Revision 110668274 of "Wolstenholme prime" on enwikiIn [[mathematics]], a '''Wolstenholme prime''' is a certain kind of [[prime number]]. A prime ''p'' is called a Wolstenholme prime [[iff]] the following condition holds:
:<math>{{2p-1}\choose{p-1}} \equiv 1 \pmod{p^4}</math>
Wolstenholme primes are named after [[mathematician]] [[Joseph Wolstenholme]], who proved [[Wolstenholme's theorem]], the equivalent statement for ''p''<sup>3</sup> in [[1862]], following [[Charles Babbage]] who showed the equivalent for ''p''<sup>2</sup> in [[1819]].
The only known Wolstenholme primes so far are 16843 and 2124679 {{OEIS|id=A088164}}; any other Wolstenholme prime must be greater than 10<sup>9</sup>. This data is consistent with the heuristic that the residue modulo ''p''<sup>4</sup> is a pseudo-random multiple of ''p''<sup>3</sup>. This heuristic predicts that the number of Wolstenholme primes less than ''N'' is roughly ''ln ln N''.
== See also ==
* [[Wieferich prime]]
* [[Wilson prime]]
* [[Wall-Sun-Sun prime]]
== External links ==
* [http://primes.utm.edu/glossary/page.php?sort=Wolstenholme The Prime Glossary: Wolstenholme prime]
* [http://www.loria.fr/~zimmerma/records/Wieferich.status Status of the search for Wolstenholme primes]
[[Category:Prime numbers]]
[[Category:Factorial and binomial topics]]
[[de:Wolstenholme-Primzahl]]
[[es:NĂºmero de Wolstenholme]]
[[fr:Nombre de Wolstenholme]]All content in the above text box is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license Version 4 and was originally sourced from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=110668274.
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