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Prime
Rank1

Sub-Project
Available
Tasks2,3
UTC time 2016-11-22 14:13:24 Powered by BOINC


14 321 Prime Search (LLR) 500/1000 User Count 92664
12 Cullen Prime Search (LLR) 400/1000 Host Count 271624
18 Extended Sierpinski Problem (LLR) 501/28K Hosts Per User 2.93
  Generalized Cullen/Woodall Prime Search (LLR) (Coming soon!) 0/0 Tasks in Progress 159589
12 Prime Sierpinski Problem (LLR) 749/41K Primes Discovered 75797
467 Proth Prime Search (LLR) 3998/921K Primes Reported4 at T5K 26214
2379 Proth Prime Search Extended (LLR) 3998/475K Mega Primes Discovered 128
193 Proth Mega Prime Search (LLR) 3995/268K TeraFLOPS 2071.544
7 Seventeen or Bust (LLR) 199/7678
PrimeGrid's 2016 Challenge Series
Wallis is Born Challenge
Nov 18 18:00:00 to Nov 23 18:00:00 (UTC)


Time until end of Wallis is Born challenge:
Days
Hours
Min
Sec
Standings
Wallis is Born Challenge (AP27): Individuals | Teams
52 Sierpinski / Riesel Base 5 Problem (LLR) 1001/17K
4303 Sophie Germain Prime Search (LLR) 3983/153K
25 The Riesel Problem (LLR) 751/2000
12 Woodall Prime Search (LLR) 401/1000
  Generalized Cullen/Woodall Prime Search (Sieve) 4010/
  Proth Prime Search (Sieve) 2412/
  The Riesel Problem (Sieve) 3998/
5K+ Generalized Fermat Prime Search (n=15) 3991/158K
1864 Generalized Fermat Prime Search (n=16) 3993/281K
275 Generalized Fermat Prime Search (n=17 low) 998/121K
195 Generalized Fermat Prime Search (n=17 mega) 1493/24K
47 Generalized Fermat Prime Search (n=18) 993/25K
18 Generalized Fermat Prime Search (n=19) 1003/7803
12 Generalized Fermat Prime Search (n=20) 751/7298
6 Generalized Fermat Prime Search (n=21) 400/934
2 Generalized Fermat Prime Search (n=22) 203/4100
  AP27 Search 2489/

1"Prime Rank" is where the leading edge candidate, if prime, would appear in the Top 5000 Primes list. "5K+" means the primes are too small to make the list.
2First "Available Tasks" number is the number of tasks available to send.
3Second "Available Tasks" number is additional prime candidates that have not yet been turned into workunits. Underlined work is loaded manually. If the first number is 0, something is broken. If both numbers are 0, we've run out of work.
4Includes all primes ever reported by PrimeGrid to Top 5000 Primes list. Many of these are no longer in the top 5000.

About

PrimeGrid's primary goal is to bring the excitement of prime finding to the "everyday" computer user. By simply downloading and installing BOINC and attaching to the PrimeGrid project, participants can choose from a variety of prime forms to search. With a little patience, you may find a large or even record breaking prime and enter into Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database as a Titan!

PrimeGrid's secondary goal is to provide relevant educational materials about primes. Additionally, we wish to contribute to the field of mathematics.

Lastly, primes play a central role in the cryptographic systems which are used for computer security. Through the study of prime numbers it can be shown how much processing is required to crack an encryption code and thus to determine whether current security schemes are sufficiently secure.

PrimeGrid is currently running several sub-projects:
  • 321 Prime Search: searching for mega primes of the form 3·2n±1.
  • Cullen-Woodall Search: searching for mega primes of forms n·2n+1 and n·2n−1.
  • Extended Sierpinski Problem: helping solve the Extended Sierpinski Problem.
  • Generalized Fermat Prime Search: searching for megaprimes of the form b2n+1.
  • Prime Sierpinski Project: helping Prime Sierpinski Project solve the Prime Sierpinski Problem.
  • Proth Prime Search: searching for primes of the form k·2n+1.
  • Seventeen or Bust: helping to solve the Sierpinski Problem.
  • Sierpinski/Riesel Base 5: helping to solve the Sierpinski/Riesel Base 5 Problem.
  • Sophie Germain Prime Search: searching for primes p and 2p+1.
  • The Riesel problem: helping to solve the Riesel Problem.
   You can choose the projects you would like to run by going to the project preferences page.

Recent Significant Primes


On 12 November 2016, 17:02:17 UTC, PrimeGrid's PPS Mega Prime Search project found the mega prime:
673·23330436+1
The prime is 1,002,564 digits long and enters Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 193rd overall.

The discovery was made by Randall Scalise (Randall J. Scalise) of the United States using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4590 CPU @ 3.50GHz with 8GB RAM, running Linux. This computer took about 1 hour 12 minutes to complete the primality test using LLR. For more information, please see the Official Announcement.


On 31 October 2016, 22:13:54 UTC, PrimeGrid's Seventeen or Bust subproject found the mega prime:
10223·231172165+1
The prime is 9,383,761 digits long and enters Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 7th overall.

This is the largest prime found attempting to solve the Sierpinski Problem and eliminates k=10223 as a possible Sierpinski number. It is also the largest known Proth prime, the largest known Colbert number, and the largest prime PrimeGrid has discovered. Among the 10 largest known prime numbers, it is the only prime that is not a Mersenne number, and the only known non-Mersenne prime over 4 million digits.

The discovery was made by Szabolcs Peter (Syp) of Hungary using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-4770 CPU @ 3.40GHz with 12GB RAM, running Windows 10 Enterprise Edition. This computer took about 8 days, 22 hours and 34 minutes to complete the primality test using LLR. For more information, please see the Official Announcement.


On 4 November 2016, 06:03:37 UTC, PrimeGrid's PPS Mega Prime Search project found the mega prime:
655·23327518+1
The prime is 1,001,686 digits long and enters Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 196th overall.

The discovery was made by Paul Mazumdar (pm107) of the United Kingdom using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4590 CPU @ 3.30GHz with 16GB RAM, running Windows 10 Education Edition. This computer took about 1 hour and 5 minutea to complete the primality test using LLR. Paul is a member of the University of Cambridge team. For more information, please see the Official Announcement.


On 3 November 2016, 17:52:13 UTC, PrimeGrid's PPS Mega Prime Search project found the mega prime:
659·23327371+1
The prime is 1,001,642 digits long and enters Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 196th overall.

The discovery was made by Dejana Ristic (Dejana Ristic) of Germany using an Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1245 v3 @ 3.40GHz with 8GB RAM, running Windows 7 Enterprise Edition. This computer took about 1 hour and 1 minute to complete the primality test using LLR. Dejana is a member of the Rechenkraft.net team. For more information, please see the Official Announcement.


On 3 November 2016, 23:35:42 UTC, PrimeGrid's AP27 Search project (Arithmetic Progression of 27 primes) found the progression of 26 primes:
149836681069944461+7725290*23#*n for n=0..25
The discovery was made by Takeshi Nakamura (kurogane-t) of Japan using an NVIDIA GTX 1070 on an Intel(R) Xeon(R) E5-2667 v3 @ 3.20GHz with 16GB RAM, running Windows 10 Core x64 Edition. This computer took about 30 minutes to process the task (each task tests 100 progression differences of 10 shifts each). Takeshi is a member of the BOINC@MIXI team. For more information, please see the Official Announcement.


On 2 November 2016, 16:08:03 UTC, PrimeGrid's PPS Mega Prime Search project found the mega prime:
821·23327003+1
The prime is 1,001,531 digits long and enters Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 196th overall.

The discovery was made by Randall Scalise (Randall J. Scalise) of the United States using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4590 CPU @ 3.50GHz with 8GB RAM, running Linux. This computer took about 1 hour and 1 minute to complete the primality test using LLR. For more information, please see the Official Announcement.


On 30 October 2016, 07:20:52 UTC, PrimeGrid's PPS Mega Prime Search project found the mega prime:
555·23325925+1
The prime is 1,001,206 digits long and enters Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 196th overall.

The discovery was made by Alexander Falk (Alexander Falk) of the United States using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-4690HQ CPU @ 2.60GHz with 16GB RAM, running Windows 10 Professional. This computer took about 4 hours 12 minutes to complete the primality test using LLR. Alexander is a member of the The Knights Who Say Ni! team. For more information, please see the Official Announcement.


On 24 October 2016, 17:17:12 UTC, PrimeGrid's PPS Mega Prime Search project found the mega prime:
791·23323995+1
The prime is 1,000,626 digits long and enters Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 197th overall.

The discovery was made by Randall Scalise (Randall J. Scalise) of the United States using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4570 CPU @ 3.20GHz with 8GB RAM, running Linux. This computer took about 1 hour 8 minutes to complete the primality test using LLR. For more information, please see the Official Announcement.


On 21 October 2016, 18:12:50 UTC, PrimeGrid's PPS Mega Prime Search project found the mega prime:
597·23322871+1
The prime is 1,000,287 digits long and enters Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 197th overall.

The discovery was made by Randall Scalise (Randall J. Scalise) of the United States using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4570 CPU @ 3.20GHz with 8GB RAM, running Linux. This computer took about 1 hour 11 minutes to complete the primality test using LLR. For more information, please see the Official Announcement.


Other significant primes


3·211895718-1 (321): official announcement | 321
3·211731850-1 (321): official announcement | 321
3·211484018-1 (321): official announcement | 321
3·210829346+1 (321): official announcement | 321
3·27033641+1 (321): official announcement | 321
3·26090515-1 (321): official announcement | 321
3·25082306+1 (321): official announcement | 321
3·24235414-1 (321): official announcement | 321
3·22291610+1 (321): official announcement | 321

27·25213635+1 (27121): official announcement | 27121
27·24583717-1 (27121): official announcement | 27121
27·24542344-1 (27121): official announcement | 27121
121·24553899-1 (27121): official announcement | 27121
27·23855094-1 (27121): official announcement | 27121

149836681069944461+7725290*23#*n for n=0..25 (AP26): official announcement
43142746595714191+23681770*23#*n for n=0..25 (AP26): official announcement

6679881·26679881+1 (CUL): official announcement | Cullen
6328548·26328548+1 (CUL): official announcement | Cullen

161041·27107964+1 (ESP): official announcement | k=161041 eliminated

147855!-1 (FPS): official announcement | Factorial
110059!+1 (FPS): official announcement | Factorial
103040!-1 (FPS): official announcement | Factorial
94550!-1 (FPS): official announcement | Factorial

682156·79682156+1 (GC): official announcement | Generalized Cullen
427194·113427194+1 (GC): official announcement | Generalized Cullen

475856524288+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
356926524288+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
341112524288+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
75898524288+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
1828858262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
1615588262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
1488256262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
1415198262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
773620262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
676754262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
525094262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
361658262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
145310262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
40734262144+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
44085096131072+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
44049878131072+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
43165206131072+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
43163894131072+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime
42654182131072+1 (GFN): official announcement | Generalized Fermat Prime

563528·13563528-1 (GW): official announcement | Generalized Woodall
404882·43404882-1 (GW): official announcement | Generalized Woodall

1098133#-1 (PRS): official announcement | Primorial
843301#-1 (PRS): official announcement | Primorial

373·23404702+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
303·23391977+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
369·23365614+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
393·23349525+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
113·23437145+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
159·23425766+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
245·23411973+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
177·23411847+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
35·23587843+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
35·23570777+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
33·23570132+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
93·23544744+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
87·23496188+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
51·23490971+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime
81·23352924+1 (MEGA): official announcement | Mega Prime

673·23330436+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
655·23327518+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
659·23327371+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
821·23327003+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
555·23325925+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
791·23323995+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
597·23322871+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
415·23559614+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
465·23536871+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
447·23533656+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
495·23484656+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
491·23473837+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
453·23461688+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
479·23411975+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
453·23387048+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
403·23334410+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
309·23577339+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
381·23563676+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
351·23545752+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
345·23532957+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
329·23518451+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
323·23482789+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
189·23596375+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
387·23322763+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
275·23585539+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
251·23574535+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
191·23548117+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
141·23529287+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
135·23518338+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
249·23486411+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
195·23486379+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
197·23477399+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
255·23395661+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
179·23371145+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime
193·23329782+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
129·23328805+1 (PPS-Mega): official announcement | Mega Prime

7·25775996+1 (PPS): official announcement | Mega Prime
9·23497442+1 (PPS): official announcement | Mega Prime
57·22747499+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
267·22662090+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
9·22543551+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
25·22141884+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
183·21747660+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
131·21494099+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
329·21246017+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
2145·21099064+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
1705·2906110+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
659·2617815+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
519·2567235+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
651·2476632+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
7905·2352281+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
4479·2226618+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
3771·2221676+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
7333·2138560+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor

10223·231172165-1 (SoB): official announcement | k=10223 eliminated

2996863034895·21290000±1 (SGS): official announcement | Twin
2618163402417·21290000-1 (SGS), 2618163402417·21290001-1 (2p+1): official announcement | SGS
18543637900515·2666667-1 (SGS), 18543637900515·2666668-1 (2p+1): official announcement | SGS
3756801695685·2666669±1 (SGS): official announcement | Twin

180062·52249192-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=180062 eliminated
53546·52216664-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=53546 eliminated
296024·52185270-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=296024 eliminated
92158·52145024+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=92158 eliminated
77072·52139921+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=77072 eliminated
306398·52112410-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=306398 eliminated
154222·52091432+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=154222 eliminated
100186·52079747-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=100186 eliminated
144052·52018290+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=144052 eliminated
109208·51816285+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=109208 eliminated
325918·51803339+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=325918 eliminated
133778·51785689+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=133778 eliminated
24032·51768249+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=24032 eliminated
138172·51714207-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=138172 eliminated
22478·51675150-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=22478 eliminated
326834·51634978-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=326834 eliminated
207394·51612573-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=207394 eliminated
104944·51610735-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=104944 eliminated
330286·51584399-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=330286 eliminated
22934·51536762-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=22934 eliminated
178658·51525224-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=178658 eliminated
59912·51500861+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=59912 eliminated
37292·51487989+1 (SR5): official announcement | k=37292 eliminated
173198·51457792-1 (SR5): official announcement | k=173198 eliminated

502573·27181987-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=502573 eliminated
402539·27173024-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=402539 eliminated
40597·26808509-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=40597 eliminated
304207·26643565-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=304207 eliminated
398023·26418059-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=398023 eliminated
252191·25497878-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=252191 eliminated
353159·24331116-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=353159 eliminated
141941·24299438-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=141941 eliminated
415267·23771929-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=415267 eliminated
123547·23804809-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=123547 eliminated
65531·23629342-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=65531 eliminated
428639·23506452-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=428639 eliminated
191249·23417696-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=191249 eliminated
162941·2993718-1 (TRP): official announcement | k=162941 eliminated

65516468355·2333333±1 (TPS): official announcement | Twin

3752948·23752948-1 (WOO): official announcement | Woodall
2367906·22367906-1 (WOO): official announcement | Woodall
2013992·22013992-1 (WOO): official announcement | Woodall

News RSS feed

Wallis is Born Challenge Starts November 18th at 18:00 UTC
Please join us for the Wallis is Born Challenge, running for 5 days from November 18th 18:00:00 UTC until November 23rd 18:00:00 UTC. This challenge is running the AP27 app only.

For more information, please see the official challenge thread: http://www.primegrid.com/forum_thread.php?id=7084
15 Nov 2016 | 22:56:21 UTC · Comment


Another PPS Mega Prime!
On 12 November 2016, 17:02:17 UTC, PrimeGrid’s PPS Mega Prime Search project found the Mega Prime:

673*2^3330436+1

The prime is 1,002,564 digits long and will enter Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 193rd overall.

The discovery was made by Randall Scalise (Randall J. Scalise) of the United States using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4590 CPU @ 3.50GHz with 8GB RAM, running Linux. This computer took about 1 hour 12 minutes to complete the primality test using LLR.

The prime was verified on 12 November 2016, 17:23:33 UTC by John S. Chambers (Johnny Rotten) of the United States using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3770K CPU @ 3.50GHz with 16GB RAM, running Microsoft Windows 7 Professional Edition. This computer took about 1 hour 23 minutes to complete the primality test using LLR. John is a member of the SETI.USA team.

For more details, please see the official announcement.
14 Nov 2016 | 12:56:38 UTC · Comment


World Record Colbert Number discovered!
On 31 October 2016, 22:13:54 UTC, PrimeGrid’s Seventeen or Bust subproject found the Mega Prime:

10223*2^31172165+1

The prime is 9,383,761 digits long and will enter Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 7th overall.

This is the largest prime found attempting to solve the Sierpinski Problem and eliminates k=10223 as a possible Sierpinski number. It is also the largest known Proth prime, the largest known Colbert number, and the largest prime PrimeGrid has discovered. Among the 10 largest known prime numbers, it is the only prime that is not a Mersenne number, and the only known non-Mersenne prime over 4 million digits.

Until the Seventeen or Bust project shut down earlier in the year, this search was a collaboration between PrimeGrid and Seventeen or Bust. This discovery would not have been possible without all the work done over the years by Seventeen or Bust.

The discovery was made by Szabolcs Peter (SyP) of Hungary using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-4770 CPU @ 3.40GHz with 12GB RAM, running Windows 10 Enterprise Edition. This computer took about 8 days, 22 hours, 34 minutes to complete the primality test using LLR.

Information regarding double checking will be announced at a later date.

For more details, please see the official announcement.
9 Nov 2016 | 16:57:51 UTC · Comment


Yes, its another PPS Mega Prime!
On 4 November 2016, 06:03:37 UTC, PrimeGrid’s PPS Mega Prime Search project found the Mega Prime:

655*2^3327518+1

The prime is 1,001,686 digits long and will enter Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 196th overall.

The discovery was made by Paul Mazumdar (pm107) of the United Kingdom using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4590 CPU @ 3.30GHz with 16GB RAM, running Windows 10 Education Edition. This computer took about 1 hour 5 minutes to complete the primality test using LLR. Paul is a member of the University of Cambridge team.

The prime was verified on 4 November 2016, 14:34:01 UTC by Toshitaka Kumagai (Toshitaka Kumagai) of Japan using an Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2643 @ 3.30GHz with 256GB RAM, running Windows 10 Core Edition. This computer took about 1 hour 22 Minutes to complete the primality test using LLR.

For more details, please see the official announcement.
5 Nov 2016 | 11:32:12 UTC · Comment


Another PPS Mega Prime!
On 3 November 2016, 17:52:13 UTC, PrimeGrid’s PPS Mega Prime Search project found the Mega Prime:

659*2^3327371+1

The prime is 1,001,642 digits long and will enter Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 196th overall.

The discovery was made by Dejana Ristic (Dejana Ristic) of Germany using an Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1245 v3 @ 3.40GHz with 8GB RAM, running Windows 7 Enterprise Edition. This computer took about 1 hour 1 minute to complete the primality test using LLR. Dejana is a member of the Rechenkraft.net team.

The prime was verified on 4 November 2016, 09:03:57 UTC by Steve King (steveking) of the United States using an Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-4010U CPU @ 1.70GHz with 12GB RAM, running Windows 10 Core Edition. This computer took about 4 hours to complete the primality test using LLR.

For more details, please see the official announcement.
5 Nov 2016 | 10:53:25 UTC · Comment


... more

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Newly reported primes

3155621049735*2^1290000-1 (Randall J. Scalise); 38794556^32768+1 (Soulfly); 3153599285835*2^1290000-1 (Randall J. Scalise); 8325*2^1426153+1 (Stefan); 3153161314935*2^1290000-1 (aolder); 3152361811965*2^1290000-1 (Randall J. Scalise); 38732164^32768+1 (sangis43); 3153766353855*2^1290000-1 (Randall J. Scalise); 9287*2^1426099+1 (KD7LRJ); 38672504^32768+1 (Soulfly); 2219*2^1426071+1 (Randall J. Scalise); 38572858^32768+1 (Soulfly); 15948188^65536+1 (Krzysiak_PL_GDA); 38532442^32768+1 (Sysadm@Nbg); 3150288030417*2^1290000-1 (Randall J. Scalise); 3148486309197*2^1290000-1 (post-factum); 15893070^65536+1 (288larsson); 3144778890027*2^1290000-1 (ETX); 38437674^32768+1 (teppot); 3147765440787*2^1290000-1 (Teuvo Korhonen)

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