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Wieferich prime (Definition)

A Wieferich prime a is prime number $p$ such that $p^2$ divides $2^{p-1}-1$ ; compare this with Fermat's little theorem, which states that every prime $p$ divides $2^{p-1}-1$ . Wieferich primes were first described by Arthur Wieferich in 1909 in works pertaining to Fermat's last theorem.

The only known Wieferich primes are 1093 and 3511, found by W. Meissner in 1913 and N. G. W. H. Beeger in 1922, respectively; if any others exist, they must be at least $1.25\times 10^{15}$ . The conjecture that only finitely many Wieferich primes exist remains unproven, though J. H. Silverman was able to show in 1988 that if the abc Conjecture holds, then for any positive integer $a>1$ , there exist infinitely many primes $p$ such that $p^2$ does not divide $a^{p-1}-1$ . In particular, there are infinitely many primes which are not Wieferich.

Wieferich primes and Fermat's last theorem

The following theorem connecting Wieferich primes and Fermat's last theorem was proven by Wieferich in 1909:

Theorem 1   Let $p$ be prime, and let $x, y, z$ be integers such that $x^p+y^p+z^p=0$ . Furthermore, assume that $p$ does not divide the product $xyz$ . Then $p$ is a Wieferich prime.

In 1910, Mirimanoff was able to expand this theorem by showing that, if the preconditions of the theorem hold true for some prime $p$ , then $p^2$ must also divide $3^{p-1}$ . Prime numbers of this kind have been called Mirimanoff primes on occasion, but the name has not entered general mathematical use.

An analysis of Wieferich primes also proved crucial to Preda Mihailescu's proof of the (formerly-named) Catalan's conjecture.

Bibliography

1
Ireland, Kenneth and Rosen, Michael. A Classical Introduction to Modern Number Theory. Springer, 1998.
2
Nathanson, Melvyn B. Elementary Methods in Number Theory. Springer, 2000.
3
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, entry on Wieferich primes. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License




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Cross-references: Catalan's conjecture, proof, analysis, expand, product, theorem, integer, positive, ABC conjecture, conjecture, Fermat's last theorem, Fermat's little theorem, divides, prime number

This is version 4 of Wieferich prime, born on 2003-08-11, modified 2006-02-17.
Object id is 4575, canonical name is WieferichPrime.
Accessed 3125 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC11A07 (Number theory :: Elementary number theory :: Congruences; primitive roots; residue systems)

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Wieferich prime by bert on 2005-12-17 08:21:48
This entry is out-of-date. Also it has a misprint, defining it as a prime whose square does not divide 2^p - 1.

The only Wieferich primes known are 1093 and 3511. It is currently unknown whether or not there are infinitely many of them, but there are no others less than 1.25 x 10^15 (McIntosh 2004; see http://www.loria.fr/~zimmerma/records/Wieferich.status). It has been proved that the ABC conjecture implies that there are infinitely many primes that are not Wieferich (J. Silverman, "Wieferich's Criterion and the abc Conjecture", J. Number Th. 30 (1988) 226-237).
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