec 2001 Mersenne 39
726972593-1 2098960 G4 Jun 1999 Mersenne 38
823021377-1 909526 G3 Jan 1998 Mersenne 37
922976221-1 895932 G2 Aug 1997 Mersenne 36
1021398269-1 420921 G1 Nov 1996 Mersenne 35
1121257787-1 378632 SG Sep 1996 Mersenne 34
122859433-1 258716 SG Jan 1994 Mersenne 33
132756839-1 227832 SG Feb 1992 Mersenne 32
142216091-1 65050 S Sep 1985 Mersenne 31
152132049-1 39751 S Sep 1983 Mersenne 30
162110503-1 33265 WC Dec 1988 Mersenne 29
17286243-1 25962 S Sep 1982 Mersenne 28
18244497-1 13395 SN Apr 1979 Mersenne 27
19223209-1 6987 N Feb 1979 Mersenne 26
20221701-1 6533 NN Oct 1978 Mersenne 25

(up) Related Pages

(up) References

BSW89
P. T. Bateman, J. L. Selfridge and Wagstaff, Jr., S. S., "The new Mersenne conjecture," Amer. Math. Monthly, 96 (1989) 125-128.  MR 90c:11009 [See the conjectures in our page on Mersenne Primes.]
CW91
W. N. Colquitt and Welsh, Jr., L., "A new Mersenne prime," Math. Comp., 56 (1991) 867--870.  MR 91h:11006 [The discovery of the 29th Mersenne prime.]
Gillies64
D. B. Gillies, "Three new Mersenne primes and a statistical theory," Math. Comp., 18 (1964) 93--95.  Corrigendum in Math. Comp. 31 (1977), 1051.  MR 28:2990 [The primes are 211213-1, 29941-1 and 29689-1.]
NN80
C. Noll and L. Nickel, "The 25th and 26th Mersenne primes," Math. Comp., 35 (1980) 1387-1390.  MR 81k:10010
Peterson92
I. Peterson, "Striking paydirt in prime-number terrain," Science News, 141:14 (1992) 213. [Discusses the discovery of the Mersenne prime 2756839 -1]
Robinson54
R. M. Robinson, "Mersenne and Fermat numbers," Proc. Amer. Math. Soc., 5 (1954) 842-846. [Announces the discovery of the 13th through 17th Mersenne primes--the first Mersenne primes found by electronic computer.]
Slowinski79
D. Slowinski, "Searching for the 27th Mersenne prime," J. Recreational Math., 11 (1978-9) 258--261.
Tuckerman71
B. Tuckerman, "The 24th Mersenne prime," Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U. S. A., 68 (1971) 2319-2320.  MR 45:166
Chris Caldwell © 1996-2008 (all rights reserved)