In mathematics, a congruence is an equivalence relation on the integers. The following sections list important or interesting prime-related congruences.

Table of congruences characterizing special primes

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  special case of Fermat's little theorem, satisfied by all odd prime numbers
  solutions are called Wieferich primes (smallest example: 1093)
  satisfied by all prime numbers
  solutions are called Wall–Sun–Sun primes (no examples known)
  by Wolstenholme's theorem satisfied by all prime numbers greater than 3
  solutions are called Wolstenholme primes (smallest example: 16843)
  by Wilson's theorem a natural number n is prime if and only if it satisfies this congruence
  solutions are called Wilson primes (smallest example: 5)
  solutions are the twin primes
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There are other prime-related congruences that provide necessary and sufficient conditions on the primality of certain subsequences of the natural numbers. Many of these alternate statements characterizing primality are related to Wilson's theorem, or are restatements of this classical result given in terms of other special variants of generalized factorial functions. For instance, new variants of Wilson's theorem stated in terms of the hyperfactorials, subfactorials, and superfactorials are given in.[1]

Variants of Wilson's theorem

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For integers  , we have the following form of Wilson's theorem:

 

If   is odd, we have that

 

Clement's theorem concerning the twin primes

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Clement's congruence-based theorem characterizes the twin primes pairs of the form   through the following conditions:

 

P. A. Clement's original 1949 paper [2] provides a proof of this interesting elementary number theoretic criteria for twin primality based on Wilson's theorem. Another characterization given in Lin and Zhipeng's article provides that

 

Characterizations of prime tuples and clusters

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The prime pairs of the form   for some   include the special cases of the cousin primes (when  ) and the sexy primes (when  ). We have elementary congruence-based characterizations of the primality of such pairs, proved for instance in the article.[3] Examples of congruences characterizing these prime pairs include

 

and the alternate characterization when   is odd such that   given by

 

Still other congruence-based characterizations of the primality of triples, and more general prime clusters (or prime tuples) exist and are typically proved starting from Wilson's theorem.[4]).

References

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  1. ^ Aebi, Christian; Cairns, Grant (May 2015). "Generalizations of Wilson's Theorem for Double-, Hyper-, Sub- and Superfactorials". The American Mathematical Monthly. 122 (5): 433–443. doi:10.4169/amer.math.monthly.122.5.433. JSTOR 10.4169/amer.math.monthly.122.5.433. S2CID 207521192.
  2. ^ Clement, P. A. (1949). "Congruences for sets of primes". Amer. Math. Monthly. 56 (1): 23–25. doi:10.2307/2305816. JSTOR 2305816.
  3. ^ C. Lin and L. Zhipeng (2005). "On Wilson's theorem and Polignac conjecture". Math. Medley. 6. arXiv:math/0408018. Bibcode:2004math......8018C.
  4. ^ See, for example, Section 3.3 in Schmidt, Maxie D. (2018). "New congruences and finite difference equations for generalized factorial functions". Integers. 18 A78. arXiv:1701.04741. MR 3862591.