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Revision as of 19:37, 20 January 2019

M46 is the short hand used to refer to the 46th Mersenne prime 242.643.801-1.

The number is 12,837,064 decimal digits long. After the discovery, Dr. Crandalls company Perfectly Scientific, which developed the FFT algorithm used by GIMPS, made commemorative souvenir posters with all 12.8 million digits printed in a tiny font.

Discovery

[math]\displaystyle{ 2^{42.643.801}{-}1 }[/math] was discovered to be prime on 2009-04-12 by an IT professional Odd Magnar Strindmo, using Prime95 program written by George Woltman. Strindmo's computers had been working with GIMPS since 1996 testing over 1400 candidates. The calculation took 29 days on a 3.0 GHz Intel Core2 processor.

At time of its discovery, it was the second-largest known prime number. This prime number was the thirteenth record prime found by the GIMPS project.

Verification

The prime was first verified on June 12th by Tony Reix of Bull SAS in Grenoble, France, using the Glucas program running on Bull NovaScale HPC servers, one featuring Itanium2 CPUs and another featuring Nehalem CPUs.

The prime was later independently verified by Rob Giltrap of Sun Microsystems using Ernst Mayer's Mlucas program running on a Sun SPARC Enterprise M9000 Server.

External links