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Available: AP26 Search 67793 User/Host Count 30830/92641 (3 hosts per user) PrimeGrid's 2010 Challenge Series
Ides of March Challenge
15 Mar 18:00 UTC – 16 Mar 18:00 UTC


Days
Hours
Min
Sec
Year of the Tiger Challenge
Final Standings
Participants | Teams
Available: 321 Prime Search (LLR) 119 Tasks in Progress 156054
Available: Cullen Prime Search (LLR) 103 UTC time 2010-03-12 01:50:29
Available: Prime Sierpinski Problem (LLR) 99 Powered by BOINC
Supported platforms: Windows; Linux; Mac OS; PlayStation 3; Solaris
Available: Proth Prime Search (LLR) 986
Available: Seventeen or Bust (LLR) 103
Available: Sophie Germain Prime Search (LLR) 984
Available: Woodall Prime Search (LLR) 100
Available: 321 Prime Search (Sieve) 10630
Available: Cullen/Woodall (Sieve) 12780
Available: Proth Prime Search (Sieve) 4357
Available: PSP/SoB (Sieve) 88608
Available: The Riesel Problem (Sieve) 7952

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.
  • AP26 Search: searching for an Arithmetic Progression of 26 primes.
  • Cullen-Woodall Search: searching for mega primes of forms n·2n+1 and n·2n−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.
  • Sophie Germain Prime Search: searching for primes p and 2p+1.
  • Seventeen or Bust: helping to solve the Sierpinski Problem.
  • Twin Prime Search: searching for gigantic twin primes of the form k·2n+1 and k·2n−1.
   You can choose the projects you would like to run by going to the project preferences page.

Recent Significant Primes

On 07 Dec 2009, 08:32:59 UTC, PrimeGrid's PRPNet found the largest known generalized Woodall prime:
563528·13563528-1
The prime is 627,745 digits long and enters Chris Caldwell's The Largest Known Primes Database ranked 1st for generalized Woodall primes and 65th overall.
The discovery was made by Lennart Vogel of Sweden using an Intel Q6600 @ 2.4GHz with 4 GB RAM running Linux. For more details, please see the official announcement.

Other significant primes

65516468355·2333333±1 (Twin): official announcement | twin +1; twin -1
6679881·26679881+1 (Cullen): official announcement | decimal representation
6328548·26328548+1 (Cullen): official announcement | decimal representation
659·2617815+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
519·2567233+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
651·2476624+1 (PPS): official announcement | Fermat Divisor
3752948·23752948−1 (Woodall): official announcement | decimal representation
2367906·22367906−1 (Woodall): official announcement | decimal representation
2013992·22013992−1 (Woodall): official announcement | decimal representation

Newly reported primes

619806997365*2^666669-1 (m4rtyn); 643*2^782318+1 (s-yama); 1001*2^782313+1 (dlouwe); 639*2^782159+1 (s-yama); 3729*2^492667+1 (Robert Scullin); 165*2^781224+1 (Ossi Mauno); 3675*2^492591+1 (Anders); 6445*2^492556+1 (MSc); 9429*2^492530+1 (shanky); 763*2^737752+1 (tomakey); 557339392725*2^666669-1 (Honza); 291794611365*2^666670-1 (Spider-Bob); 295967927325*2^666670-1 (Tamagoch); 1115*2^726077+1 ([XTBA>TSA] chili69); 296615942265*2^666670-1 (Tamagoch); 8085*2^492193+1 (lunarcom); 951*2^781285+1 ([AF>HFR>RR]bcoz); 1803*2^492273+1 ([AF>HFR>RR]bcoz); 4373*2^492253+1 (lunarcom); 5527*2^492230+1 (HAmsty)

Last 24 hours

Top members by work done in the last 24 hours

shanky1124403.97
Mr. Hankey331837.63
lennart SM5YMT111604.63
SG Grid75144.97
Tomba271736.16

Top teams by work done in the last 24 hours

SETI.USA876647
PrimeSearchTeam251974.83
SETI.Germany201022.97
BOINC@Poland197506.14
Ukraine133785.11

PrimeGrid User of the Day

User profile Profile Ralf Recker
It's just me, 4 cores and 192 shaders sieving for factors and searching prime numbers and their arithmetic progressions.

News RSS feed

The Ides of March Challenge
2010-03-09 14:15 UTC
Less than one week till it's the end for some prime wannabe's. A 24 hour (15-16 March) Challenge is being offered on PrimeGrid's Prime Sierpinski Project/Seventeen or Bust (Sieve) application. Come join us as we quicken the demise for some unlucky k/n pairs.

Application builds are available for MacIntel, Linux, and Windows – with a 64 bit advantage. For more information, please see this forum post.

Tour de Primes 2010 has ended!!!
2010-03-01 21:35 UTC
A very productive month for the Tour de Primes. 309 "Top 5000" primes were discovered, easily surpassing last year's mark of 212. lennart SM5YMT of Sweden and the PrimeSearchTeam once again topped the leader boards winning his second yellow jersey in a row. He also picked up the green jersey for the first time. [SG]marodeur6 of Germany and team SETI.Germany takes home the checkered jersey.

For more details about the tour and complete standings, please see this forum post.

BEWARE the Ides of March!!!
2010-03-01 20:40 UTC
PrimeGrid's Challenge series continues with the Ides of March Challenge. Once again we observe Caesar's demise by finding factors that will bring some k/n pairs to their demise. A 24 hour (15-16 March) Challenge is being offered on PrimeGrid's Prime Sierpinski Project/Seventeen or Bust (Sieve) application.

For more information, please see this forum post.

New AP25 Found
2010-02-25 13:00 UTC
A new AP25 (Arithmetic Progression of 25 primes) has been found. It is the 13th discovered. The finder is Keith Pattenden (KWSN - Sir Brian - err sorry - wrong film!) of the United Kingdom. He is a member of the The Knights Who Say Ni! team.

The AP25 progression is written as 42592855872841649+19093314*23#*n for n=0..24. It was found by an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 260 in an Intel Core2 Quad 6600 @ 2.40GHz running 32 bit Windows XP Professional. For more details on this find and the AP26 search, please see this forum post.

New AP25 Found
2010-02-24 19:30 UTC
A new AP25 (Arithmetic Progression of 25 primes) has been found. It is the 12th discovered. The finder is Bryan Little (mfl0p) of the United States. He is a member of the [H]ard|OC team.

The AP25 progression is written as 58555890166091939+10416756*23#*n for n=0..24. It was found by an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 260 in an Intel Core2 Quad @ 2.40GHz running Linux. For more details on this find and the AP26 search, please see this forum post.

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