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score
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Posted on 10-06-08 2:44
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hai guyz, help me out if anyone is expert!
If p1, p2, p3.........pn are the first n primes, show that p1p2p3......pn+1 is prime.
Greately appreciated.........if anybody can help........thankx
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perrybhadra
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Posted on 10-06-08 2:58
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first make the question clear , i think this is not a possible case
say u take 1 , 2 and 3. However, 1x2x3 =6 is not a prime .
help me understand, i may be wrong.
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alexander
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Posted on 10-06-08 3:09
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I don't think 1 is a prime number. If you take 2 as the first prime number, then the question is correct.
Last edited: 06-Oct-08 03:10 PM
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fortunefaded
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Posted on 10-06-08 3:49
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The above statement is incorrect. Actually, it is not a prime. Proof: (By counter-example) 2*3*5*7*11*13 + 1 = 30031 = 59 * 509 May be you are looking into the proof of infinitudes of prime. Euclid used the p1*p2*p3*....*pn +1 to prove the fact that there are infinite primes, but it does not mean that p1*p2*p3...*pn +1 has to be a prime number itself. That is the second part of the theorem. Hope this helps.
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fortunefaded
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Posted on 10-06-08 3:50
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Oops, Repost.
Last edited: 06-Oct-08 03:51 PM
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bluesfan1
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Posted on 10-07-08 2:29
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If you carefully look at the definition of a prime number, 1 is not a prime number. A prime number has to be divisible by 1 and itself i.e. a prime number has exactly two factors. Therefore the first prime number is 2. I don't how teachers in Nepal teach this in schools. I never knew this in school.
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bluesfan1
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Posted on 10-07-08 2:32
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If you carefully look at the definition of a prime number, 1 is not a prime number. A prime number has to be divisible by 1 and itself i.e. a prime number has exactly two factors. Therefore the first prime number is 2. I don't how teachers in Nepal teach this in schools. I never knew this in school.
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nepal_republic
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Posted on 10-07-08 9:04
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After you multiply by 2 then the result is not going to be prime.
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score
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Posted on 10-07-08 10:08
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thankx for everybody who responded to my questions.
I greatly appreciate you all.
thankx again
score
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junio
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Posted on 10-07-08 10:44
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As far as I am concerned .. let us suppose the first prime number P1 = 2 P2 = 3 P3 = 5 P4 = 7 P5 = 11 P(n-1) where n is the set of real numbers Pn Pn+1 = (some prime nos) where n is the set of real nos.. thus from the Mathematical Induction theorem P1,P2,P3......Pn,Pn+1 is the set of prime numbers For further information go to http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PrimeNumber.html
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sangfroid
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Posted on 10-08-08 6:35
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The question is wrong... you can never find a prime number which is a product of two same/different numbers unless you do (1*1=1) . In that also, there is some confusion about if people take 1 as prime or not.
Defination of prime says that , it is only divisible by itself or 1. So this question is wrong.
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Lackadaisical
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Posted on 10-08-08 10:57
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Sangfroid - The question is not wrong. If you look at the question carefully it clearly says that add one to the product of prime numbers. So a number is NOT a prime number if it is a product of prime numbers but is definitely a prime number if it is product of prime numbers plus 1.
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sangfroid
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Posted on 10-08-08 1:30
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ohh i thought it is an index of n....
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