Currently there may be errors shown on top of a page, because of a missing Wiki update (PHP version and extension DPL3).
Navigation
Topics Help • Register • News • History • How to • Sequences statistics • Template prototypes

Lucas primality test

From Prime-Wiki
Revision as of 14:31, 17 February 2019 by Karbon (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

The Lucas primality test invented in 1891 by Édouard Lucas, determines whether a number N is prime or not, using the complete factorization of N-1.

If, for some integer b, the quantity bN-1 is congruent to 1 modulo N, and if b(N-1)/q is not congruent to 1 modulo N for any prime divisor q of N-1, then N is a prime.

Example

Prove that N = 811 is prime knowing that N-1 = 2 × 34 × 5

Let's start with b = 3.

[math]\displaystyle{ 3^{810/2}\,= \,3^{405}\,\equiv \, 810\,\pmod{811} }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ 3^{810/3}\,= \,3^{270}\,\equiv \, 680\,\pmod{811} }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ 3^{810/5}\,= \,3^{162}\,\equiv \, 212\,\pmod{811} }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ 3^{810}\,\equiv \, 1\,\pmod{811} }[/math]

All conditions of the test hold so 811 is prime.

The fourth computation is not needed: compute b(N-1)/2 as done in the example, if it is congruent to 1, the value b must be changed, if it is congruent to N-1, the first condition of the test holds, otherwise N is composite.

Notice the b = 7 is a bad choice because:

[math]\displaystyle{ 7^{810/2}\,= \,7^{405}\,\equiv \, 1\,\pmod{811} }[/math]

External links