Proth number
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]After French mathematician François Proth (1852-1879).
Noun
[edit]Proth number (plural Proth numbers)
- (number theory) Any number of the form k·2n + 1, where k is odd, n is a positive integer, and 2n > k.
- 2006, B. Grégoire, L. Théry, B. Werner, A Computational Approach to Pocklington Certificates, Masami Hagiya, Philip Wadler (editors), Functional and Logic Programming: 8th International Symposium, Proceedings, Springer, LNCS 3945, page 109,
- To generate Pocklington certificates for Proth number[sic] we add a new entry to the oracle:
pocklington -proth
k p.
- To generate Pocklington certificates for Proth number[sic] we add a new entry to the oracle:
- 2016, Abhijit Das, Computational Number Theory[1], Taylor & Francis (CRC Press / Chapman & Hall), page 295:
- Suppose that a Proth number satisfies the condition that for some integer . Prove that is prime.
- 2014, Adam Spencer, Adam Spencer's Big Book of Numbers, Brio Books, page 388:
- If a Proth number is prime, we call it a Proth prime.
- 2006, B. Grégoire, L. Théry, B. Werner, A Computational Approach to Pocklington Certificates, Masami Hagiya, Philip Wadler (editors), Functional and Logic Programming: 8th International Symposium, Proceedings, Springer, LNCS 3945, page 109,
Hyponyms
[edit]Translations
[edit]number of the form k×2^n + 1
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See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Sequence A080075 on the On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences