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The New Book of Prime Number Records: Mathematical Discoveries in Computing & Medicine | Perfect for Researchers, Cryptographers & Medical Data Analysts
The New Book of Prime Number Records: Mathematical Discoveries in Computing & Medicine | Perfect for Researchers, Cryptographers & Medical Data Analysts

The New Book of Prime Number Records: Mathematical Discoveries in Computing & Medicine | Perfect for Researchers, Cryptographers & Medical Data Analysts

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Description

This text originated as a lecture delivered November 20, 1984, at Queen's University, in the undergraduate colloquium senes. In another colloquium lecture, my colleague Morris Orzech, who had consulted the latest edition of the Guinness Book of Records, reminded me very gently that the most "innumerate" people of the world are of a certain trible in Mato Grosso, Brazil. They do not even have a word to express the number "two" or the concept of plurality. "Yes, Morris, I'm from Brazil, but my book will contain numbers different from ·one.''' He added that the most boring 800-page book is by two Japanese mathematicians (whom I'll not name) and consists of about 16 million decimal digits of the number Te. "I assure you, Morris, that in spite of the beauty of the appar­ ent randomness of the decimal digits of Te, I'll be sure that my text will include also some words." And then I proceeded putting together the magic combina­ tion of words and numbers, which became The Book of Prime Number Records. If you have seen it, only extreme curiosity could impel you to have this one in your hands. The New Book of Prime Number Records differs little from its predecessor in the general planning. But it contains new sections and updated records.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Ribenboim wrote a book called the Little Book of Big Primes which came out in 1991 and was written for general audiences. This book and the revised edition of the Little book are of personal interest to me because my father's work in 1939 gets cited a lot with respect to the Carmichael numbers. This motivates me to read through the book in more detail that some of the other reviewers. But as Cube Boy mentioned this is not just about records. It is fundamentally an advanced book on number theory for mathematicians with many of the same topics as are in the Little Book but at a hogher level with more mathematical detail and with new results that came about between 1991 and 1996. I have also reviewed the second edition of the Little Book and I comment more about the prime records and my father's contributions there. Also the second edition in 2004 has new records as the computer is able to verify that larger and larger numbers are prime.