I watched this video on YouTube video about Sierpiński numbers. It's quite informative but I thought I'd find out more.
The Sierpiński Problem: An Exhaustive Analysis of Covering Systems, Primality, and Distributed Computational Number Theory
The intersection of abstract Diophantine number theory and large-scale computational mathematics has produced some of the most rigorous and collaborative problem-solving efforts in modern scientific history. At the center of this nexus lies the Sierpiński problem, a profound question that challenges mathematicians to determine the smallest odd natural number $k$ for which the expression $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ never yields a prime number for any positive integer $n$. Such numbers, known formally as Sierpiński numbers, represent a striking anomaly in the asymptotic distribution of primes, guaranteeing an infinite sequence of composite integers.
This comprehensive report explores the mathematical properties of Sierpiński numbers, the life and theoretical contributions of their discoverer Wacław Sierpiński, the foundational proof mechanisms involving cyclotomic covering sets, and the ongoing, decades-long distributed computing efforts—most notably the "Seventeen or Bust" initiative—that seek to resolve the Sierpiński problem and its associated mathematical variants.
Historical Context: The Life and Legacy of Wacław Sierpiński
To fully grasp the significance of Sierpiński numbers, it is essential to examine the historical and intellectual environment of their namesake, Wacław Franciszek Sierpiński (1882–1969). An eminent Polish mathematician, Sierpiński made outstanding and foundational contributions to set theory, point set topology, the theory of functions of a real variable, and number theory [cite: 1, 2, 3].
Born in Warsaw during the Russian Empire's occupation of Poland, Sierpiński’s early education was severely constrained by the systematic suppression of Polish culture [cite: 4, 5]. Following sweeping educational mandates implemented between 1869 and 1874, the Russian authorities forced all secondary schools and universities in the territory to operate entirely in the Russian language [cite: 3, 6]. The implicit geopolitical aim was to suppress Polish intellectual advancement; however, this hostile environment inadvertently forged Sierpiński's resilience and fierce intellectual independence [cite: 5].
Despite these formidable barriers, Sierpiński enrolled in the Department of Mathematics and Physics at the Czar's University (the official, Russian-controlled iteration of the University of Warsaw) in 1899 [cite: 1, 7]. His prodigious talent in number theory was recognized almost immediately. In 1903, the department announced a competition for an essay on the number theory contributions of the distinguished Russian mathematician Georgy Voronoy [cite: 3]. Sierpiński submitted a dissertation that won the university's gold medal in 1904 [cite: 1, 7].
His prize-winning work significantly advanced the famous Gauss circle problem. Specifically, if $R(r)$ denotes the number of integer lattice points $(m, n)$ contained within a circle of radius $r$ centered at the origin, there exists a constant $C$ and a number $k$ such that the error term is bounded by $|R(r) - \pi r^2| < C r^k$ [cite: 1, 7]. Carl Friedrich Gauss had originally proved in 1837 that the minimal value $d$ for $k$ is $d \le 1$. Sierpiński's major contribution was proving that this inequality could be tightened to $d \le 2/3$ [cite: 1, 7]. In 1913, the prominent German mathematician Edmund Landau shortened Sierpiński's proof, publicly describing the underlying mathematics as exceptionally profound [cite: 1, 7].
Despite his academic triumph, Sierpiński's Polish nationalism led him to withdraw his gold-medal essay from the university's Russian-language Izvestia journal, choosing instead to publish it years later in a Polish mathematical magazine [cite: 7]. Following his graduation in 1904, his academic journey pivoted toward set theory and topology. He became deeply fascinated by the continuum hypothesis, the axiom of choice, and fractal curves, eventually introducing geometric concepts that bear his name, such as the Sierpiński triangle (or gasket), the Sierpiński carpet, and the Sierpiński space-filling curve [cite: 4]. He was also the first to provide a concrete example of an absolutely normal number in 1916—a number whose digits occur with equal asymptotic frequency in any given base [cite: 6].
During World War II, Sierpiński courageously continued his academic work within the "Underground Warsaw University" while officially employed as a municipal clerk, smuggling his mathematical papers out of occupied Poland to be published in Italy [cite: 1]. However, his enduring fascination with the structural properties of integers eventually led his focus back to pure number theory. In 1960, utilizing advanced techniques in modular congruences, Sierpiński published a seminal proof establishing the existence of the numbers that now bear his name [cite: 8, 9, 10].
Mathematical Foundations and Polignac's Conjecture
The expression $k \cdot 2^n + 1$, where $k$ is an odd positive integer and $n$ is a positive integer, generates a specific class of integers. When the exponentiated term overtakes the multiplier (specifically, when $2^n > k$), the resulting integer is known as a Proth number, named after the 19th-century French mathematician François Proth [cite: 1, 3]. Proth numbers are highly significant in computational number theory because their primality can be tested with exceptional algorithmic efficiency using Proth's theorem, circumventing the need for exhaustive trial division [cite: 1, 11].
A Sierpiński number is defined specifically as an odd natural number $k$ such that the Proth expression $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ is composite for every integer $n \ge 1$ [cite: 10, 12]. For the vast majority of $k$ values, evaluating successive values of $n$ quickly yields a prime number. For instance, if $k = 3$, setting $n = 2$ produces $3 \cdot 2^2 + 1 = 13$, which is prime; thus, 3 is immediately disqualified as a Sierpiński number [cite: 2, 3]. The core mathematical anomaly of a Sierpiński number is that its sequence completely evades the infinitely many prime numbers scattered throughout the integers.
The conceptual architecture of Sierpiński's 1960 proof relies heavily on addressing a flawed hypothesis known as Polignac's conjecture. In 1849, the French mathematician Alphonse de Polignac conjectured that every odd integer greater than 1 could be expressed as the sum of a prime number and a power of two (i.e., $p + 2^k$) [cite: 13, 14]. While Leonhard Euler had previously noted isolated counterexamples like 127 and 959, Polignac's conjecture remained a subject of intense debate until 1950 [cite: 14].
In 1950, the prolific Hungarian mathematician Paul Erdős and the Dutch mathematician J. G. van der Corput independently disproved Polignac's conjecture with rigorous finality [cite: 15]. Erdős proved that there exists an infinite arithmetic progression of odd numbers that cannot under any circumstances be represented as a sum of a prime and a power of two [cite: 9]. To achieve this, Erdős utilized a mathematical construct known as a "covering set" (or covering system) of congruences [cite: 13]. Erdős observed that by carefully selecting a finite set of prime numbers—specifically $\{3, 5, 7, 13, 17, 241\}$—one could create a modular interlocking system where every possible exponent $n$ aligns with a modulus that forces the resulting expression to be divisible by at least one of those selected primes [cite: 9, 16].
Sierpiński’s 1960 Proof and the Mechanics of Covering Sets
Building directly upon Erdős's foundational concept of covering systems, Sierpiński proved his eponymous theorem: there exist infinitely many odd positive integers $k$ such that $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ is strictly composite for all positive integers $n$ [cite: 17].
The proof mechanism relies on a finite covering set of congruences. A covering set $P = \{p_1, p_2, \dots, p_m\}$ is a finite set of prime numbers constructed so that for every positive integer $n$, the expression $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ is divisible by at least one $p_i \in P$ [cite: 18, 19]. Sierpiński constructed a precise covering of exponents $n$ using the moduli $\{2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64\}$. This specific covering ensures that every integer $n$ satisfies at least one modular condition, triggering divisibility by a corresponding prime.
The mechanics of Sierpiński’s 1960 proof can be modeled by mapping the exponent conditions to their required prime divisors and the resulting congruences for $k$.
Index | Modulus for n | Exponent Congruence | Prime Divisor (p_i) | Required Congruence for k 1 | 2 | n = 1 mod 2 | 3 | k = 1 mod 3 2 | 4 | n = 2 mod 4 | 5 | k = 1 mod 5 3 | 8 | n = 4 mod 8 | 17 | k = 1 mod 17 4 | 16 | n = 8 mod 16 | 257 | k = 1 mod 257 5 | 32 | n = 16 mod 32 | 65537 | k = 1 mod 65537 6 | 64 | n = 32 mod 64 | 641 | k = 1 mod 641 7 | 64 | n = 0 mod 64 | 6700417 | k = -1 mod 6700417
Table 1: The covering system utilized in Wacław Sierpiński's 1960 proof [cite: 18].
The primes $\{3, 5, 17, 257, 641, 65537, 6700417\}$ form the covering set $C$ [cite: 1]. This specific set is highly delicate and demonstrates a deep structural connectivity to Fermat numbers. It functions explicitly because the fifth Fermat number, $F_5 = 2^{32} + 1$, factors cleanly into two distinct prime divisors: 641 and 6,700,417 [cite: 1].
By invoking the Chinese Remainder Theorem, Sierpiński proved that there exists a simultaneous solution $k$ to all the modular constraints listed in Table 1 [cite: 1]. Furthermore, because the prime moduli are pairwise coprime, the solutions for $k$ repeat periodically, forming an infinite arithmetic progression [cite: 1]. Any $k$ falling within this progression ensures that $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ is divisible by at least one prime in the covering set $C$ for any conceivable $n$, thus guaranteeing absolute compositeness [cite: 17, 19]. Solving this system of congruences yields the smallest $k$ native to Sierpiński's original method—an unwieldy 20-digit integer: 15,511,380,746,462,593,381 [cite: 17, 20].
John Selfridge and the Formulation of the Sierpiński Problem
While Sierpiński brilliantly proved the existence of these infinite progressions, he did not attempt to hunt for the absolute smallest example of such a number. In 1962, the American mathematician John Selfridge—renowned for his work on Fermat numbers, primality testing, and his proof alongside Erdős that the product of consecutive integers is never a power—addressed this gap [cite: 8, 21].
Selfridge discovered a far more elegant and numerically compact covering set [cite: 1, 22]. He demonstrated that $k = 78557$ is a Sierpiński number by employing a covering set consisting of only seven small primes: $\{3, 5, 7, 13, 19, 37, 73\}$ [cite: 3, 8]. For $k = 78557$, the covering functions beautifully over the modulus 36 [cite: 19]. Selfridge proved that every number of the form $78557 \cdot 2^n + 1$ is perfectly divisible by at least one prime in this covering set, thereby ensuring that no prime number can ever be generated by the sequence [cite: 8, 18, 21].
A critical nuance in the definition of a Sierpiński number is the strict requirement that $k$ must be an odd integer [cite: 8]. If this constraint were removed, the number $k = 65536$ ($2^{16}$) would likely be a smaller candidate [cite: 23]. For $k = 65536$, the expression becomes $2^{16} \cdot 2^n + 1 = 2^{n+16} + 1$ [cite: 24]. This sequence only yields primes if $n+16$ is a power of 2, generating Fermat numbers. Since it is widely believed (though unproven) that $2^{16} + 1$ is the largest prime Fermat number, $65536 \cdot 2^n + 1$ would technically be composite for all $n > 0$ [cite: 23, 25]. To avoid entangling the Sierpiński problem with the unproven finiteness of Fermat primes, the definition strictly excludes even numbers, solidifying 78,557 as the premier candidate [cite: 3, 24].
Following his discovery, Selfridge engaged in private correspondence with Paul Erdős, conjecturing that 78,557 was not merely a Sierpiński number, but the absolute smallest possible Sierpiński number [cite: 8, 26]. Determining the mathematical truth of this conjecture is known as the Sierpiński Problem [cite: 8, 10].
Algebraic Compositeness: Aurifeuillean Factorizations
While covering sets represent the dominant mathematical paradigm for proving that a number is a Sierpiński number, they are not the sole mechanism. In 1995, the mathematician A. S. Izotov demonstrated that certain fourth powers could be proven to be Sierpiński numbers without establishing a comprehensive covering set for all possible values of $n$ [cite: 8, 27].
Izotov's proof relied on an advanced algebraic identity known as Aurifeuillean factorization [cite: 1]. He showed that expressions of the form $t^4 \cdot 2^{4m+2} + 1$ can be factored purely algebraically, independent of modular prime divisibility:
$$t^4 \cdot 2^{4m+2} + 1 = (t^2 \cdot 2^{2m+1} + t \cdot 2^{m+1} + 1) \cdot (t^2 \cdot 2^{2m+1} - t \cdot 2^{m+1} + 1)$$ [cite: 1, 28].
Because this polynomial factorization always splits the expression into two distinct integers strictly greater than 1, it proves that any exponent of the form $n \equiv 2 \pmod 4$ natively gives rise to a composite number [cite: 8]. Therefore, a covering set is only required to eliminate the remaining exponent classes: $n \equiv 0, 1, \text{ and } 3 \pmod 4$ [cite: 8]. Izotov's technique provides a profound second-order insight: the compositeness of the $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ sequence can arise from inherent algebraic geometry and polynomial expansion, rather than relying solely on the cyclical, interlocking gears of prime modular arithmetic.
The Distributed Computation Era: Solving the Sierpiński Problem
To rigorously prove Selfridge's conjecture that 78,557 is indeed the smallest Sierpiński number, mathematicians face a daunting task of exhaustive elimination. They must prove that every single odd integer $k < 78557$ is not a Sierpiński number [cite: 3, 8]. A candidate $k$ is successfully eliminated if and only if a positive integer $n$ can be found such that $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ is prime [cite: 8].
Pre-Internet Computational Efforts
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, testing these numbers was an arduous process constrained by the hardware limitations of early academic mainframes. By 1983, computational searches had determined that there were 70 values of $k < 78557$ for which no prime had been found for exponents $n \le 8000$ [cite: 10, 16]. Over the subsequent 14 years, targeted algorithmic testing slowly eliminated 48 of those multipliers [cite: 10].
A major paradigm shift occurred in August 1997 with the introduction of the Proth.exe software developed by Yves Gallot [cite: 2]. This program heavily optimized Proth's theorem for standard consumer personal computers, allowing amateur mathematicians to participate in the search. Utilizing Proth.exe, a decentralized group of enthusiasts (including Lew Baxter, Marc Thibeault, and Janusz Szmidt) systematically eliminated more candidates [cite: 22]. By the end of 2001, the list of unsolved multipliers below 78,557 had been reduced to exactly 17 [cite: 1, 10].
The "Seventeen or Bust" Project (2002–2016)
Recognizing that the exponent $n$ required to find a prime for the remaining 17 values was reaching into the hundreds of thousands—necessitating vast, decentralized amounts of computational power—two college undergraduates, Louis Helm and David Norris, along with Michael Garrison, conceived the distributed computing project "Seventeen or Bust" in March 2002 [cite: 16, 29]. The project's public client was released on April 1, 2002, allowing volunteers worldwide to donate their idle CPU cycles to test specific $k$ and $n$ pairings [cite: 29, 30].
The project was immensely successful and heralded the golden era of crowdsourced mathematics. Within its first year, it eliminated five $k$ values. Over its 14-year lifespan as an independent project, Seventeen or Bust found massive primes that eliminated 11 of the 17 candidates [cite: 16]. The primes discovered were mathematically significant; for instance, the prime found for $k = 19249$ by Konstantin Agafonov in 2007 contained nearly 4 million digits, making it the largest known non-Mersenne prime at the time [cite: 2, 30].
In 2010, the global volunteer platform PrimeGrid officially partnered with Seventeen or Bust to accelerate the search using the BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing) infrastructure [cite: 31, 32]. Unfortunately, in April 2016, the Seventeen or Bust project suffered a catastrophic datacenter failure resulting in the loss of critical un-backed-up data [cite: 10, 33]. Consequently, PrimeGrid assumed full administration of the project and absorbed its mission [cite: 16, 29, 33].
Shortly after this transition, PrimeGrid facilitated the discovery of a 12th prime, eliminating $k = 10223$. Discovered by Szabolcs Péter of Hungary on October 31, 2016, the prime $10223 \cdot 2^{31172165} + 1$ contains a staggering 9,383,761 decimal digits [cite: 1, 16, 33]. The calculation required nearly 9 days of continuous processing on an Intel i7 CPU [cite: 16, 33]. At the time of its discovery, it was the 7th largest known prime overall, the largest known Proth prime, and the largest known Colbert number [cite: 16, 33, 34].
k Value | Exponent (n) | Decimal Digits | Date Discovered | Discoverer 46157 | 698207 | 210186 | Nov 27, 2002 | Stephen Gibson 65567 | 1013803 | 305190 | Dec 2, 2002 | James Burt 44131 | 995972 | 299823 | Dec 5, 2002 | Anonymous 69109 | 1157446 | 348431 | Dec 6, 2002 | Sean DiMichele 54767 | 1337287 | 402569 | Dec 23, 2002 | Peter Coels 5359 | 5054502 | 1521561 | Dec 6, 2003 | Randy Sundquist 28433 | 7830457 | 2357207 | Dec 30, 2004 | Team Prime Rib 27653 | 9167433 | 2759677 | Jun 8, 2005 | Derek Gordon 4847 | 3321063 | 999744 | Oct 15, 2005 | Richard Hassler 19249 | 13018586 | 3918990 | Mar 26, 2007 | Konstantin Agafonov 33661 | 7031232 | 2116617 | Oct 17, 2007 | Sturle Sunde 10223 | 31172165 | 9383761 | Oct 31, 2016 | Szabolcs Péter
Table 2: The 12 mega-primes discovered by the Seventeen or Bust and PrimeGrid collaborations, successfully eliminating their respective $k$ values from the Sierpiński problem [cite: 31, 32].
Current Status: "Five or Bust"
As of the mid-2020s, decades of concerted computational effort have distilled the original Sierpiński problem down to exactly five remaining unproven multipliers [cite: 8, 35]. While the project name could accurately be updated to "Five or Bust," PrimeGrid retains the original moniker for historical continuity [cite: 29, 35].
To definitively prove that 78,557 is the smallest Sierpiński number, a prime must be found for each of the following $k$ values:
Remaining Candidates for the Sierpinski Problem k = 21181 k = 22699 k = 24737 k = 55459 k = 67607
Table 3: The five remaining odd multipliers below 78,557 [cite: 8, 10, 35].
Computational Infrastructure and Hardware Dynamics
The search continues under PrimeGrid utilizing a global network of hundreds of thousands of volunteers, supplying thousands of TeraFLOPS of processing power to test exceedingly large exponents [cite: 31]. The search space has long surpassed $n = 36420000$, venturing into algorithmic territory where any prime discovered will be well over 10 million decimal digits long [cite: 10, 30].
The underlying mathematics of the search relies on Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) algorithms to multiply ultra-large integers efficiently. Applications like LLR (Lucas-Lehmer-Riesel), PRST, and Genefer are heavily optimized for both CPU and GPU execution [cite: 16, 35, 36]. The workflow is strictly bifurcated into two phases: sieving and primality testing. Sieving acts as a highly efficient filter, removing candidate exponents that have small algebraic factors. However, the deeper the sieve goes, the slower the rate of candidate removal becomes, eventually hitting an "optimal depth" where sieving takes just as much computational time as running a full primality test [cite: 28, 37].
Because computing large $n$ values requires intense, uninterrupted CPU time, multithreading is frequently employed. A single task running on one CPU core can take upwards of two to four weeks on older machines, making the tuning of parameters like max cpus critical for participants [cite: 35]. Interestingly, deep hardware analysis indicates that hyperthreading (or SMT) frequently decreases overall throughput for LLR primality testing. This negative performance scaling occurs because FFT calculations rely heavily on cache continuity and memory bandwidth rather than instruction pipeline multiplexing, prompting project organizers to advise volunteers to disable hyperthreading for LLR tasks [cite: 35, 38].
PrimeGrid also conducts rigorous "double checking" of legacy data. Because Seventeen or Bust suffered data loss, PrimeGrid systematically retests specific ranges of $n$ (comparing mathematical residues) to ensure no primes were missed due to hardware calculation errors or incomplete validation [cite: 30, 39, 40]. Two of the original twelve primes (for $k = 4847$ and $k = 33661$) were discovered exclusively because volunteers were double-checking previously computed ranges, highlighting the necessity of cryptographic-level verification in these searches [cite: 29, 39].
Generalizations and Extended Number Theory Problems
The theoretical proofs and computational methodologies developed for the Sierpiński problem have laid the groundwork for an entire taxonomy of associated mathematical conjectures. By altering the parameters, constraints, or signs of the $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ sequence, number theorists have generated a suite of derivative problems.
The Prime Sierpiński Problem
In 1976, Nathan Mendelsohn proved that $k = 271129$ is a Sierpiński number, utilizing the covering set $\{3, 5, 7, 13, 17, 241\}$ [cite: 1, 2]. Because 271,129 is itself a prime number, this discovery initiated the Prime Sierpiński Problem: determining the smallest Sierpiński number that is also a prime [cite: 8, 22].
To establish 271,129 as the smallest prime Sierpiński number, all prime integers less than 271,129 must be tested. Currently, there are nine prime multipliers for which no prime of the form $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ has been found: 22699, 67607, 79309, 79817, 152267, 156511, 222113, 225931, and 237019 [cite: 8, 22]. Notably, the first two values (22,699 and 67,607) are less than 78,557, meaning they are shared candidates with the original Seventeen or Bust project [cite: 10, 28]. PrimeGrid operates the "Prime Sierpinski Problem" (PSP) subproject specifically to eliminate these remaining values [cite: 3, 8, 28].
The Extended Sierpiński Problem
Assuming Selfridge's conjecture holds and 78,557 is the absolute smallest Sierpiński number, and assuming Mendelsohn's 271,129 is the smallest prime Sierpiński number, a structural gap exists. The Extended Sierpiński Problem asks: Is 271,129 the second smallest Sierpiński number overall? [cite: 8, 22].
Answering this requires searching the interval $78557 < k < 271129$ for any composite Sierpiński numbers [cite: 8, 22]. Eliminating the candidates in this range requires finding a prime for each composite $k$. As of the most recent computational updates, 11 composite multipliers remain in this interval: 21181, 24737, 55459, 91549, 131179, 163187, 200749, 209611, 227723, 229673, and 238411 [cite: 22]. (Again, 21181, 24737, and 55459 are shared with the original Five or Bust list, demonstrating the interwoven nature of these conjectures [cite: 22].)
Riesel Numbers and Dual Compositeness
The algebraic inverse of the Sierpiński function is the sequence $k \cdot 2^n - 1$. An odd natural number $k$ for which this expression is composite for all positive integers $n$ is known as a Riesel number [cite: 13, 15]. In 1956—four years prior to Sierpiński's proof—the Swedish mathematician Hans Riesel proved the existence of such numbers and demonstrated that $k = 509203$ is a Riesel number [cite: 15, 41].
Like Sierpiński numbers, Riesel numbers rely heavily on covering systems. However, the required primes often differ significantly due to the $-1$ altering the cyclotomic properties and algebraic factorization geometry [cite: 13, 19]. Unlike the $+1$ form, which allows flexible use of small primes like 5 and 7, Riesel coverings often require more complex congruences to avoid overlapping failures [cite: 8]. The quest to prove 509,203 is the absolute smallest Riesel number continues through PrimeGrid's "The Riesel Problem" subproject [cite: 6, 11].
Brier Numbers: Simultaneously Sierpiński and Riesel
A profound synthesis of these two sequences was theorized by Eric Brier, who asked whether an integer could be simultaneously a Sierpiński number and a Riesel number [cite: 8, 23, 42]. Such an integer, now known as a Brier number, must satisfy the condition that both $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ and $k \cdot 2^n - 1$ are composite for all positive integers $n$ [cite: 8, 17, 43].
Because a Brier number must satisfy the congruences of two independent covering sets simultaneously, the values of $k$ escalate dramatically. The smallest known Brier number, discovered by Christophe Clavier in 2013, is a 41-digit behemoth: 3,316,923,598,096,294,713,661 [cite: 1, 19, 24]. By leveraging a theorem of D. Shiu on the distribution of primes in arithmetic progressions, it has been mathematically proven that for every positive integer $r$, there exist $r$ consecutive primes that are also Brier numbers, hinting at the deeply patterned, yet elusive, nature of prime distributions [cite: 23, 42]. A 2021 Dartmouth College study by Pomerance et al. further proved that infinitely many numbers are simultaneously Sierpiński, Riesel, and Carmichael numbers, creating an intersection of pseudo-primality and forced compositeness [cite: 1].
Base Extensions, Repdigits, and the First Kind
While the standard definition operates in Base 2, the mathematics generalizes readily to any integer Base $b \ge 2$, where one searches for $k$ such that $k \cdot b^n + 1$ is composite for all $n$ [cite: 25, 44]. PrimeGrid operates projects like the Sierpinski/Riesel Base 5 problem to eliminate candidates where $b=5$ [cite: 6, 44]. In 2025, PrimeGrid successfully eliminated $k = 67612$ in Base 5 by discovering a 3.8-million-digit prime (which took only 1 hour and 24 minutes of PRP testing on an AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX), bringing the remaining Base 5 candidates down to 27 [cite: 6, 36].
Furthermore, Sierpiński numbers of the first kind refer to primes of the form $k^k + 1$. Sierpiński himself proved that for $k^k + 1$ to be prime for any $k>1$, $k$ must take the highly restrictive form $2^{2^j}$, tying the sequence directly back to Fermat numbers [cite: 45, 46]. Mathematical investigations have also extended to detecting Sierpiński and Riesel numbers among restrictive integer subsets, such as Fibonacci sequences, Lucas numbers, and repdigits (numbers consisting solely of a single repeated digit in a given base) [cite: 15, 47].
Broader Implications and Conjecture Outlook
The quest to resolve the Sierpiński problem acts as a crucible for both pure mathematical theory and applied computer science. At the theoretical level, the existence of Sierpiński numbers directly links to Paul Erdős's combinatorial number theory. Erdős conjectured that for any Sierpiński number $k$, the smallest prime divisor of $k \cdot 2^n + 1$ must be bounded as $n$ approaches infinity [cite: 15, 27]. If this is proven true, it solidifies the hypothesis that all Sierpiński numbers are strictly the product of covering systems, ruling out any undiscovered algebraic anomalies that might cause infinite compositeness without a finite, periodic covering set [cite: 13, 27].
At the applied level, the search drives massive innovations in high-performance computing (HPC). The algorithms used by PrimeGrid to multiply integers spanning millions of digits—relying on discrete Fourier transforms and advanced memory bandwidth management—routinely push the physical boundaries of hardware stability [cite: 31, 35]. The massive prime numbers discovered in these searches are frequently utilized to stress-test modern CPU and GPU architectures, successfully identifying microscopic, silicon-level calculation errors before those processors are deployed in commercial, scientific, or cryptographic environments.
Conclusion
The Sierpiński problem stands as a towering testament to the enduring complexity of prime number distribution. What began in 1960 as a brilliant theoretical proof utilizing interlocking covering sets of prime congruences has evolved into one of the largest, most sustained distributed computing efforts in human history.
John Selfridge’s 1962 discovery of $k = 78557$ established the absolute baseline, and despite decades of aggressive computational searching by thousands of global volunteers, his conjecture that it is the smallest Sierpiński number remains flawlessly intact. The field has systematically stripped away candidates, transforming the original "Seventeen or Bust" initiative into the current "Five or Bust" reality.
As algorithmic efficiency improves and global computational power scales, the mathematical community steadily marches toward a definitive resolution of the five remaining candidates: 21181, 22699, 24737, 55459, and 67607. Whether a prime is eventually found for each, finally proving Selfridge right, or whether one of these five numbers stubbornly remains composite for all $n$, thereby rewriting number theory textbooks, the journey itself has fundamentally advanced our understanding of prime dynamics, modular coverings, and the very limits of computational mathematics.
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