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Dr. John B. Cosgrave (born 5 January 1946) is an Irish mathematician specialising in
number theory Number theory (or arithmetic or higher arithmetic in older usage) is a branch of pure mathematics devoted primarily to the study of the integers and arithmetic function, integer-valued functions. German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777â ...
. Born in
Bailieborough Bailieborough or Bailieboro (; ) is a town in County Cavan, Ireland. , its population was 2,683, up from 1,529 as of the 1996 census. Bailieborough's proximity to the N3 road (Ireland), N3 National Road has made it a commuter town. History P ...
, County Cavan, he was educated at Royal Holloway College, London, he lectured in
Carysfort College Our Lady of Mercy College, Carysfort (commonly known as Carysfort College) was a ''College of Education'' in Dublin, Ireland from its foundation in 1877 until its closure in 1988. Educating primary school teachers, and located in a parkland cam ...
(Blackrock, Dublin) and
St Patrick's College of Education St Patrick's College ( ga, Coláiste Phádraig), often known as St Pat's, was a third level institution in Ireland, the leading function of which was as the country's largest primary teacher training college, which had at one time up to 2,000 s ...
(Drumcondra).


Other

In January 1999, while preparing some work for his students, he identified a highly structured prime number with exactly two thousand digits. Dubbing this prime a millennium prime, he wrote an email about it to a niece and nephew, which was subsequently published by Folding Landscapes, the publishing house of the cartographer Tim Robinson. He donated his author royalties to the Irish Cancer Society, and subsequently wrote an ''Irishman's Diary'' column about it for the
Irish Times ''The Irish Times'' is an Irish daily broadsheet newspaper and online digital publication. It launched on 29 March 1859. The editor is Ruadhán Mac Cormaic. It is published every day except Sundays. ''The Irish Times'' is considered a newspaper ...
newspaper. In July 1999 – while a participant in the Proth Search Group – he became the discoverer of the then-largest known composite Fermat number, a record which his St. Patrick's College (Drumcondra) based Proth-Gallot Group twice broke in 2003, the 1999 record having stood until then. The third of those records continued to stand until it was broken in June 2011.


Selected publications

* Cosgrave, John B. and Dilcher, Karl. ''The Multiplicative Orders of Certain Gauss Factorials'', International Journal of Number Theory, Volume 7, Number 1, February 2011. * Cosgrave, John B. and Dilcher, Karl. ''Mod p^3 analogues of theorems of Gauss and Jacobi on binomial coefficients'', Acta Arithmetica, Vol. 142, No. 2, 103–118, 2010. * Cosgrave, John B. and Dilcher, Karl. ''Extensions of the Gauss-Wilson theorem'', Integers: Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory, Vol. 8, #A39, 2008. * Cosgrave, John B. ''Number Theory and Cryptography (using Maple)'', in David Joyner USNA (Ed.), Coding Theory and Cryptography: From Enigma to Geheimschreiber to Quantum Theory (United States Naval Academy Conference), Springer-Verlag, 2000, pp 124–143. * Cosgrave, John B. ''A Prime for the Millennium'', published by Folding Landscapes (2000). * Cosgrave, John B. ''An Introduction to Number Theory with Talented Youth'', USA School Science and Mathematics, Vol 99, No 6, October 1999 (Special issue devoted to gifted and talented Mathematics and Science students). * Cosgrave, John B. ''From divisibility by 6 to the Euclidean Algorithm and the RSA cryptographic method'', The American Mathematical Association of Two-Year Colleges Review, Vol 19, No 1, Fall 1997, 38–45. * Cosgrave, John B. ''Teaching Mathematics by Questioning – The Socratic Method'', Newsletter of Irish Mathematics Teachers Association, Nos 81–82, 1993, 32–47. * Cosgrave, John B. ''A Halmos Problem and a Related Problem'', American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 101, No. 10, 993–996, December 1994. * Cosgrave, John B. ''A Remark on Euclid's Proof of the Infinitude of Primes'', American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 96, No. 4, 339–341, April 1989. * Cosgrave, John B. ''Transcendental numbers in the p-adic domain'' (unpublished PhD thesis, 1972). * Cosgrave, John B. ''An application of Wilson's theorem to prove that 2^p = 2 (mod p) when p is prime'', ''A theorem about certain sequences'', and ''A theorem about primes of the form a^2 + n^2'', Mathematical Gazette, Oct. 1969. * Cosgrave, J. B. ''A new proof of Wilson's Theorem'' and ''A new proof of Wilson's theorem for primes of the form (4n + 3)'', Mathematical Gazette, Feb. 1967.


See also

*
Prime number A prime number (or a prime) is a natural number greater than 1 that is not a product of two smaller natural numbers. A natural number greater than 1 that is not prime is called a composite number. For example, 5 is prime because the only ways ...
*
Fermat numbers In mathematics, a Fermat number, named after Pierre de Fermat, who first studied them, is a positive integer of the form :F_ = 2^ + 1, where ''n'' is a non-negative integer. The first few Fermat numbers are: : 3, 5, 17, 257, 65537, 42949672 ...
*
Number theory Number theory (or arithmetic or higher arithmetic in older usage) is a branch of pure mathematics devoted primarily to the study of the integers and arithmetic function, integer-valued functions. German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777â ...


References


External links


John B. Cosgrave's web site


* ttp://www.science.ie/EN/index.cfm/section/sitePages/page/mathematician Science.ie article on Dr. John B. Cosgrave {{DEFAULTSORT:Cosgrave, John B. Irish mathematicians Living people 1946 births Scientists from County Cavan 20th-century Irish mathematicians 21st-century Irish mathematicians People from Bailieborough