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Mersenne-prime-calculator

Calculates Mersenne primes, numbers of the form 2^n-1, where n is an integer which for certain values will produce prime numbers. The first such examples of are n = 2, 3, 5, 7, 13, 17, 19 and 31. The largest prime yet found is of this form when n = 82,589,933. This code is designed to calculate this prime number as well as any other Mersenne prime the user desires.

Composition

The code works by first setting a target value for the index n, we then choose a base to work in. A larger base than 10 decreases the time for the code to run. Here we choose 10^9. Using logarithms, the code then calculates the number of digits in the answer and initialises an array with that many digits. We then times the number in this array by a multiplier, chosen to be large to increase efficiency, here 2^25. We then finish the calculation by multiplying by two the necessary number of times to reach the desired index. Then we subtract 1 and print to screen or save the found number as a text file.

Finding number of digits in the prime to calculate

An important part of the code is finding the number of digits in the prime to be calculated. There is a pdf included in the files which describes how this bit of maths works.

Largest known prime

Also included is a file containing the result of the calculation for the largest prime currently known. The sum for this is 2^82,589,933 a number which contains nearly 25 million digits!