Elliptic pseudoprime

In number theory, a pseudoprime is called an elliptic pseudoprime for (EP), where E is an elliptic curve defined over the field of rational numbers with complex multiplication by an order in Q ( d ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} {\big (}{\sqrt {-d}}{\big )}} , having equation y2 = x3 + ax + b with a, b integers, P being a point on E and n a natural number such that the Jacobi symbol (−d | n) = −1, if (n + 1)P ≡ 0 (mod n).

The number of elliptic pseudoprimes less than X is bounded above, for large X, by

X / exp ( ( 1 / 3 ) log X log log log X / log log X )   . {\displaystyle X/\exp((1/3)\log X\log \log \log X/\log \log X)\ .}

References

  • Gordon, Daniel M.; Pomerance, Carl (1991). "The distribution of Lucas and elliptic pseudoprimes". Mathematics of Computation. 57 (196): 825–838. doi:10.2307/2938720. JSTOR 2938720. Zbl 0774.11074.

External links

  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Elliptic Pseudoprime". MathWorld.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Classes of natural numbers
Of the form a × 2b ± 1
Other polynomial numbers
Recursively defined numbers
Possessing a specific set of other numbers
Expressible via specific sums
2-dimensional
centered
non-centered
3-dimensional
centered
non-centered
pyramidal
4-dimensional
non-centered
Combinatorial numbers
Divisor functions
Prime omega functions
Euler's totient function
Aliquot sequences
Primorial
Numeral system-dependent numbers
Arithmetic functions
and dynamics
Digit sum
Digit product
Coding-related
Other
P-adic numbers-related
Digit-composition related
Digit-permutation related
Divisor-related
Other
Generated via a sieve
  • Mathematics portal


Stub icon

This article about a number is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e