Carmichael number: Difference between revisions
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[[J. Chernick]] found in 1939 a way to construct Carmichael numbers. If, for a natural number ''n'', the three numbers ''6n+1'', ''12n+1'' and ''18n+1'' are prime numbers, the product <math>(6n+1)\cdot (12n+1)\cdot (18n+1)</math> is a Carmichael number. Equivalent to this is that if ''m'', ''2m-1'' and ''3m-2'' are prime numbers, then the product <math>m\cdot (2m-1)\cdot (3m-1)</math> is a Carmichael number. | [[J. Chernick]] found in 1939 a way to construct Carmichael numbers. If, for a natural number ''n'', the three numbers ''6n+1'', ''12n+1'' and ''18n+1'' are prime numbers, the product <math>(6n+1)\cdot (12n+1)\cdot (18n+1)</math> is a Carmichael number. Equivalent to this is that if ''m'', ''2m-1'' and ''3m-2'' are prime numbers, then the product <math>m\cdot (2m-1)\cdot (3m-1)</math> is a Carmichael number. | ||
==References and notes== | |||
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== Further reading == | == Further reading == |
Revision as of 20:30, 7 November 2007
A Carmichael number is a composite number, who is named after the mathematician Robert Daniel Carmichael. A Carmichael number c satisfies for every integer a, that is divisible by c. A Carmichael number c satisfies also the conrgruence , if . In 1994 Pomerance, Alford and Granville proved that there exist infinitely many Carmichael numbers.
Properties of a Carmichael number
Every Carmichael number is an Euler pseudoprime. Every abolute Euler pseudoprime is a Carmichael number. A Carmichael number is squarefree and every Carmichael number has three different prime factors or more. Every Carmichael number c satisfies for every of his prime factors that is divisible by .
Chernicks Carmichael numbers
J. Chernick found in 1939 a way to construct Carmichael numbers. If, for a natural number n, the three numbers 6n+1, 12n+1 and 18n+1 are prime numbers, the product is a Carmichael number. Equivalent to this is that if m, 2m-1 and 3m-2 are prime numbers, then the product is a Carmichael number.
References and notes
Further reading
- Richard E. Crandall and Carl Pomerance: Prime Numbers. A Computational Perspective. Springer Verlag, ISBN 0-387-25282-7
- Paolo Ribenboim: The New Book of Prime Number Records. Springer Verlag, 1996, ISBN 0-387-94457-5