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1.

Early History
Many early writers felt that the numbers of the form 2 n-1 were prime
for all primes n, but in 1536 Hudalricus Regius showed that 211-1 = 2047 was
not prime (it is 23.89).  By 1603 Pietro Cataldi had correctly verified that 217-1
and 219-1 were both prime, but then incorrectly stated 2n-1 was also prime for
23, 29, 31 and 37.  In 1640 Fermat showed Cataldi was wrong about 23 and 37;
then Euler in 1738 showed Cataldi was also wrong about 29.  Sometime
later Euler showed Cataldi's assertion about 31 was correct.

Enter French monk Marin Mersenne (1588-1648).  Mersenne stated in the


preface to his Cogitata Physica-Mathematica (1644) that the numbers 2n-1
were prime for

n = 2, 3, 5, 7, 13, 17, 19, 31, 67, 127 and 257 


and were composite for all other positive integers n < 257.  Mersenne's
(incorrect) conjecture fared only slightly better than Regius', but still got his
name attached to these numbers.
Definition: When 2n-1 is prime it is said to be a Mersenne prime.
It was obvious to Mersenne's peers that he could not have tested all of these
numbers (in fact he admitted as much), but they could not test them either.  It
was not until over 100 years later, in 1750, that Euler verified the next number
on Mersenne's and Regius' lists, 231-1, was prime.  After another century, in
1876, Lucas verified 2127-1 was also prime.  Seven years later Pervouchine
showed 261-1 was prime, so Mersenne had missed this one.  In the early 1900's
Powers showed that Mersenne had also missed the primes 2 89-1 and 2107-1. 
Finally, by 1947 Mersenne's range, n < 258, had been completely checked and
it was determined that the correct list is:
n = 2, 3, 5, 7, 13, 17, 19, 31, 61, 89, 107 and 127.
See the table of known Mersenne primes below.

2. Perfect Numbers and a Few Theorems


Many ancient cultures were concerned with the relationship of a number with
the sum of its divisors, often giving mystic interpretations.  Here we are
concerned only with one such relationship:
Definition: A positive integer n is called a perfect number if it is equal to the
sum of all of its positive divisors, excluding nitself.
For example, 6 is the first perfect number because 6=1+2+3.  The next is
28=1+2+4+7+14.  The next two are 496 and 8128. These four were all known
before the time of Christ.  Look at these numbers in the following partially
factored form:
2.3, 4.7, 16.31, 64.127.
Do you notice they all have the same form 2 n-1(2n-1) (for n = 2, 3, 5, and 7
respectively)?  And that in each case 2n-1 was a Mersenne prime?  In fact it is
easy to show the following theorems:
Theorem One:  k is an even perfect number if and only if it has the form 2 n-
1 n
(2 -1) and 2n-1 is prime. [Proof.]

Theorem Two:  If 2n-1 is prime, then so is n. [Proof.]

So the search for Mersennes is also the search for even perfect numbers!

You may have also noticed that the perfect numbers listed above (6, 28, 496,
8128) all end with either the digit 6 or the digit 8--this is also very easy to
prove (but no, they do not continue to alternate 6, 8, 6, 8,...).  If you like that
digit pattern, look at the first four perfect numbers in binary:
110
11100
111110000
1111111000000

(The binary digit pattern is a consequence of Theorem One.)  It is not


known whether or not there is an odd perfect number, but if there is one it is
big!  This is probably the oldest unsolved problem in all of mathematics.

When checking to see if a Mersenne number is prime, we usually first look for
any small divisors.  The following theorem of Euler and Fermat is very useful
in this regard.

Theorem Three:  Let p and q be primes. If q divides Mp = 2p-1, then


q = +/-1 (mod 8)     and     q = 2kp + 1
for some integer k. [Proof.]
Finally, we offer the following for your perusal:
Theorem Four:  Let p = 3 (mod 4) be prime. 2p+1 is also prime if and only if
2p+1 divides Mp. [Proof].
Theorem Five:  If you sum the digits of any even perfect number (except 6),
then sum the digits of the resulting number, and repeat this process until you
get a single digit, that digit will be one. [Proof.]

3. Table of Known Mersenne Primes


Let M(p) = 2p-1 and P(p) = 2p-1(2p-1).  The list of all known primes p for which
M(p) is a Mersenne prime (therefore P(p) is a perfect number) follows:
p digits digits
## year discoverer notes
(exponent) in Mp in Pp
1 2 1 1 ---- ----  
2 3 1 2 ---- ----  
3 5 2 3 ---- ----  
4 7 3 4 ---- ----  
5 13 4 8 1456 anonymous  
6 17 6 10 1588 Cataldi  
7 19 6 12 1588 Cataldi  
8 31 10 19 1772 Euler  
9 61 19 37 1883 Pervushin  
10 89 27 54 1911 Powers  
11 107 33 65 1914 Powers note
12 127 39 77 1876 Lucas  
13 521 157 314 1952 Robinson  
14 607 183 366 1952 Robinson  
15 1279 386 770 1952 Robinson  
16 2203 664 1327 1952 Robinson  
17 2281 687 1373 1952 Robinson  
18 3217 969 1937 1957 Riesel  
19 4253 1281 2561 1961 Hurwitz  
20 4423 1332 2663 1961 Hurwitz  
21 9689 2917 5834 1963 Gillies  
22 9941 2993 5985 1963 Gillies  
23 11213 3376 6751 1963 Gillies  
24 19937 6002 12003 1971 Tuckerman [Tuckerman71]
25 21701 6533 13066 1978 Noll & Nickel [NN80]
26 23209 6987 13973 1979 Noll "
27 44497 13395 26790 1979 Nelson & Slowinski [Slowinski79]
28 86243 25962 51924 1982 Slowinski [Ewing83]
29 110503 33265 66530 1988 Colquitt & Welsh [CW91]
30 132049 39751 79502 1983 Slowinski  
31 216091 65050 130100 1985 Slowinski  
32 756839 227832 455663 1992 Slowinski & Gage et al. (web page)
33 859433 258716 517430 1994 Slowinski & Gage  
34 1257787 378632 757263 1996 Slowinski & Gage (web page)
Armengaud, Woltman, 
35 1398269 420921 841842 1996 (web page)
et al. (GIMPS)
Spence, Woltman,
36 2976221 895932 1791864 1997 (web page)
et al. (GIMPS)
Clarkson,
37 3021377 909526 1819050 1998 Woltman, Kurowski (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Hajratwala, Woltman,
38 6972593 2098960 4197919 1999 Kurowski (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Cameron, Woltman,
39 13466917 4053946 8107892 2001 Kurowski (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Shafer, Woltman, Kurowski
?? 20996011 6320430 12640858 2003 (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Findley, Woltman, Kurowski
?? 24036583 7235733 14471465 2004 (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Nowak, Woltman, Kurowski
?? 25964951 7816230  15632458 2005 (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Cooper, Boone, Woltman,
?? 30402457  9152052  18304103 2005 Kurowski (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Cooper, Boone, Woltman,
?? 32582657 9808358 19616714 2006 Kurowski (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Elvenich, Woltman,
?? 37156667 11185272 22370543 2008 Kurowski (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Strindmo, Woltman,
?? 42643801 12837064 25674127 2009 Kurowski (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)
Smith, Woltman, Kurowski
?? 43112609 12978189 25956377 2008 (web page)
et al. (GIMPS, PrimeNet)

We put question marks instead of a number for the the last of the Mersenne
primes because it will not be known if there are other Mersenne's in between
these until a check and double check has been completed by GIMPS.  See
the GIMPS Status Page for more information.  Not all smaller exponents have
been tested.

4. The Lucas-Lehmer Test and Recent History


Mersenne primes (and therefore even perfect numbers) are found using the
following theorem:
Lucas-Lehmer Test:  For p an odd prime, the Mersenne number 2p-1 is prime
if and only if 2p-1 divides S(p-1) where S(n+1) = S(n)2-2, and S(1) = 4. [Proof.]
(It is also possible to start with S(1)=10 and certain other values depending
on p.)  In pseudo-code this test is:
Lucas_Lehmer_Test(p):
  s := 4;
  for i from 3 to p do s := s2-2 mod 2p-1;
  if s == 0 then
    2p-1 is prime
  else
    2p-1 is composite;
The theory for this test was initiated by Lucas in the late 1870's and then made
into this simple test about 1930 by Lehmer. The sequence S(n) is computed
modulo 2p-1 to save time.  This test is ideal for binary computers because the
division by 2p-1 (in binary) can be done using rotation and addition only. 
(See the pages on proving primality for more information of proving numbers
are prime.)

In 1811 Peter Barlow wrote in his text Theory of Numbers that 230(231-1) "is the
greatest [perfect number] that will be discovered; for as they are merely
curious, without being useful, it is not likely that any person will attempt to find
one beyond it."  I wonder what he would have made of the first attempts to
climb Mount Everest, to run faster miles, or to jump a longer broad jump--other
tasks that are curious but not useful.  Obviously no one in the late 1800's had
any idea of the power of modern computers.  What might we know about the
machines of 50 years from now?  (See also "Why find big primes?")

After the 23rd Mersenne prime was


found at the University of Illinois, the
mathematics department was so proud
that the chair of their department, Dr.
Bateman, had their postage meter
changed to stamp "211213-1 is prime" on
each envelope.  This was used until the four color theorem was proved in 1976.
(In 1985 Dr. Bateman printed several copies of the earlier imprint--the image
on the left is from one of these.)

The 25th and 26th Mersenne primes were found by high-school students Laura
Nickel and Landon Curt Noll, who, though they had little understanding of the
mathematics involved, used Lucas' simple test on the local university's
mainframe (CSUH's CDC 174) to find the next two primes.  Their discovery of
the first prime made the national television news and the front page of the New
York times.  They went their separate ways after finding the first prime, but
Noll kept the program running to find the second--so Noll claims complete
ownership.  Noll searched later, and though he never found another Mersenne
prime, he is one of a team that holds the record for the largest non-Mersenne
prime.  He currently works for Silicon Graphics.

Slowinski, who works for Cray computers, has written a version of the Lucas
test that he has convinced many Cray labs around the world to run in their spare
time (time that would be lost otherwise).  He had to delay announcing one of
his prime records until he got permission to begin looking for it.  Slowinski's
search for record primes is "not so organized as you would suppose" (his
words), as he does not search systematically.  In fact, looking at the table of
Mersennes you see he missed the 29th prime but found the 30th and 31st. 
Colquitt & Welsh worked to fill in the gaps and found the 29th.

Enter George Woltman, an excellent programmer and organizer.  Starting in


late 1995 he gathered up the disparate databases and combined them into one.
Then he placed this database, and a free, highly optimized program for search
for Mersennes onto the web.  This began GIMPS (the Great Internet Mersenne
Prime Search) which: has now found the largest known Mersennes, has
scanned all of the regions left unexplored between the previous record primes,
combines the efforts of dozens of experts and thousands of amateurs, and
which offers free software for most computer platforms.

In late 1997 Scott Kurowski (and others) established PrimeNet to automate the


selection of ranges and reporting of results for GIMPS, now almost anyone can
join this search!

5. Conjectures and Unsolved Problems


Is there an odd perfect number? 
We know that all even perfect numbers are a Mersenne prime times a
power of two (Theorem One above), but what about odd perfect
numbers?  If there is one, then it is a perfect square times an odd power
of a single prime; it is divisible by at least eight primes and has at least
75 prime factors (not necessarily distinct [Hare2006], [Hare2005],
[IS2003]) with at least 9 distinct [Nielsen2006]; it has at least 300
decimal digits [BCR91]; and it has a prime divisor greater that
1020 [Cohen87].  For more information see [Ribenboim95] or [Guy94].
Are there infinitely many Mersenne primes? 
Equivalently we could ask: Are there infinitely many even perfect
numbers?  The answer is probably yes (because the harmonic series
diverges).
Are there infinitely many Mersenne composites? 
Euler showed:
Theorem:  If  k>1 and  p=4k+3  is prime, then 2p+1 is prime if and only
if 2p = 1 (mod 2p+1).
So if p=4k+3 and 2p+1 are prime then the Mersenne number 2p-1 is
composite (and it seems reasonable to conjecture that there are infinitely
many primes pairs such p, 2p+1). 
The New Mersenne Conjecture:
Bateman, Selfridge and Wagstaff have conjectured [BSW89] the
following.
Let p be any odd natural number. If two of the following conditions
hold, then so does the third:

1. p = 2k+/-1   or   p = 4k+/-3


2. 2p-1 is a prime (obviously a Mersenne prime)
3. (2p+1)/3 is a prime.

Notice how this conjecture is related to the theorem in the previous


conjecture.  See our page on The New Mersenne Conjecturefor status
information.
Is every Mersenne number 2p-1 square free?
This falls more in the category of an open question (to which we do not
know the answer), rather than a conjecture (which we guess is true)
[Guy94 section A3].  It is easy to show that if the square of a
prime p divides a Mersenne, then p is a Wieferich prime and these are
rare!  Only two are known below 4,000,000,000,000 and neither of these
squared divide a Mersenne.  
Let C0 = 2, then let C1 = 2C0-1, C2 = 2C1-1, C3 = 2C2-1, ... Are these all prime? 
According to Dickson [Dickson v1p22] Catalan responded in 1876 to
Lucas' stating 2127-1 (C4) is prime with this sequence.  These numbers
grow very quickly:
C0 = 2 (prime)
C1 = 3 (prime)
C2 = 7 (prime)
C3 = 127 (prime)
C4 = 170141183460469231731687303715884105727 (prime)
51217599719369681875006054625051616349
C5 > 10 (is C5 prime ?)
It seems very unlikely that C5 (or many of the larger terms) would be
prime, so this is no doubt another example of Guy's strong law of small
numbers.  Notice that if there is even one composite term in this
sequences, then by theorem one all of the following terms are
composite.  (Landon Curt Noll tells me he has used his program calc to
verify that C5 has no prime divisors below 5*1051.)
Are there more double-Mersenne primes?
Another common early misconception was that if n=Mp is prime, then so
is Mn; lets call this number MMp (a "double-Mersenne").  Indeed each of
the first four such numbers are prime:
MM2  =  23-1   =  7,
MM3  =  27-1   =  127,
MM5  =  231-1  =  2147483647,
MM7  =  2127-1 =  170141183460469231731687303715884105727.
However, the next four (MM13 MM17 MM19 and MM31) all have known
factors--so are composite.  Are there any more primes in this sequence? 
Probably not, but it remains an open question.  Tony Forbes is leading a
project to search for a factor of the next term: MM61, you might want to
join and help!

Notice the Catalan sequence above is a subsequence of this one.

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