Thursday, August 23, 2012

Prime Numbers



Prime Numbers:

A prime number is one that has only two factors namely 1 and itself and a composite number has factors besides 1 and itself.


A natural number greater than 1 that has no divisor between 1 and itself is said to be prime, hence called a prime number or simply a prime. Every natural number greater than 1 has at least the two distinct divisors 1 and itself; a prime has no others.








The number 2 is a prime, there being no candidate divisors between 1 and itself; from it, all even numbers thereafter are non-prime, i.e. 50% of all subsequent numbers. The numbers 3, 5, and 7 are all prime, meaning that, of the first six such subsequent numbers, precisely half are prime, half non-prime. However, of any subsequent six consecutive numbers, at least one of the odd values must be divisible by 3; including the three even numbers this means that at least 66% must be non-prime. So the trend goes; as we look further afield, with an accumulating collection of primes to be divisors, the density of primes declines progressively. But, no matter how far up the numbers we travel, we never exhaust the primes, nor is there any known point above which all further primes are spaced by more than the minimal value of 2 .

Hope you like the above example of Prime Numbers.Please leave your comments, if you have any doubts.

No comments:

Post a Comment