The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search

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The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search, or GIMPS, is a collaborative project of volunteers, who use Prime 95 and MPrime, special open source software that can be downloaded from the Internet for free, in order to search for Mersenne prime numbers. The project was founded and the prime testing software was written by George Woltman. Scott Kurowski wrote the PrimeNet server that supports the research to demonstrate Entropia distributed computing software, a company he founded in 1997.

This project has been rather successful: it has found a total of 6 Mersenne primes, each of which was the largest known prime at the time of discovery. The largest known prime as of March 2004, is 220,996,011-1. This prime was discovered on 17th November 2003 by Michael Shafer, a GIMPS participant from Michigan, United States of America.

As of March 2004, GIMPS has a sustained throughput of approximately 14 Teraflops.

Technically the GIMPS software is not open source, since it has a restriction which most open source/free software groups find unacceptable - users must abide by the prize distribution terms. This restriction will become meaningless when the EFF prizes are claimed.

Table of contents
1 Mersenne primes found
2 See also

Mersenne primes found

Here is a list of all Mersenne primes discovered by GIMPS participants:

See also

External links