Repunit

The Prime Pages keeps a list of the 5000 largest known primes, plus a few each of certain selected archivable forms and classes. These forms are defined in this collection's home page.

This page is about one of those forms.

(up) Definitions and Notes

The term repunit comes from the words 'repeated' and 'unit;' so repunits are positive integers in which every digit is one. (This term was coined by A. H. Beiler in [Beiler1964].) For example, R1=1, R2=11, R3=111, and Rn=(10n-1)/9. Notice Rn divides Rm whenever n divides m.

Repunit primes are repunits that are prime. For example, 11, 1111111111111111111, and 11111111111111111111111 (2, 19, and 23 digits). The only other known repunit primes are the ones with 317 digits: (10317-1)/9, 1,031 digits and (101031-1)/9.

During 1999 Dubner discovered R49081 = (1049081-1)/9 was a probable prime. In October 2000, Lew Baxter discovered the next repunit probable prime is R86453. In 2007 the probable primes R109297 (Bourdelais and Dubner) and R270343 (Voznyy and Budnyy) were found. In 2021 the probable primes R5794777 and R8177207 were found (Batalov and Propper). It will be some time before these giant primes are proven! As the poet wrote:

Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp, or what's a heaven for? (Robert Browning)

What makes these repunits R so difficult to prove prime is that we do not have an easy way to factor R-1 or R+1. The (practically) quick methods of primality proving all require factoring.

Even though only a few are known, it has been conjectured that there are infinitely many repunit primes. To see why just look at the graph of the known repunit primes and probable primes (here we graph log(log(Rn)) verses n.

Graph

(up) Record Primes of this Type

rankprime digitswhowhencomment
1R(86453) 86453 E3 May 2023 Repunit, ECPP, unique
2R(49081) 49081 c70 Mar 2022 Repunit, unique, ECPP
3R(1031) 1031 WD Dec 1985 Repunit

(up) References

Beiler1964
A. Beiler, Recreations in the theory of numbers, Dover Pub., New York, NY, 1964.
BLSTW88
J. Brillhart, D. H. Lehmer, J. L. Selfridge, B. Tuckerman and S. S. Wagstaff, Jr., Factorizations of bn ± 1, b=2,3,5,6,7,10,12 up to high powers, Amer. Math. Soc., 1988.  Providence RI, pp. xcvi+236, ISBN 0-8218-5078-4. MR 90d:11009 (Annotation available)
Dubner2002
Dubner, Harvey, "Repunit R49081 is a probable prime," Math. Comp., 71:238 (2002) 833--835 (electronic).  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/S0025-5718-01-01319-9) MR 1885632 (Abstract available)
WD86
H. C. Williams and H. Dubner, "The primality of R1031," Math. Comp., 47:176 (1986) 703--711.  MR 87k:11141
Williams78b
H. C. Williams, "Some primes with interesting digit patterns," Math. Comp., 32 (1978) 1306--1310.  Corrigendum in 39 (1982), 759.  MR 58:484
Yates82
S. Yates, Repunits and repetends, Star Publishing Co., Inc., Boynton Beach, Florida, 1982.  pp. vi+215, MR 83k:10014
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