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In number theory, a Wall–Sun–Sun prime or Fibonacci–Wieferich prime is a certain kind of prime number which is conjectured to exist, although none are known.

Definition

Let p be a prime number. When each term in the sequence of Fibonacci numbers Fn is reduced modulo p, the result is a periodic sequence. The (minimal) period length of this sequence is called the Pisano period and denoted π(p). Since F0=0, it follows that p divides Fπ(p). A prime p such that p2 divides Fπ(p) is called a Wall–Sun–Sun prime.

Equivalent definitions

If α(m) denotes the rank of apparition modulo m (i.e., α(m) is the smallest positive index such that m divides Fα(m)), then a Wall–Sun–Sun prime can be equivalently defined as a prime p such that p2 divides Fα(p).

For a prime p ≠ 2, 5, the rank of apparition α(p) is known to divide p(p5), where the Legendre symbol (p5) has the values

(p5)={1if p±1(mod5);1if p±2(mod5).

This observation gives rise to an equivalent characterization of Wall–Sun–Sun primes as primes p such that p2 divides the Fibonacci number Fp(p5).[1]

A prime p is a Wall–Sun–Sun prime if and only if π(p2)=π(p).

A prime p is a Wall–Sun–Sun prime if and only if Lp1(modp2), where Lp is the p-th Lucas number.[2]Template:Rp

McIntosh and Roettger establish several equivalent characterizations of Lucas–Wieferich primes.[3] In particular, let ϵ=(p5); then the following are equivalent:

  • Fpϵ0(modp2)
  • Lpϵ2ϵ(modp4)
  • Lpϵ2ϵ(modp3)
  • Fpϵ(modp2)
  • Lp1(modp2)

Existence

Template:Unsolved

In a study of the Pisano period k(p), Donald Dines Wall determined that there are no Wall–Sun–Sun primes less than 10000. In 1960, he wrote:[4] Template:Quote It has since been conjectured that there are infinitely many Wall–Sun–Sun primes.[5]

In 2007, Richard J. McIntosh and Eric L. Roettger showed that if any exist, they must be > 2Template:E.[3] Dorais and Klyve extended this range to 9.7Template:E without finding such a prime.[6]

In December 2011, another search was started by the PrimeGrid project;[7] however, it was suspended in May 2017.[8] In November 2020, PrimeGrid started another project that searches for Wieferich and Wall–Sun–Sun primes simultaneously.[9] The project ended in December 2022, definitely proving that any Wall–Sun–Sun prime must exceed 264 (about 181018).[10]

History

Wall–Sun–Sun primes are named after Donald Dines Wall,[4][11] Zhi Hong Sun and Zhi Wei Sun; Z. H. Sun and Z. W. Sun showed in 1992 that if the first case of Fermat's Last Theorem was false for a certain prime p, then p would have to be a Wall–Sun–Sun prime.[12] As a result, prior to Andrew Wiles' proof of Fermat's Last Theorem, the search for Wall–Sun–Sun primes was also the search for a potential counterexample to this centuries-old conjecture.

Generalizations

A tribonacci–Wieferich prime is a prime p satisfying Template:Nowrap, where h is the least positive integer satisfying [Th,Th+1,Th+2] ≡ [T0, T1, T2] (mod m) and Tn denotes the n-th tribonacci number. No tribonacci–Wieferich prime exists below 1011.[13]

A Pell–Wieferich prime is a prime p satisfying p2 divides Pp−1, when p congruent to 1 or 7 (mod 8), or p2 divides Pp+1, when p congruent to 3 or 5 (mod 8), where Pn denotes the n-th Pell number. For example, 13, 31, and 1546463 are Pell–Wieferich primes, and no others below 109 Template:OEIS. In fact, Pell–Wieferich primes are 2-Wall–Sun–Sun primes.

Near-Wall–Sun–Sun primes

A prime p such that Fp(p5)Ap(modp2) with small |A| is called near-Wall–Sun–Sun prime.[3] Near-Wall–Sun–Sun primes with A = 0 would be Wall–Sun–Sun primes. PrimeGrid recorded cases with |A| ≤ 1000.[14] A dozen cases are known where A = ±1 Template:OEIS.

Wall–Sun–Sun primes with discriminant D

Wall–Sun–Sun primes can be considered for the field QD with discriminant D. For the conventional Wall–Sun–Sun primes, D = 5. In the general case, a Lucas–Wieferich prime p associated with (P, Q) is a Wieferich prime to base Q and a Wall–Sun–Sun prime with discriminant D = P2 – 4Q.[1] In this definition, the prime p should be odd and not divide D.

It is conjectured that for every natural number D, there are infinitely many Wall–Sun–Sun primes with discriminant D.

The case of (P,Q)=(k,1) corresponds to the k-Wall–Sun–Sun primes, for which Wall–Sun–Sun primes represent the special case k = 1. The k-Wall–Sun–Sun primes can be explicitly defined as primes p such that p2 divides the k-Fibonacci number Fk(πk(p)), where Fk(n) = Un(k, −1) is a Lucas sequence of the first kind with discriminant D = k2 + 4 and πk(p) is the Pisano period of k-Fibonacci numbers modulo p.[15] For a prime p ≠ 2 and not dividing D, this condition is equivalent to either of the following.

  • p2 divides Fk(p(Dp)), where (Dp) is the Kronecker symbol;
  • Vp(k, −1) ≡ k (mod p2), where Vn(k, −1) is a Lucas sequence of the second kind.

The smallest k-Wall–Sun–Sun primes for k = 2, 3, ... are

13, 241, 2, 3, 191, 5, 2, 3, 2683, ... Template:OEIS

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

Template:Prime number classes