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Inrecreational mathematics, a repunit is a number like 11, 111, or 1111 that contains only the digit 1 — a more specific type of repdigit. The term stands for "repeated unit" and was coined in 1966 by Albert H. Beiler in his book Recreations in the Theory of Numbers.[note 1]

Repunit prime
No. of known terms11
Conjectured no. of termsInfinite
First terms11, 1111111111111111111, 11111111111111111111111
Largest known term(108177207−1)/9
OEIS index
  • Primes of the form (10^n − 1)/9
  • Arepunit prime is a repunit that is also a prime number. Primes that are repunits in base-2 are Mersenne primes. As of May 2023, the largest known prime number 282,589,933 − 1, the largest probable prime R8177207 and the largest elliptic curve primality-proven prime R86453 are all repunits in various bases.

    Definition

    The base-b repunits are defined as (this b can be either positive or negative)

     

    Thus, the number Rn(b) consists of n copies of the digit 1 in base-b representation. The first two repunits base-b for n = 1 and n = 2 are

     

    In particular, the decimal (base-10) repunits that are often referred to as simply repunits are defined as

     

    Thus, the number Rn = Rn(10) consists of n copies of the digit 1 in base 10 representation. The sequence of repunits base-10 starts with

    1, 11, 111, 1111, 11111, 111111, ... (sequence A002275 in the OEIS).

    Similarly, the repunits base-2 are defined as

     

    Thus, the number Rn(2) consists of n copies of the digit 1 in base-2 representation. In fact, the base-2 repunits are the well-known Mersenne numbers Mn = 2n − 1, they start with

    1, 3, 7, 15, 31, 63, 127, 255, 511, 1023, 2047, 4095, 8191, 16383, 32767, 65535, ... (sequence A000225 in the OEIS).

    Properties

    since 35 = 7 × 5 = 5 × 7. This repunit factorization does not depend on the base-b in which the repunit is expressed.
    Only repunits (in any base) having a prime number of digits can be prime. This is a necessary but not sufficient condition. For example,
    R11(2) = 211 − 1 = 2047 = 23 × 89.

    Factorization of decimal repunits

    (Prime factors colored red means "new factors", i. e. the prime factor divides Rn but does not divide Rk for all k < n) (sequence A102380 in the OEIS)[2]

    R1 = 1
    R2 = 11
    R3 = 3 · 37
    R4 = 11 · 101
    R5 = 41 · 271
    R6 = 3 · 7 · 11 · 13 · 37
    R7 = 239 · 4649
    R8 = 11 · 73 · 101 · 137
    R9 = 32 · 37 · 333667
    R10 = 11 · 41 · 271 · 9091
    R11 = 21649 · 513239
    R12 = 3 · 7 · 11 · 13 · 37 · 101 · 9901
    R13 = 53 · 79 · 265371653
    R14 = 11 · 239 · 4649 · 909091
    R15 = 3 · 31 · 37 · 41 · 271 · 2906161
    R16 = 11 · 17 · 73 · 101 · 137 · 5882353
    R17 = 2071723 · 5363222357
    R18 = 32 · 7 · 11 · 13 · 19 · 37 · 52579 · 333667
    R19 = 1111111111111111111
    R20 = 11 · 41 · 101 · 271 · 3541 · 9091 · 27961
    R21 = 3 · 37 · 43 · 239 · 1933 · 4649 · 10838689
    R22 = 112 · 23 · 4093 · 8779 · 21649 · 513239
    R23 = 11111111111111111111111
    R24 = 3 · 7 · 11 · 13 · 37 · 73 · 101 · 137 · 9901 · 99990001
    R25 = 41 · 271 · 21401 · 25601 · 182521213001
    R26 = 11 · 53 · 79 · 859 · 265371653 · 1058313049
    R27 = 33 · 37 · 757 · 333667 · 440334654777631
    R28 = 11 · 29 · 101 · 239 · 281 · 4649 · 909091 · 121499449
    R29 = 3191 · 16763 · 43037 · 62003 · 77843839397
    R30 = 3 · 7 · 11 · 13 · 31 · 37 · 41 · 211 · 241 · 271 · 2161 · 9091 · 2906161

    Smallest prime factor of Rn for n > 1 are

    11, 3, 11, 41, 3, 239, 11, 3, 11, 21649, 3, 53, 11, 3, 11, 2071723, 3, 1111111111111111111, 11, 3, 11, 11111111111111111111111, 3, 41, 11, 3, 11, 3191, 3, 2791, 11, 3, 11, 41, 3, 2028119, 11, 3, 11, 83, 3, 173, 11, 3, 11, 35121409, 3, 239, 11, ... (sequence A067063 in the OEIS)

    Repunit primes

    The definition of repunits was motivated by recreational mathematicians looking for prime factors of such numbers.

    It is easy to show that if n is divisible by a, then Rn(b) is divisible by Ra(b):

     

    where   is the   cyclotomic polynomial and d ranges over the divisors of n. For p prime,

     

    which has the expected form of a repunit when x is substituted with b.

    For example, 9 is divisible by 3, and thus R9 is divisible by R3—in fact, 111111111 = 111 · 1001001. The corresponding cyclotomic polynomials   and   are   and  , respectively. Thus, for Rn to be prime, n must necessarily be prime, but it is not sufficient for n to be prime. For example, R3 = 111 = 3 · 37 is not prime. Except for this case of R3, p can only divide Rn for prime nifp = 2kn + 1 for some k.

    Decimal repunit primes

    Rn is prime for n = 2, 19, 23, 317, 1031, 49081, 86453 ... (sequence A004023inOEIS). On April 3, 2007 Harvey Dubner (who also found R49081) announced that R109297 is a probable prime.[3] On July 15, 2007, Maksym Voznyy announced R270343 to be probably prime.[4] Serge Batalov and Ryan Propper found R5794777 and R8177207 to be probable primes on April 20 and May 8, 2021, respectively.[5] As of their discovery each was the largest known probable prime. On March 22, 2022 probable prime R49081 was eventually proven to be a prime.[6] On May 15, 2023 probable prime R86453 was eventually proven to be a prime.[7]

    It has been conjectured that there are infinitely many repunit primes[8] and they seem to occur roughly as often as the prime number theorem would predict: the exponent of the Nth repunit prime is generally around a fixed multiple of the exponent of the (N−1)th.

    The prime repunits are a trivial subset of the permutable primes, i.e., primes that remain prime after any permutation of their digits.

    Particular properties are

    Algebra factorization of generalized repunit numbers

    Ifb is a perfect power (can be written as mn, with m, n integers, n >1) differs from 1, then there is at most one repunit in base-b. If n is a prime power (can be written as pr, with p prime, r integer, p, r >0), then all repunit in base-b are not prime aside from Rp and R2. Rp can be either prime or composite, the former examples, b = −216, −128, 4, 8, 16, 27, 36, 100, 128, 256, etc., the latter examples, b = −243, −125, −64, −32, −27, −8, 9, 25, 32, 49, 81, 121, 125, 144, 169, 196, 216, 225, 243, 289, etc., and R2 can be prime (when p differs from 2) only if b is negative, a power of −2, for example, b = −8, −32, −128, −8192, etc., in fact, the R2 can also be composite, for example, b = −512, −2048, −32768, etc. If n is not a prime power, then no base-b repunit prime exists, for example, b = 64, 729 (with n = 6), b = 1024 (with n = 10), and b = −1 or 0 (with n any natural number). Another special situation is b = −4k4, with k positive integer, which has the aurifeuillean factorization, for example, b = −4 (with k = 1, then R2 and R3 are primes), and b = −64, −324, −1024, −2500, −5184, ... (with k = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, ...), then no base-b repunit prime exists. It is also conjectured that when b is neither a perfect power nor −4k4 with k positive integer, then there are infinity many base-b repunit primes.

    The generalized repunit conjecture

    A conjecture related to the generalized repunit primes:[9][10] (the conjecture predicts where is the next generalized Mersenne prime, if the conjecture is true, then there are infinitely many repunit primes for all bases  )

    For any integer  , which satisfies the conditions:

    1.  .
    2.   is not a perfect power. (since when   is a perfect  th power, it can be shown that there is at most one   value such that   is prime, and this   value is   itself or a rootof )
    3.   is not in the form  . (if so, then the number has aurifeuillean factorization)

    has generalized repunit primes of the form

     

    for prime  , the prime numbers will be distributed near the best fit line

     

    where limit  ,  

    and there are about

     

    base-b repunit primes less than N.

    We also have the following 3 properties:

    1. The number of prime numbers of the form   (with prime  ) less than or equal to   is about  .
    2. The expected number of prime numbers of the form   with prime   between   and   is about  .
    3. The probability that number of the form   is prime (for prime  ) is about  .

    History

    Although they were not then known by that name, repunits in base-10 were studied by many mathematicians during the nineteenth century in an effort to work out and predict the cyclic patterns of repeating decimals.[11]

    It was found very early on that for any prime p greater than 5, the period of the decimal expansion of 1/p is equal to the length of the smallest repunit number that is divisible by p. Tables of the period of reciprocal of primes up to 60,000 had been published by 1860 and permitted the factorization by such mathematicians as Reuschle of all repunits up to R16 and many larger ones. By 1880, even R17toR36 had been factored[11] and it is curious that, though Édouard Lucas showed no prime below three million had period nineteen, there was no attempt to test any repunit for primality until early in the twentieth century. The American mathematician Oscar Hoppe proved R19 to be prime in 1916[12] and Lehmer and Kraitchik independently found R23 to be prime in 1929.

    Further advances in the study of repunits did not occur until the 1960s, when computers allowed many new factors of repunits to be found and the gaps in earlier tables of prime periods corrected. R317 was found to be a probable prime circa 1966 and was proved prime eleven years later, when R1031 was shown to be the only further possible prime repunit with fewer than ten thousand digits. It was proven prime in 1986, but searches for further prime repunits in the following decade consistently failed. However, there was a major side-development in the field of generalized repunits, which produced a large number of new primes and probable primes.

    Since 1999, four further probably prime repunits have been found, but it is unlikely that any of them will be proven prime in the foreseeable future because of their huge size.

    The Cunningham project endeavours to document the integer factorizations of (among other numbers) the repunits to base 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, and 12.

    Demlo numbers

    D. R. Kaprekar has defined Demlo numbers as concatenation of a left, middle and right part, where the left and right part must be of the same length (up to a possible leading zero to the left) and must add up to a repdigit number, and the middle part may contain any additional number of this repeated digit.[13] They are named after Demlo railway station (now called Dombivili) 30 miles from Bombay on the then G.I.P. Railway, where Kaprekar started investigating them. He calls Wonderful Demlo numbers those of the form 1, 121, 12321, 1234321, ..., 12345678987654321. The fact that these are the squares of the repunits has led some authors to call Demlo numbers the infinite sequence of these,[14] 1, 121, 12321, ..., 12345678987654321, 1234567900987654321, 123456790120987654321, ..., (sequence A002477 in the OEIS), although one can check these are not Demlo numbers for p = 10, 19, 28, ...

    See also

    Footnotes

    Notes

    1. ^ Albert H. Beiler coined the term "repunit number" as follows:

      A number which consists of a repeated of a single digit is sometimes called a monodigit number, and for convenience the author has used the term "repunit number" (repeated unit) to represent monodigit numbers consisting solely of the digit 1.[1]

    References

    1. ^ Beiler 2013, pp. 83
  • ^ For more information, see Factorization of repunit numbers.
  • ^ Harvey Dubner, New Repunit R(109297)
  • ^ Maksym Voznyy, New PRP Repunit R(270343)
  • ^ Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A004023 (Indices of prime repunits: numbers n such that 11...111 (with n 1's) = (10^n - 1)/9 is prime.)". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation.
  • ^ "PrimePage Primes: R(49081)". PrimePage Primes. 2022-03-21. Retrieved 2022-03-31.
  • ^ "PrimePage Primes: R(86453)". PrimePage Primes. 2023-05-16. Retrieved 2023-05-16.
  • ^ Chris Caldwell. "repunit". The Prime Glossary. Prime Pages.
  • ^ Deriving the Wagstaff Mersenne Conjecture
  • ^ Generalized Repunit Conjecture
  • ^ a b Dickson & Cresse 1999, pp. 164–167
  • ^ Francis 1988, pp. 240–246
  • ^ Kaprekar 1938a, 1938b, Gunjikar & Kaprekar 1939
  • ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Demlo Number". MathWorld.
  • References


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Repunit&oldid=1233768348"
     



    Last edited on 10 July 2024, at 20:06  





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    This page was last edited on 10 July 2024, at 20:06 (UTC).

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