Misplaced Pages

Smarandache–Wellin number

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Smarandache–Wellin prime) Concatenation of the first n prime numbers

In mathematics, a Smarandache–Wellin number is an integer that in a given base is the concatenation of the first n prime numbers written in that base. Smarandache–Wellin numbers are named after Florentin Smarandache and Paul R. Wellin.

The first decimal Smarandache–Wellin numbers are:

2, 23, 235, 2357, 235711, 23571113, 2357111317, 235711131719, 23571113171923, 2357111317192329, ... (sequence A019518 in the OEIS).

Smarandache–Wellin prime

A Smarandache–Wellin number that is also prime is called a Smarandache–Wellin prime. The first three are 2, 23 and 2357 (sequence A069151 in the OEIS). The fourth is 355 digits long: it is the result of concatenating the first 128 prime numbers, through 719.

The primes at the end of the concatenation in the Smarandache–Wellin primes are

2, 3, 7, 719, 1033, 2297, 3037, 11927, ... (sequence A046284 in the OEIS).

The indices of the Smarandache–Wellin primes in the sequence of Smarandache–Wellin numbers are:

1, 2, 4, 128, 174, 342, 435, 1429, ... (sequence A046035 in the OEIS).

The 1429th Smarandache–Wellin number is a probable prime with 5719 digits ending in 11927, discovered by Eric W. Weisstein in 1998. If it is proven prime, it will be the eighth Smarandache–Wellin prime. In March 2009, Weisstein's search showed the index of the next Smarandache–Wellin prime (if one exists) is at least 22077.

See also

References

  1. Pomerance, Carl B.; Crandall, Richard E. (2001). Prime Numbers: a computational perspective. Springer. pp. 78 Ex 1.86. ISBN 0-387-25282-7.
  2. Rivera, Carlos, Primes by Listing
  3. Weisstein, Eric W. "Integer Sequence Primes". MathWorld. Retrieved 2011-07-28.

External links

Prime number classes
By formula
By integer sequence
By property
Base-dependent
Patterns
k-tuples
By size
  • Mega (1,000,000+ digits)
  • Largest known
  • Complex numbers
    Composite numbers
    Related topics
    First 60 primes
    List of prime numbers
    Classes of natural numbers
    Powers and related numbers
    Of the form a × 2 ± 1
    Other polynomial numbers
    Recursively defined numbers
    Possessing a specific set of other numbers
    Expressible via specific sums
    Figurate numbers
    2-dimensional
    centered
    non-centered
    3-dimensional
    centered
    non-centered
    pyramidal
    4-dimensional
    non-centered
    Combinatorial numbers
    Primes
    Pseudoprimes
    Arithmetic functions and dynamics
    Divisor functions
    Prime omega functions
    Euler's totient function
    Aliquot sequences
    Primorial
    Other prime factor or divisor related numbers
    Numeral system-dependent numbers
    Arithmetic functions
    and dynamics
    Digit sum
    Digit product
    Coding-related
    Other
    P-adic numbers-related
    Digit-composition related
    Digit-permutation related
    Divisor-related
    Other
    Binary numbers
    Generated via a sieve
    Sorting related
    Natural language related
    Graphemics related
    Categories: