The abc conjecture and non-Wieferich primes in arithmetic progressions (Q1946705): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 14:45, 16 December 2024

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The abc conjecture and non-Wieferich primes in arithmetic progressions
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    The abc conjecture and non-Wieferich primes in arithmetic progressions (English)
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    15 April 2013
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    If a prime \(p\) satisfies the congruence \(2^{p-1} \equiv \pmod{p^2}\), then it is called a Wieferich prime and if it satisfies the congruence \(a^{p-1} \equiv \pmod{p^2}\), then it is called a Wieferich prime for base \(a\). As was noted by the authors it can be shown by elementary tools that under the \textbf{abc conjecture} there are infinitely many non-Wieferich primes. In this paper the authors show that under the abc~conjecture the number of non-Wieferich primes is \(\ll \frac{\log x}{\log\log x}\).
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    Wieferich primes
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    arithmetic progressions
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    abc conjecture
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