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PrimeGrid is a volunteer computing project that searches for very large (up to world-record size)
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 ...
s whilst also aiming to solve long-standing mathematical conjectures. It uses the
Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing The Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC, pronounced – rhymes with "oink") is an open-source middleware system for volunteer computing (a type of distributed computing). Developed originally to support SETI@home, it beca ...
(BOINC) platform. PrimeGrid offers a number of subprojects for prime-number sieving and discovery. Some of these are available through the BOINC client, others through the PRPNet client. Some of the work is manual, i.e. it requires manually starting work units and uploading results. Different subprojects may run on different operating systems, and may have executables for CPUs, GPUs, or both; while running the
Lucas–Lehmer–Riesel test In mathematics, the Lucas–Lehmer–Riesel test is a primality test for numbers of the form ''N'' = ''k'' ⋅ 2''n'' − 1 ( Riesel numbers) with odd ''k'' < 2''n''. The test was developed by Hans ...
, CPUs with
Advanced Vector Extensions Advanced Vector Extensions (AVX) are extensions to the x86 instruction set architecture for microprocessors from Intel and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). They were proposed by Intel in March 2008 and first supported by Intel with the Sandy Bridge ...
and
Fused Multiply-Add Fuse or FUSE may refer to: Devices * Fuse (electrical), a device used in electrical systems to protect against excessive current ** Fuse (automotive), a class of fuses for vehicles * Fuse (hydraulic), a device used in hydraulic systems to protect ...
instruction sets will yield the fastest results for non-GPU accelerated workloads. PrimeGrid awards badges to users in recognition of achieving certain defined levels of credit for work done. The badges have no intrinsic value but are valued by many as a sign of achievement. The issuing of badges should also benefit PrimeGrid by evening out the participation in the less popular sub projects. The easiest of the badges can often be obtained in less than a day by a single computer, whereas the most challenging badges will require far more time and computing power.


History

PrimeGrid started in June 2005 under the name Message@home and tried to decipher text fragments hashed with MD5. Message@home was a test to port the BOINC scheduler to Perl to obtain greater portability. After a while the project attempted the
RSA factoring challenge The RSA Factoring Challenge was a challenge put forward by RSA Laboratories on March 18, 1991 to encourage research into computational number theory and the practical difficulty of factoring large integers and cracking RSA keys used in cryptograp ...
trying to factor RSA-640. After RSA-640 was factored by an outside team in November 2005, the project moved on to RSA-768. With the chance to succeed too small, it discarded the RSA challenges, was renamed to PrimeGrid, and started generating a list of the first prime numbers. At 210,000,000,000 the primegen subproject was stopped. In June 2006, dialog started with
Riesel Sieve Riesel Sieve was a volunteer computing project, running in part on the BOINC platform. Its aim was to prove that 509,203 is the smallest Riesel number, by finding a prime of the form for all odd smaller than 509,203. Progress At the start of t ...
to bring their project to the BOINC community. PrimeGrid provided PerlBOINC support and Riesel Sieve was successful in implementing their sieve as well as a prime finding ( LLR) application. With collaboration from Riesel Sieve, PrimeGrid was able to implement the LLR application in partnership with another prime finding project,
Twin Prime Search Twin Prime Search (TPS) is a volunteer computing project that looks for large twin primes. It uses the programs LLR (for primality testing) and NewPGen (for sieving). It was founded on April 13, 2006, by Michael Kwok. It is unknown whether there a ...
(TPS). In November 2006, the TPS LLR application was officially released at PrimeGrid. Less than two months later, January 2007, the record twin was found by the original manual project. TPS has since been completed, while the search for
Sophie Germain prime In number theory, a prime number ''p'' is a if 2''p'' + 1 is also prime. The number 2''p'' + 1 associated with a Sophie Germain prime is called a . For example, 11 is a Sophie Germain prime and 2 × 11 +  ...
s continues. In the summer of 2007, the Cullen and Woodall prime searches were launched. In the Fall, more prime searches were added through partnerships with the Prime Sierpinski Problem an
3*2^n-1 Search
projects. Additionally, two sieves were added: the Prime Sierpinski Problem combined sieve which includes supporting the
Seventeen or Bust Seventeen or Bust was a volunteer computing project started in March 2002 to solve the last seventeen cases in the Sierpinski problem. The project solved eleven cases before a server loss in April 2016 forced it to cease operations. Work on the ...
sieve and the combined Cullen/Woodall sieve. In the fall of the same year, PrimeGrid migrated its systems from PerlBOINC to standard
BOINC The Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC, pronounced – rhymes with "oink") is an open-source middleware system for volunteer computing (a type of distributed computing). Developed originally to support SETI@home, it beca ...
software. Since September 2008, PrimeGrid is also running a
Proth prime A Proth number is a natural number ''N'' of the form N = k \times 2^n +1 where ''k'' and ''n'' are positive integers, ''k'' is odd and 2^n > k. A Proth prime is a Proth number that is prime. They are named after the French mathematician François ...
sieving subproject. In January 2010 the subproject Seventeen or Bust (for solving the Sierpinski problem) was added. The calculations for the
Riesel problem In mathematics, a Riesel number is an odd natural number ''k'' for which k\times2^n-1 is composite for all natural numbers ''n'' . In other words, when ''k'' is a Riesel number, all members of the following set are composite: :\left\. If the form ...
followed in March 2010.


Projects

, PrimeGrid is working on or has worked on the following projects:


321 Prime Search

321 Prime Search is a continuation of Paul Underwood'
321 Search
which looked for primes of the form 3 · 2''n'' − 1. PrimeGrid added the +1 form and continues the search up to ''n'' = 25''M''. Primes known for 3 · 2''n'' + 1 occur at the following ''n'': : 1, 2, 5, 6, 8, 12, 18, 30, 36, 41, 66, 189, 201, 209, 276, 353, 408, 438, 534, 2208, 2816, 3168, 3189, 3912, 20909, 34350, 42294, 42665, 44685, 48150, 54792, 55182, 59973, 80190, 157169, 213321, 303093, 362765, 382449, 709968, 801978, 916773, 1832496, 2145353, 2291610, 2478785, 5082306, 7033641, 10829346, 16408818 Primes known for 3 · 2''n'' − 1 occur at the following ''n'': : 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 11, 18, 34, 38, 43, 55, 64, 76, 94, 103, 143, 206, 216, 306, 324, 391, 458, 470, 827, 1274, 3276, 4204, 5134, 7559, 12676, 14898, 18123, 18819, 25690, 26459, 41628, 51387, 71783, 80330, 85687, 88171, 97063, 123630, 155930, 164987, 234760, 414840, 584995, 702038, 727699, 992700, 1201046, 1232255, 2312734, 3136255, 4235414, 6090515, 11484018, 11731850, 11895718, 16819291, 17748034, 18196595


PRPNet projects


Accomplishments


AP26

One of PrimeGrid projects was AP26 Search which searched for a record 26
primes in arithmetic progression In number theory, primes in arithmetic progression are any sequence of at least three prime numbers that are consecutive terms in an arithmetic progression. An example is the sequence of primes (3, 7, 11), which is given by a_n = 3 + 4n for 0 \le n ...
. The search was successful in April 2010 with the finding of the first known AP26: : is prime for . : , or 23
primorial In mathematics, and more particularly in number theory, primorial, denoted by "#", is a function from natural numbers to natural numbers similar to the factorial function, but rather than successively multiplying positive integers, the function ...
, is the product of all primes up to 23.


AP27

Next target of the project was AP27 Search which searched for a record 27
primes in arithmetic progression In number theory, primes in arithmetic progression are any sequence of at least three prime numbers that are consecutive terms in an arithmetic progression. An example is the sequence of primes (3, 7, 11), which is given by a_n = 3 + 4n for 0 \le n ...
. The search was successful in September 2019 with the finding of the first known AP27: : is prime for . : , or 23
primorial In mathematics, and more particularly in number theory, primorial, denoted by "#", is a function from natural numbers to natural numbers similar to the factorial function, but rather than successively multiplying positive integers, the function ...
, is the product of all primes up to 23.


Cullen prime search

PrimeGrid is also running a search for
Cullen prime Cullen may refer to: Places Canada *Cullen, Saskatchewan, a former hamlet in Benson No. 35 Rural Municipality Ireland *Cullen, County Cork, a village near Boherbue, County Cork *Cullen, County Tipperary, a small village in County Tipperary Scotl ...
numbers, yielding the two largest known Cullen primes. The first one being the 14th largest known prime at the time of discovery, and the second one was PrimeGrid's largest prime found at over 2 million digits.


Generalized Fermat prime search

On 31 October 2018, PrimeGrid discovered the largest known Generalized Fermat prime to date, . This prime is 6,317,602 digits long and is only the second Generalized Fermat prime found for . It ranks as the 13th largest known prime overall.


Riesel Problem

, PrimeGrid has eliminated 15 values of ''k'' from the
Riesel problem In mathematics, a Riesel number is an odd natural number ''k'' for which k\times2^n-1 is composite for all natural numbers ''n'' . In other words, when ''k'' is a Riesel number, all members of the following set are composite: :\left\. If the form ...
and is continuing the search to eliminate the 49 remaining numbers.


Twin prime search

Primegrid worked with the
Twin Prime Search Twin Prime Search (TPS) is a volunteer computing project that looks for large twin primes. It uses the programs LLR (for primality testing) and NewPGen (for sieving). It was founded on April 13, 2006, by Michael Kwok. It is unknown whether there a ...
to search for a record-sized
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 pr ...
at approximately 58,700 digits. The new world's largest known twin prime was eventually discovered on January 15, 2007 (sieved by Twin Prime Search and tested by PrimeGrid). The search continued for another record twin prime at just above 100,000 digits. It was completed in August 2009 when Primegrid found . Continued testing for twin primes in conjunction with the search for a
Sophie Germain prime In number theory, a prime number ''p'' is a if 2''p'' + 1 is also prime. The number 2''p'' + 1 associated with a Sophie Germain prime is called a . For example, 11 is a Sophie Germain prime and 2 × 11 +  ...
yielded a new record twin prime in September 2016 upon finding the number composed of 388,342 digits.


Woodall prime search

, the project has discovered the three largest Woodall primes known to date. The largest of these, , is the first
mega prime A megaprime is a prime number with at least one million decimal digits. Other terms for large primes include titanic prime, coined by Samuel Yates in the 1980s for a prime with at least 1000 digits, and gigantic prime for a prime with at least 10 ...
discovered by the project and is 1129757 digits long. It was discovered on December 21, 2007, by Matthew J Thompson using the LLR program. The search continues for an even bigger Woodall prime. PrimeGrid also found the largest known generalized Woodall prime, .


Media coverage

PrimeGrid's author Rytis Slatkevičius has been featured as a young entrepreneur in ''
The Economist ''The Economist'' is a British weekly newspaper printed in demitab format and published digitally. It focuses on current affairs, international business, politics, technology, and culture. Based in London, the newspaper is owned by The Econo ...
''. PrimeGrid has also been featured in an article by Francois Grey in the ''
CERN Courier ''CERN Courier'' (or sometimes ''CERN Courier: International Journal of High Energy Physics'') is a monthly trade magazine covering current developments in high-energy physics and related fields worldwide. It was established in 1959. Since October ...
'' and a talk about citizen cyberscience in
TEDx TED Conferences, LLC (Technology, Entertainment, Design) is an American-Canadian non-profit media organization that posts international talks online for free distribution under the slogan "ideas worth spreading". TED was founded by Richard Sau ...
Warwick conference. In the first Citizen Cyberscience Summit, Rytis Slatkevičius gave a talk as a founder of PrimeGrid, named ''Finding primes: from digits to digital technology'', relating mathematics and volunteering and featuring the history of the project.


References


External links

* * /www.discord.com/channels/357493752434130944/ PrimeGrid Discord chat server(almost daily discovery announcements) * /primes.utm.edu/bios/page.php?id=950 PrimeGrid's resultsat
The Prime Pages The PrimePages is a website about prime numbers maintained by Chris Caldwell at the University of Tennessee at Martin. The site maintains the list of the "5,000 largest known primes", selected smaller primes of special forms, and many "top twenty" ...
{{BOINC topics Science in society Free science software Volunteer computing projects Distributed prime searches Cross-platform free software