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Difference between revisions of "M38"

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'''M38''' is the short hand used to refer to the 38th [[Mersenne prime]]. Specifically it is 2<sup>{{Num|6972593}}</sup>-1. This number was discovered to be [[prime]] on 1999-06-01 by [[Nayan Hajratwala]], using [[Prime95]] written by [[George Woltman]]. The number is [http://www.mersenneforum.org/txt/38.txt {{Num|2098960}} decimal digits] long.
 
'''M38''' is the short hand used to refer to the 38th [[Mersenne prime]]. Specifically it is 2<sup>{{Num|6972593}}</sup>-1. This number was discovered to be [[prime]] on 1999-06-01 by [[Nayan Hajratwala]], using [[Prime95]] written by [[George Woltman]]. The number is [http://www.mersenneforum.org/txt/38.txt {{Num|2098960}} decimal digits] long.
  
The prime was independently verified by David Willmore using [[Mlucas]] program written by [[Ernst Mayer]] using two weeks of computer time donated by Aerial Communications on a 500 MHz DEC Alpha workstation.
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The prime was independently verified by David Willmore using [[Mlucas]] program written by [[Ernst W. Mayer]] using two weeks of computer time donated by Aerial Communications on a 500 MHz DEC Alpha workstation.
  
 
This prime number was the fourth record prime found by the [[GIMPS]] project.
 
This prime number was the fourth record prime found by the [[GIMPS]] project.

Latest revision as of 20:11, 11 August 2024

M38
Prime class :
Type : Mersenne prime
Formula : Mn = 2n - 1
Prime data :
Rank : 38
n-value : 6,972,593
Number : 437075744127...142924193791
Digits : 2,098,960
Perfect number : 26,972,592 • (26,972,593-1)
Digits : 4,197,919
Discovery data :
Date of Discovery : 1999-06-01
Discoverer : Nayan Hajratwala
Found with : Lucas-Lehmer test / Prime95 on 350 MHz Pentium II IBM Aptiva
Credits : George Woltman et. al.
GIMPS

M38 is the short hand used to refer to the 38th Mersenne prime. Specifically it is 26,972,593-1. This number was discovered to be prime on 1999-06-01 by Nayan Hajratwala, using Prime95 written by George Woltman. The number is 2,098,960 decimal digits long.

The prime was independently verified by David Willmore using Mlucas program written by Ernst W. Mayer using two weeks of computer time donated by Aerial Communications on a 500 MHz DEC Alpha workstation.

This prime number was the fourth record prime found by the GIMPS project.

External links