Largest known prime number found
The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search, a cooperative computing project, helps find a prime that has nearly 13 million digits.
Web edition : Sunday, September 28th, 2008
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LARGEST KNOWN PRIME NUMBER. Printing out all 13 million digits in 12-point type would create a number 30 miles long. But here are a few of the digits, from the beginning and the end of the full number. Full story.Avik Nandy/Science News

Editor’s note: This story was originally posted on Science News online as a Math Trek column September 20.

Here’s a number to savor: 243,112,609-1.

Its size is mind-boggling. With nearly 13 million digits, it makes the number of atoms in the known universe seem negligible, a mere 80 digits.

And its form is tidy and lovely: 2n-1.

But its true beauty is far grander: It is a prime number. Indeed, it is the largest prime number ever found.

The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search, or GIMPS, a computing project that uses volunteers’ computers to hunt for primes, found the prime and just confirmed the discovery. It can now claim a $100,000 prize from the Electronic Frontier Foundation for being the first to find a prime number that has more than 10 million digits.

Prime numbers make up the “periodic table” of numbers, the building blocks that combine to form all numbers. A prime number is a whole number divisible only by 1 and itself. Euclid in 300 B.C. proved that there are infinitely many of them (click for his beautifully simple proof). Still, that doesn’t make them easy to find. At the beginning of the number line, the primes seem to be everywhere — 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13… — but in the number line’s more distant reaches, prime numbers become elusive.

Because 243,112,609-1 has the form 2n-1, it’s called a “Mersenne prime,” after a French monk born in the 16th century who made an (incorrect) conjecture about them. Mersenne primes are of particular interest partly because they can be expressed in such a compact form. (It sure is easier to write 243,112,609-1 than to type out all 13 million digits!) More significantly, though, some clever methods have been developed to identify them.

The most obvious way to go about identifying any prime number is to try factoring it. First, try dividing by 3, then 5, then 7, etc., and if none of them work, you’ve got a prime. But the last time a new prime was identified this way was in 1588, because as the numbers get bigger, the division takes longer and longer. So mathematicians have developed clever tests for primeness that are simpler to compute. The best one of all, called the Lucas-Lehmer test, only works for Mersenne primes. Remarkably, the method requires no division at all, making it extremely quick.

Only 46 Mersenne primes have ever been found, and GIMPS has found 12 of them. The project recruits volunteers to donate their computers’ CPU cycles when they would otherwise be idle. Each computer works on a single number, first trying to find small factors. If that fails, it applies the Lucas-Lehmer test. A computer working full-time can test a single 10-million-digit number in eight days.

The processing power of all the individual computers linked together is equivalent to one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world. No supercomputer, though, would devote all its processing time to computing prime numbers.

The finding is unlikely to have significance for number theory, although number theory’s great unanswered question, perhaps, is to find how the prime numbers are distributed. Still, “you never know where discoveries may lead you,” says George Woltman, founder of GIMPS. “But really, it’s like climbing Mt. Everest. You do it because it’s there. It’s a lot safer, though. You can do it from the air-conditioned comfort of your home.”

Or, if you prefer, the air-conditioned comfort of your office. The computer that found the prime was administered by Edson Smith at the University of California, Los Angeles mathematics department. Smith downloaded the GIMPS software, and when the computers in the math department weren’t busy with other work, they searched for primes and communicated their results back to GIMPS.

This prime is the eighth found at UCLA, although the first with GIMPS. Half the prize money will go to the UCLA math department, a quarter will go to charity (probably a math department with an open faculty position for number theory, Woltman says) and most of the remainder will go to those who found previous Mersenne primes using GIMPS.

Remarkably, GIMPS found another Mersenne prime two weeks after this one – after a two-year dry spell with no new primes. This prime had fewer digits, just 11 million.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation became interested in prime hunting because it makes an excellent challenge problem for cooperative, distributed computing. “The award is an incentive to stretch the computational ability of the Internet,” says Landon Noll of Cisco Systems Inc., one of the judges for the Electronic Frontier Foundation prize and a discoverer of a former biggest known prime. More prizes remain to be claimed: a $150,000 award for a prime with 100 million digits, and a $250,000 award for one with a billion digits.

GIMPS has used well-established methods, while continuing to refine its implementations for greatest efficiency. Finding the numbers for the larger awards, though, will require major innovations, Noll says: “People are going to have to go back to the drawing board.” He points out that testing a single 100-million–digit number for primeness would take a single desktop computer more than four years, and testing a billion-digit number would take it more than 500 years. So at a minimum, he says, algorithms will have to be developed that allow multiple computers to test a single prime.

Current cryptographic systems rely on the challenge of factoring large primes. This task is distinct from verifying primeness, but the root difficulty is the same: limited computing power. Through this prize, “we maintain a pulse on what people might be able to do in breaking cryptosystems,” Noll says.


Comments 7
  • play nicely in the sandbox boys!
    tom  berry tom berry
    Nov. 29, 2008 at 12:01pm
  • Determining prime of super large numbers. Find square root of that number. If that root has numbers after the decimal point, drop them. If the large subject number ends in a digit (1) than change the last digits of the roots to 1 and 1, or 3 and 7, or 9 and 9. At the same time change the first digits of the roots down one digit and the other up one digit. Likewise, if the subject number ends with a (3) digit replace the last digits of the roots with 1 & 3, if the subject number ends in (7) digit than replace the last digits of the roots with 1 & 7, while the subject number ending with a (9) digit would replace the last digits of the roots with 1 & 9 and 7 & 7. With the first digits of the roots either rising or falling by 1 digit in each case. Than multiply those changed roots if the are factors of the subject number than the number is not prime. If they're not factors than the number is prime. ricor
    richard rainey richard rainey
    Nov. 6, 2008 at 8:17pm
  • There is an infinity of primes, but is there still a prime at infinity.. I have a simple demo that says not but it's a bit too big to develop here..
    ALAN SCRIBOT ALAN SCRIBOT
    Oct. 7, 2008 at 4:11am
  • Creo saber la respuesta de esto.... y tambien creo saber un numero primo con mas de 10 millones de sifras ^^ aunque no estoy seguro.... pero quiero saber donde debo poner la respuesta.
    seria de una ayuda inmensa que me digan...

    Boris Carrasco Boris Carrasco
    Oct. 6, 2008 at 8:06pm
  • The first sentence of the last paragraph has an error. "Current cryptographic systems rely on the challenge of factoring large primes." That's an extraordinary challenge, because primes cannot be factored into distinct proper factors.

    Great article otherwise!
    Jason Schultz Jason Schultz
    Oct. 6, 2008 at 9:01am
  • Alan Thorne i looked at your comment and decided that I needed to create an account here because you are wrong. Point one.) Pi has no end. thats it. Point two.) If you are not going to lie then dont state it out loud we all do not want to know about your supposed honesty. Point three.) The usefullness of prime numbers is that the U.S. Government uses them for codes. Point three.) your an idiot. And futhermore I find it very cool that they found a prime number 13 Million digits long.
    Tim Morton Tim Morton
    Oct. 6, 2008 at 8:54am
  • I see more point in finding the end of pi, I am not going to lie... I just don't see any usefulness in this, but maybe I am missing where it is useful.
    Alan Thorne Alan Thorne
    Sep. 28, 2008 at 2:55pm
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  • GIMPS website: [Go to]

    For an enormous amount of additional information on prime numbers, go to [Go to]

    ARTICLES ON PAST BIGGEST PRIMES:

    “New largest prime discovered” (2005; ~ 7.8 million digits) [Go to]

    “Math Trek: Priming upward” (2004; ~ 7 million digits) [Go to]

    “Searchers capture a champion megaprime” (2001; ~ 4 million digits) [Go to]
  • FOR A LARGER SAMPLING of the huge number, visit [Go to]
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