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Vantieghems theorem

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 188.62.77.89 (talk) at 06:26, 14 May 2021 (2 is a prime but doesn't follow the first congruence--it should be only applicable to the odd primes(as mentioned in the second reference of the page)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In number theory, Vantieghems theorem is a primality criterion. It states that a natural number n(n≥3) is prime if and only if

Similarly, n is prime, if and only if the following congruence for polynomials in X holds:

or:

Example

Let n=7 forming the product 1*3*7*15*31*63 = 615195. 615195 = 7 mod 127 and so 7 is prime
Let n=9 forming the product 1*3*7*15*31*63*127*255 = 19923090075. 19923090075 = 301 mod 511 and so 9 is composite

References

  • Kilford, L.J.P. (2004). "A generalization of a necessary and sufficient condition for primality due to Vantieghem". Int. J. Math. Math. Sci. (69–72): 3889–3892. arXiv:math/0402128. Bibcode:2004math......2128K. Zbl 1126.11307.. An article with proof and generalizations.
  • Vantieghem, E. (1991). "On a congruence only holding for primes". Indag. Math. New Series. 2 (2): 253–255. Zbl 0734.11003.