Revision as of 15:59, 26 July 2008 by imported>Jitse Niesen
A Carmichael number is a composite number named after the mathematician Robert Daniel Carmichael. A Carmichael number
divides
for every integer
. A Carmichael number c also satisfies the congruence
, if
. The first few Carmichael numbers are 561, 1105, 1729, 2465, 2821, 6601 and 8911. In 1994 Pomerance, Alford and Granville proved that there exist infinitely many Carmichael numbers.
Properties
- Every Carmichael number is square-free and has at least three different prime factors
- For every Carmichael number c it holds that
is divisible by
for every one of its prime factors
.
- Every Carmichael number is an Euler pseudoprime.
- Every absolute Euler pseudoprime is a Carmichael number.
Chernick's Carmichael numbers
J. Chernick found in 1939 a way to construct Carmichael numbers[1]. If, for a natural number n, the three numbers
,
and
are prime numbers, the product
is a Carmichael number. Equivalent to this is that if
,
and
are prime numbers, then the product
is a Carmichael number.
To construct Carmichael numbers with
, you could only use numbers
which ends with 0, 1, 5 or 6.
This way to construct Carmichael numbers could expand to
with the restriction, that for
the variable
is divisible by
References and notes