Pratt Certificate
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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
and computer science, a primality certificate or primality proof is a succinct, formal proof that a number is prime. Primality certificates allow the primality of a number to be rapidly checked without having to run an expensive or unreliable
primality test A primality test is an algorithm for determining whether an input number is prime. Among other fields of mathematics, it is used for cryptography. Unlike integer factorization, primality tests do not generally give prime factors, only stating whet ...
. "Succinct" usually means that the proof should be at most polynomially larger than the number of digits in the number itself (for example, if the number has ''b'' bits, the proof might contain roughly ''b''2 bits). Primality certificates lead directly to proofs that problems such as primality testing and the complement of
integer factorization In number theory, integer factorization is the decomposition of a composite number into a product of smaller integers. If these factors are further restricted to prime numbers, the process is called prime factorization. When the numbers are suf ...
lie in NP, the class of problems verifiable in polynomial time given a solution. These problems already trivially lie in co-NP. This was the first strong evidence that these problems are not NP-complete, since if they were, it would imply that NP is subset of co-NP, a result widely believed to be false; in fact, this was the first demonstration of a problem in NP intersect co-NP not known, at the time, to be in P. Producing certificates for the complement problem, to establish that a number is composite, is straightforward: it suffices to give a nontrivial divisor. Standard probabilistic primality tests such as the
Baillie–PSW primality test The Baillie–PSW primality test is a probabilistic primality testing algorithm that determines whether a number is composite or is a probable prime. It is named after Robert Baillie, Carl Pomerance, John Selfridge, and Samuel Wagstaff. The Bailli ...
, the Fermat primality test, and the Miller–Rabin primality test also produce compositeness certificates in the event where the input is composite, but do not produce certificates for prime inputs.


Pratt certificates

The concept of primality certificates was historically introduced by the Pratt certificate, conceived in 1975 by Vaughan Pratt, who described its structure and proved it to have polynomial size and to be verifiable in polynomial time. It is based on the Lucas primality test, which is essentially the converse of
Fermat's little theorem Fermat's little theorem states that if ''p'' is a prime number, then for any integer ''a'', the number a^p - a is an integer multiple of ''p''. In the notation of modular arithmetic, this is expressed as : a^p \equiv a \pmod p. For example, if = ...
with an added condition to make it true: : Lucas' theorem: Suppose we have an integer ''a'' such that: :* ''a''''n'' − 1 ≡ 1 (mod ''n''), :* for every prime factor ''q'' of ''n'' − 1, it is not the case that ''a''(''n'' − 1)/''q'' ≡ 1 (mod ''n''). : Then ''n'' is prime. Given such an ''a'' (called a ''witness'') and the prime factorization of ''n'' − 1, it's simple to verify the above conditions quickly: we only need to do a linear number of modular exponentiations, since every integer has fewer prime factors than bits, and each of these can be done by exponentiation by squaring in O(log ''n'') multiplications (see big-O notation). Even with grade-school integer multiplication, this is only O((log ''n'')4) time; using the multiplication algorithm with best-known asymptotic running time, the Schönhage–Strassen algorithm, we can lower this to O((log ''n'')3(log log ''n'')(log log log ''n'')) time, or using soft-O notation Õ((log ''n'')3). However, it is possible to trick a verifier into accepting a composite number by giving it a "prime factorization" of ''n'' − 1 that includes composite numbers. For example, suppose we claim that ''n'' = 85 is prime, supplying ''a'' = 4 and ''n'' − 1 = 6 × 14 as the "prime factorization". Then (using ''q'' = 6 and ''q'' = 14): * 4 is coprime to 85, * 485−1 ≡ 1 (mod 85), * 4(85−1)/6 ≡ 16 (mod 85), 4(85−1)/14 ≡ 16 (mod 85). We would falsely conclude that 85 is prime. We don't want to just force the verifier to factor the number, so a better way to avoid this issue is to give primality certificates for each of the prime factors of ''n'' − 1 as well, which are just smaller instances of the original problem. We continue recursively in this manner until we reach a number known to be prime, such as 2. We end up with a tree of prime numbers, each associated with a witness ''a''. For example, here is a complete Pratt certificate for the number 229: * 229 (''a'' = 6, 229 − 1 = 22 × 3 × 19), ** 2 (known prime), ** 3 (''a'' = 2, 3 − 1 = 2), *** 2 (known prime), ** 19 (''a'' = 2, 19 − 1 = 2 × 32), *** 2 (known prime), *** 3 (''a'' = 2, 3 − 1 = 2), **** 2 (known prime). This proof tree can be shown to contain at most 4\log_2 n - 4 values other than 2 by a simple inductive proof (based on theorem 2 of Pratt). The result holds for 3; in general, take ''p'' > 3 and let its children in the tree be ''p''1, ..., ''p''''k''. By the inductive hypothesis, the tree rooted at ''p''''i'' contains at most 4\log_2 p_i - 4 values, so the entire tree contains at most : 1 + \sum_^k (4\log_2 p_i - 4) = -4k + 4\log_2 p_1 \cdots p_k \leq 4\log_2 p - 4, since ''k'' ≥ 2, and ''p''1...''p''''k'' = ''p'' − 1. Since each value has at most log ''n'' bits, this also demonstrates that the certificate has a size of O((log ''n'')2) bits. Since there are O(log ''n'') values other than 2, and each requires at most one exponentiation to verify (and exponentiations dominate the running time), the total time is O((log ''n'')3(log log ''n'')(log log log ''n'')), or Õ((log ''n'')3), which is quite feasible for numbers in the range that computational number theorists usually work with. However, while useful in theory and easy to verify, actually generating a Pratt certificate for ''n'' requires factoring ''n'' − 1 and other potentially large numbers. This is simple for some special numbers such as
Fermat primes 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, 4294967 ...
, but currently much more difficult than simple primality testing for large primes of general form.


Atkin–Goldwasser–Kilian–Morain certificates

To address the problem of efficient certificate generation for larger numbers, in 1986 Shafi Goldwasser and
Joe Kilian Joe or JOE may refer to: Arts Film and television * ''Joe'' (1970 film), starring Peter Boyle * ''Joe'' (2013 film), starring Nicolas Cage * ''Joe'' (TV series), a British TV series airing from 1966 to 1971 * ''Joe'', a 2002 Canadian animated ...
described a new type of certificate based on the theory of elliptic curves.Goldwasser, S. and Kilian, J. "Almost All Primes Can Be Quickly Certified". Proc. 18th STOC. pp. 316–329, 1986
Full text
This was in turn used by
A. O. L. Atkin Arthur Oliver Lonsdale Atkin (31 July 1925 – 28 December 2008), who published under the name A. O. L. Atkin, was a British mathematician. As an undergraduate during World War II, Atkin worked at Bletchley Park cracking German codes. He receiv ...
and
François Morain François () is a French masculine given name and surname, equivalent to the English name Francis. People with the given name * Francis I of France, King of France (), known as "the Father and Restorer of Letters" * Francis II of France, King ...
as the basis for Atkin-Goldwasser-Kilian-Morain certificates, which are the type of certificates generated and verified by elliptic curve primality proving systems. Just as Pratt certificates are based on Lucas's theorem, Atkin–Goldwasser–Kilian–Morain certificates are based on the following theorem of Goldwasser and Kilian (lemma 2 of "Almost All Primes Can Be Quickly Certified"): : Theorem: Suppose we are given: :* a positive integer ''n'' not divisible by 2 or 3; :* M''x'', M''y'', A, B in \mathbb_n (the integers mod ''n'') satisfying M''y''2 = M''x''3 + AM''x'' + B and with 4A3 + 27B2 coprime to ''n''; :* a prime q > n^ + 1 + 2n^. : Then M = (M''x'', M''y'') is a non-identity point on the elliptic curve ''y''2 = ''x''3 + Ax + B. Let ''k''M be M added to itself ''k'' times using standard elliptic-curve addition. Then, if ''q''M is the identity element I, then ''n'' is prime. Technically, an elliptic curve can only be constructed over a field, and \mathbb_n is only a field if ''n'' is prime, so we seem to be assuming the result we're trying to prove. The difficulty arises in the elliptic-curve addition algorithm, which takes inverses in the field that may not exist in \mathbb_n. However, it can be shown (lemma 1 of "Almost All Primes Can Be Quickly Certified") that if we merely perform computations as though the curve were well-defined and do not at any point attempt to invert an element with no inverse, the result is still valid; if we do encounter an element with no inverse, this establishes that ''n'' is composite. To derive a certificate from this theorem, we first encode M''x'', M''y'', A, B, and ''q'', then recursively encode the proof of primality for ''q'' < ''n'', continuing until we reach a known prime. This certificate has size O((log ''n'')2) and can be verified in O((log ''n'')4) time. Moreover, the algorithm that generates these certificates can be shown to be expected polynomial time for all but a small fraction of primes, and this fraction exponentially decreases with the size of the primes. Consequently, it's well-suited to generating certified large random primes, an application that is important in cryptography applications such as generating provably valid
RSA RSA may refer to: Organizations Academia and education * Rabbinical Seminary of America, a yeshiva in New York City *Regional Science Association International (formerly the Regional Science Association), a US-based learned society *Renaissance S ...
keys.


Pocklington Based Certificates

Provable prime generation based on variants of Pocklington's theorem (see Pocklington primality test) can be efficient techniques for generating primes (cost is generally less than probabilistic generation) with the added benefit of built in primality certificates. While these may seem to be special primes, notice that every prime integer could be generated with a Pocklington based provable generation algorithm.


Pocklington Primality Tests

Let P=Rh+1 where R=\prod q_j^ where q_j are distinct primes with e_j an integer greater than zero and a witness g such that: Then P is prime if one of the following holds:


Pocklington Primality Certificate

A Pocklington primality certificate consists of the prime P, a set primes q_j dividing (P-1), each with their own Pocklington prime certificate or small enough to be a known prime, and a witness g. The bits needed for this certificate (and order of computational cost) should range from approximately \log_2\left(1 + \sum_^\frac\right) = 1.5\log_2 for version () to \log_2\left(1 + \sum_^\frac\right) = 2\log_2 for version ()


A Small Example

Let P=1056893. Note that (P-1)=1621\cdot 163\cdot 2^2 and P^=1028.053\ldots, P^=101.86156\ldots. * Using the 'witness' 2, equation is satisfied and using q=163 and q=1621. * For version , the certificate needs only P=1056893,\ q=1621,\ g=2. * for version , the certificate needs only P=1056893,\ q=163,\ g=2, but there's a bit more work to do: ** h = (1056893-1)/163 = 6484 ** a\equiv h\equiv 127\bmod and b=\left(6484-127\right)/163=39 ** Using r=3 fails: \left(127^2-4\cdot 39\right)^\equiv (1^2-0)^1\equiv 1\bmod ** Using r=5 succeeds: \left(127^2-4\cdot 39\right)^\equiv (2^2-1)^2\equiv 2\bmod, and P is prime.


Impact of "PRIMES is in P"

"PRIMES is in P" was a breakthrough in theoretical computer science. This article, published by Manindra Agrawal,
Nitin Saxena Nitin Saxena (born 3 May 1981Saxena's CV at University of Bonn
) is ...
, and Neeraj Kayal in August 2002, proves that the famous problem of checking primality of a number can be solved deterministically in polynomial time. The authors received the 2006 Gödel Prize and 2006 Fulkerson Prize for this work. Because primality testing can now be done deterministically in polynomial time using the AKS primality test, a prime number could itself be considered a certificate of its own primality. This test runs in Õ((log ''n'')6) time. In practice this method of verification is more expensive than the verification of Pratt certificates, but does not require any computation to determine the certificate itself.


References


External links


Mathworld: Primality Certificate





The Prime Glossary: Certificate of Primality
* Vašek Chvátal
Lecture notes on Pratt's Primality Proofs
Department of Computer Science. Rutgers University
PDF version at Concordia University
* Wim van Dam
Proof of Pratt's Theorem
{dead link, date=March 2018 , bot=InternetArchiveBot , fix-attempted=yes . (Lecture notes, PDF) Primality tests