Lucas Pseudoprime
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Lucas pseudoprimes and Fibonacci pseudoprimes are
composite Composite or compositing may refer to: Materials * Composite material, a material that is made from several different substances ** Metal matrix composite, composed of metal and other parts ** Cermet, a composite of ceramic and metallic materials ...
integers that pass certain tests which all
prime 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 ...
s and very few composite numbers pass: in this case, criteria relative to some
Lucas sequence In mathematics, the Lucas sequences U_n(P,Q) and V_n(P, Q) are certain constant-recursive integer sequences that satisfy the recurrence relation : x_n = P \cdot x_ - Q \cdot x_ where P and Q are fixed integers. Any sequence satisfying this rec ...
.


Baillie-Wagstaff-Lucas pseudoprimes

Baillie and Wagstaff define Lucas pseudoprimes as follows: Given integers ''P'' and ''Q'', where ''P'' > 0 and D=P^2-4Q, let ''Uk''(''P'', ''Q'') and ''Vk''(''P'', ''Q'') be the corresponding
Lucas sequence In mathematics, the Lucas sequences U_n(P,Q) and V_n(P, Q) are certain constant-recursive integer sequences that satisfy the recurrence relation : x_n = P \cdot x_ - Q \cdot x_ where P and Q are fixed integers. Any sequence satisfying this rec ...
s. Let ''n'' be a positive integer and let \left(\tfrac\right) be the
Jacobi symbol Jacobi symbol for various ''k'' (along top) and ''n'' (along left side). Only are shown, since due to rule (2) below any other ''k'' can be reduced modulo ''n''. Quadratic residues are highlighted in yellow — note that no entry with a ...
. We define : \delta(n)=n-\left(\tfrac\right). If ''n'' is a
prime 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 ...
that does not divide ''Q'', then the following congruence condition holds: If this congruence does ''not'' hold, then ''n'' is ''not'' prime. If ''n'' is ''composite'', then this congruence ''usually'' does not hold. These are the key facts that make Lucas sequences useful in primality testing. The congruence () represents one of two congruences defining a
Frobenius pseudoprime In number theory, a Frobenius pseudoprime is a pseudoprime, whose definition was inspired by the quadratic Frobenius test described by Jon Grantham in a 1998 preprint and published in 2000. Frobenius pseudoprimes can be defined with respect to pol ...
. Hence, every Frobenius pseudoprime is also a Baillie-Wagstaff-Lucas pseudoprime, but the converse does not always hold. Some good references are chapter 8 of the book by Bressoud and Wagon (with Mathematica code), pages 142–152 of the book by Crandall and Pomerance, and pages 53–74 of the book by Ribenboim.


Lucas probable primes and pseudoprimes

A Lucas probable prime for a given (''P, Q'') pair is ''any'' positive integer ''n'' for which equation () above is true (see, page 1398). A Lucas pseudoprime for a given (''P, Q'') pair is a positive ''composite'' integer ''n'' for which equation () is true (see, page 1391). A Lucas probable prime test is most useful if ''D'' is chosen such that the Jacobi symbol \left(\tfrac\right) is −1 (see pages 1401–1409 of, page 1024 of, or pages 266–269 of ). This is especially important when combining a Lucas test with a
strong pseudoprime A strong pseudoprime is a composite number that passes the Miller–Rabin primality test. All prime numbers pass this test, but a small fraction of composites also pass, making them "pseudoprimes". Unlike the Fermat pseudoprimes, for which there ex ...
test, such as the Baillie–PSW primality test. Typically implementations will use a parameter selection method that ensures this condition (e.g. the Selfridge method recommended in and described below). If \left(\tfrac\right)=-1, then equation () becomes If congruence () is false, this constitutes a proof that ''n'' is composite. If congruence () is true, then ''n'' is a Lucas probable prime. In this case, either ''n'' is prime or it is a Lucas pseudoprime. If congruence () is true, then ''n'' is ''likely'' to be prime (this justifies the term probable prime), but this does not ''prove'' that ''n'' is prime. As is the case with any other probabilistic primality test, if we perform additional Lucas tests with different ''D'', ''P'' and ''Q'', then unless one of the tests proves that ''n'' is composite, we gain more confidence that ''n'' is prime. Examples: If ''P'' = 3, ''Q'' = −1, and ''D'' = 13, the sequence of ''Us is : ''U0'' = 0, ''U1'' = 1, ''U2'' = 3, ''U3'' = 10, etc. First, let ''n'' = 19. The Jacobi symbol \left(\tfrac\right) is −1, so δ(''n'') = 20, ''U20'' = 6616217487 = 19·348221973 and we have : U_ = 6616217487 \equiv 0 \pmod . Therefore, 19 is a Lucas probable prime for this (''P, Q'') pair. In this case 19 is prime, so it is ''not'' a Lucas pseudoprime. For the next example, let ''n'' = 119. We have \left(\tfrac\right) = −1, and we can compute : U_ \equiv 0 \pmod . However, 119 = 7·17 is not prime, so 119 is a Lucas ''pseudoprime'' for this (''P, Q'') pair. In fact, 119 is the smallest pseudoprime for ''P'' = 3, ''Q'' = −1. We will see below that, in order to check equation () for a given ''n'', we do ''not'' need to compute all of the first ''n'' + 1 terms in the ''U'' sequence. Let ''Q'' = −1, the smallest Lucas pseudoprime to ''P'' = 1, 2, 3, ... are :323, 35, 119, 9, 9, 143, 25, 33, 9, 15, 123, 35, 9, 9, 15, 129, 51, 9, 33, 15, 21, 9, 9, 49, 15, 39, 9, 35, 49, 15, 9, 9, 33, 51, 15, 9, 35, 85, 39, 9, 9, 21, 25, 51, 9, 143, 33, 119, 9, 9, 51, 33, 95, 9, 15, 301, 25, 9, 9, 15, 49, 155, 9, 399, 15, 33, 9, 9, 49, 15, 119, 9, ...


Strong Lucas pseudoprimes

Now, factor \delta(n)=n-\left(\tfrac\right) into the form d\cdot2^s where d is odd. A strong Lucas pseudoprime for a given (''P, Q'') pair is an odd composite number ''n'' with GCD(''n, D'') = 1, satisfying one of the conditions : U_d \equiv 0 \pmod or : V_ \equiv 0 \pmod for some 0 ≤ ''r'' < ''s''; see page 1396 of. A strong Lucas pseudoprime is also a Lucas pseudoprime (for the same (''P, Q'') pair), but the converse is not necessarily true. Therefore, the strong test is a more stringent primality test than equation (). There are infinitely many strong Lucas pseudoprimes, and therefore, infinitely many Lucas pseudoprimes. Theorem 7 in states: Let P and Q be relatively prime positive integers for which P^2 - 4Q is positive but not a square. Then there is a positive constant c (depending on P and Q) such that the number of strong Lucas pseudoprimes not exceeding x is greater than c \cdot \log x, for x sufficiently large. We can set ''Q'' = −1, then U_n and V_n are ''P''-Fibonacci sequence and ''P''-Lucas sequence, the pseudoprimes can be called strong Lucas pseudoprime in base ''P'', for example, the least strong Lucas pseudoprime with ''P'' = 1, 2, 3, ... are 4181, 169, 119, ... An extra strong Lucas pseudoprime is a strong Lucas pseudoprime for a set of parameters (''P'', ''Q'') where ''Q'' = 1, satisfying one of the conditions : U_d \equiv 0 \pmod \text V_d \equiv \pm 2 \pmod or : V_ \equiv 0 \pmod for some 0 \le r. An extra strong Lucas pseudoprime is also a strong Lucas pseudoprime for the same (P,Q) pair.


Implementing a Lucas probable prime test

Before embarking on a probable prime test, one usually verifies that ''n'', the number to be tested for primality, is odd, is not a perfect square, and is not divisible by any small prime less than some convenient limit. Perfect squares are easy to detect using Newton's method for square roots. We choose a Lucas sequence where the Jacobi symbol \left(\tfrac\right)=-1, so that δ(''n'') = ''n'' + 1. Given ''n'', one technique for choosing ''D'' is to use trial and error to find the first ''D'' in the sequence 5, −7, 9, −11, ... such that \left(\tfrac\right)=-1. Note that \left(\tfrac\right)\left(\tfrac\right)=-1. (If ''D'' and ''n'' have a prime factor in common, then \left(\tfrac\right)=0). With this sequence of ''D'' values, the average number of ''D'' values that must be tried before we encounter one whose Jacobi symbol is −1 is about 1.79; see, p. 1416. Once we have ''D'', we set P=1 and Q=(1-D)/4. It is a good idea to check that ''n'' has no prime factors in common with ''P'' or ''Q''. This method of choosing ''D'', ''P'', and ''Q'' was suggested by
John Selfridge John Lewis Selfridge (February 17, 1927 – October 31, 2010), was an American mathematician who contributed to the fields of analytic number theory, computational number theory, and combinatorics. Education Selfridge received his Ph.D. in 195 ...
. (This search will never succeed if ''n'' is square, and conversely if it does succeed, that is proof that ''n'' is not square. Thus, some time can be saved by delaying testing ''n'' for squareness until after the first few search steps have all failed.) Given ''D'', ''P'', and ''Q'', there are recurrence relations that enable us to quickly compute U_ and V_ in O(\log_2 n) steps; see . To start off, :U_=1 :V_=P=1 First, we can double the subscript from k to 2k in one step using the recurrence relations :U_=U_k\cdot V_k :V_=V_k^2-2Q^k=\frac. Next, we can increase the subscript by 1 using the recurrences :U_=(P\cdot U_+V_)/2 :V_=(D\cdot U_+P\cdot V_)/2. If P\cdot U_+V_ is odd, replace it with P\cdot U_+V_+n; this is even so it can now be divided by 2. The numerator of V_ is handled in the same way. (Adding ''n'' does not change the result modulo ''n''.) Observe that, for each term that we compute in the ''U'' sequence, we compute the corresponding term in the ''V'' sequence. As we proceed, we also compute the same, corresponding powers of ''Q''. At each stage, we reduce U, V, and the power of Q, mod ''n''. We use the bits of the binary expansion of ''n'' to determine ''which'' terms in the ''U'' sequence to compute. For example, if ''n''+1 = 44 (= 101100 in binary), then, taking the bits one at a time from left to right, we obtain the sequence of indices to compute: 12 = 1, 102 = 2, 1002 = 4, 1012 = 5, 10102 = 10, 10112 = 11, 101102 = 22, 1011002 = 44. Therefore, we compute ''U''1, ''U''2, ''U''4, ''U''5, ''U''10, ''U''11, ''U''22, and ''U''44. We also compute the same-numbered terms in the ''V'' sequence, along with ''Q''1, ''Q''2, ''Q''4, ''Q''5, ''Q''10, ''Q''11, ''Q''22, and ''Q''44. By the end of the calculation, we will have computed ''Un+1'', ''Vn+1'', and ''Qn+1'', (mod ''n''). We then check congruence () using our known value of ''Un+1''. When ''D'', ''P'', and ''Q'' are chosen as described above, the first 10 Lucas pseudoprimes are (see page 1401 of ): 323, 377, 1159, 1829, 3827, 5459, 5777, 9071, 9179, and 10877 The strong versions of the Lucas test can be implemented in a similar way. When ''D'', ''P'', and ''Q'' are chosen as described above, the first 10 ''strong'' Lucas pseudoprimes are: 5459, 5777, 10877, 16109, 18971, 22499, 24569, 25199, 40309, and 58519 To calculate a list of ''extra strong'' Lucas pseudoprimes, set Q = 1. Then try ''P'' = 3, 4, 5, 6, ..., until a value of D=P^2-4Q is found so that the Jacobi symbol \left(\tfrac\right)=-1. With this method for selecting ''D'', ''P'', and ''Q'', the first 10 ''extra strong'' Lucas pseudoprimes are 989, 3239, 5777, 10877, 27971, 29681, 30739, 31631, 39059, and 72389


Checking additional congruence conditions

If we have checked that congruence () is true, there are additional congruence conditions we can check that have almost no additional computational cost. If ''n'' happens to be composite, these additional conditions may help discover that fact. If ''n'' is an odd prime and \left(\tfrac\right)=-1, then we have the following (see equation 2 on page 1392 of ): Although this congruence condition is not, by definition, part of the Lucas probable prime test, it is almost free to check this condition because, as noted above, the value of ''Vn+1'' was computed in the process of computing ''Un+1''. If either congruence () or () is false, this constitutes a proof that ''n'' is not prime. If ''both'' of these congruences are true, then it is even more likely that ''n'' is prime than if we had checked only congruence (). If Selfridge's method (above) for choosing ''D'', ''P'', and ''Q'' happened to set ''Q'' = −1, then we can adjust ''P'' and ''Q'' so that ''D'' and \left(\tfrac\right) remain unchanged and ''P'' = ''Q'' = 5 (see Lucas sequence-Algebraic relations). If we use this enhanced method for choosing ''P'' and ''Q'', then 913 = 11·83 is the ''only'' composite less than 108 for which congruence () is true (see page 1409 and Table 6 of;). More extensive calculations show that, with this method of choosing ''D'', ''P'', and ''Q'', there are only five odd, composite numbers less than 1015 for which congruence () is true. If Q \neq \pm 1 , then a further congruence condition that involves very little additional computation can be implemented. Recall that Q^ is computed during the calculation of U_, and we can easily save the previously computed power of Q, namely, Q^. If ''n'' is prime, then, by Euler's criterion, : Q^ \equiv \left(\tfrac\right) \pmod . (Here, \left(\tfrac\right) is the Legendre symbol; if ''n'' is prime, this is the same as the Jacobi symbol). Therefore, if ''n'' is prime, we must have, The Jacobi symbol on the right side is easy to compute, so this congruence is easy to check. If this congruence does not hold, then ''n'' cannot be prime. Provided GCD(''n, Q'') = 1 then testing for congruence () is equivalent to augmenting our Lucas test with a "base Q"
Solovay–Strassen primality test The Solovay–Strassen primality test, developed by Robert M. Solovay and Volker Strassen in 1977, is a probabilistic test to determine if a number is composite or probably prime. The idea behind the test was discovered by M. M. Artjuhov in 196 ...
. Additional congruence conditions that must be satisfied if ''n'' is prime are described in Section 6 of. If ''any'' of these conditions fails to hold, then we have proved that ''n'' is not prime.


Comparison with the Miller–Rabin primality test

''k'' applications of the
Miller–Rabin primality test The Miller–Rabin primality test or Rabin–Miller primality test is a probabilistic primality test: an algorithm which determines whether a given number is likely to be prime, similar to the Fermat primality test and the Solovay–Strassen prim ...
declare a composite ''n'' to be probably prime with a probability at most (1/4)''k''. There is a similar probability estimate for the strong Lucas probable prime test. Aside from two trivial exceptions (see below), the fraction of (''P'',''Q'') pairs (modulo ''n'') that declare a composite ''n'' to be probably prime is at most (4/15). Therefore, ''k'' applications of the strong Lucas test would declare a composite ''n'' to be probably prime with a probability at most (4/15)k. There are two trivial exceptions. One is ''n'' = 9. The other is when ''n'' = ''p''(''p''+2) is the product of two
twin prime A twin prime is a prime number that is either 2 less or 2 more than another prime number—for example, either member of the twin prime pair (41, 43). In other words, a twin prime is a prime that has a prime gap of two. Sometimes the term ''twin p ...
s. Such an ''n'' is easy to factor, because in this case, ''n''+1 = (''p''+1)2 is a perfect square. One can quickly detect perfect squares using Newton's method for square roots. By combining a Lucas pseudoprime test with a
Fermat primality test The Fermat primality test is a probabilistic test to determine whether a number is a probable prime. Concept Fermat's little theorem states that if ''p'' is prime and ''a'' is not divisible by ''p'', then :a^ \equiv 1 \pmod. If one wants to tes ...
, say, to base 2, one can obtain very powerful probabilistic tests for primality, such as the Baillie–PSW primality test.


Fibonacci pseudoprimes

When ''P'' = 1 and ''Q'' = −1, the ''Un''(''P'',''Q'') sequence represents the Fibonacci numbers. A Fibonacci pseudoprime is often defined as a composite number ''n'' not divisible by 5 for which congruence () holds with ''P'' = 1 and ''Q'' = −1 (but ''n'' is ). By this definition, the Fibonacci pseudoprimes form a sequence: : 323, 377, 1891, 3827, 4181, 5777, 6601, 6721, 8149, 10877, ... . The references of Anderson and Jacobsen below use this definition. If ''n'' is congruent to 2 or 3 modulo 5, then Bressoud, and Crandall and Pomerance point out that it is rare for a Fibonacci pseudoprime to also be a
Fermat pseudoprime In number theory, the Fermat pseudoprimes make up the most important class of pseudoprimes that come from Fermat's little theorem. Definition Fermat's little theorem states that if ''p'' is prime and ''a'' is coprime to ''p'', then ''a'p''− ...
base 2. However, when ''n'' is congruent to 1 or 4 modulo 5, the opposite is true, with over 12% of Fibonacci pseudoprimes under 1011 also being base-2 Fermat pseudoprimes. If ''n'' is prime and GCD(''n'', ''Q'') = 1, then we also have This leads to an alternative definition of Fibonacci pseudoprime: : a Fibonacci pseudoprime is a composite number ''n'' for which congruence () holds with ''P'' = 1 and ''Q'' = −1. This definition leads the Fibonacci pseudoprimes form a sequence: : 705, 2465, 2737, 3745, 4181, 5777, 6721, 10877, 13201, 15251, ... , which are also referred to as ''Bruckman-Lucas'' pseudoprimes. Hoggatt and Bicknell studied properties of these pseudoprimes in 1974. Singmaster computed these pseudoprimes up to 100000. Jacobsen lists all 111443 of these pseudoprimes less than 1013. It has been shown that there are no even Fibonacci pseudoprimes as defined by equation (5). However, even Fibonacci pseudoprimes do exist under the first definition given by (). A strong Fibonacci pseudoprime is a composite number ''n'' for which congruence () holds for ''Q'' = −1 and all ''P''. It follows that an odd composite integer ''n'' is a strong Fibonacci pseudoprime if and only if: #''n'' is a
Carmichael number In number theory, a Carmichael number is a composite number n, which in modular arithmetic satisfies the congruence relation: :b^n\equiv b\pmod for all integers b. The relation may also be expressed in the form: :b^\equiv 1\pmod. for all integers ...
#2(''p'' + 1) , (''n'' − 1) or 2(''p'' + 1) , (''n'' − ''p'') for every prime ''p'' dividing ''n''. The smallest example of a strong Fibonacci pseudoprime is 443372888629441 = 17·31·41·43·89·97·167·331.


Pell pseudoprimes

A Pell pseudoprime may be defined as a composite number ''n'' for which equation () above is true with ''P'' = 2 and ''Q'' = −1; the sequence ''Un'' then being the
Pell sequence In mathematics, the Pell numbers are an infinite sequence of integers, known since ancient times, that comprise the denominators of the closest rational approximations to the square root of 2. This sequence of approximations begins , , , , and ...
. The first pseudoprimes are then 35, 169, 385, 779, 899, 961, 1121, 1189, 2419, ... This differs from the definition in which may be written as: : \text U_n \equiv \left(\tfrac\right) \pmod with (''P'', ''Q'') = (2, −1) again defining ''Un'' as the
Pell sequence In mathematics, the Pell numbers are an infinite sequence of integers, known since ancient times, that comprise the denominators of the closest rational approximations to the square root of 2. This sequence of approximations begins , , , , and ...
. The first pseudoprimes are then 169, 385, 741, 961, 1121, 2001, 3827, 4879, 5719, 6215 ... A third definition uses equation (5) with (''P'', ''Q'') = (2, −1), leading to the pseudoprimes 169, 385, 961, 1105, 1121, 3827, 4901, 6265, 6441, 6601, 7107, 7801, 8119, ...


References


External links

* Anderson, Peter G
Fibonacci Pseudoprimes, their factors, and their entry points.
* Anderson, Peter G
Fibonacci Pseudoprimes under 2,217,967,487 and their factors.
* Jacobsen, Dan

(data for Lucas, Strong Lucas, AES Lucas, ES Lucas pseudoprimes below 1014; Fibonacci and Pell pseudoprimes below 1012) * * * * {{Classes of natural numbers Fibonacci numbers Pseudoprimes