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(7·10200-43)/9 =
(7)1993<200>
= 991073183 · 3937154377208831195317050869489643571199<40> · [19932756512603613805537617547909718330804698132888310510455011242343011729605214247504057026096081092532311130097139778827231495420334733940846765405069<152>] (Dmitry Domanov / GMP-ECM 6.2.3 B1=43000000, sigma=1296127361 for P40 / May 19, 2009) SUBMIT/RESERVE

Status

Expression:(7·10200-43)/9
Composite Factor:199327565126036138055376175479097183308046981328883105104550
112423430117296052142475040570260960810925323111300971397788
27231495420334733940846765405069
(152-digit)
Status:Not factored. Not reserved. You can submit its factors or reserve it for submitting in the future.

How to factor it

ECM, P-1, P+1

Look for prime factors by GMP-ECM first. Refer to the section "Efforts by ECM". Not only ECM but also P-1/P+1 may be helpful.

SNFS

Use GGNFS and/or Msieve if GMP-ECM cannot find a factor. The SNFS difficulty of this composite number is 200.85-digit and the GNFS difficulty is 151.30-digit. SNFS must be faster than GNFS. It will take about 21 CPU-days to factor this composite number on 64-bit Opteron-2600MHz.

  1. Put factMsieve.pl to which $GGNFS_BIN_PATH and $NUM_CPUS were modified properly in the working directory 77773_200.
  2. Put the following polynomial file 77773_200.poly in there too.
  3. And then, run "perl factMsieve.pl 77773_200".
77773_200.poly *1
n: 19932756512603613805537617547909718330804698132888310510455011242343011729605214247504057026096081092532311130097139778827231495420334733940846765405069
m: 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000
deg: 5
c5: 7
c0: -43
skew: 1.44
type: snfs
lss: 1
rlim: 15600000
alim: 15600000
lpbr: 29
lpba: 29
mfbr: 56
mfba: 56
rlambda: 2.6
alambda: 2.6

*1 These parameters were not fully adjusted. The approximate expressions which were used for making the parameters are: deg=expt<=105?4:expt<=210?5:6 or expt<=144?4:6; d=log10(c[deg])+deg*log10(m)[digits]; time=10^(d/30-4)[hours]; skew=|c0/c[deg]|^(1/deg); rlim=round(7*10^(d/60+3)); lpbr=floor(d/25+21); mfbr=floor(d/8+31); rlambda=floor(d/25+18)/10;

See also


Efforts by ECM

The efforts by ECM to find small factors of this 152-digit composite number so far are as follows. According to the reports, unknown prime factors of this composite number are probably 40-digit or more. Please report your efforts by ECM. (Anonymous reports are not acceptable)

LevelB1Reported runs
Total / Required runs
(Required runs for lower level)
Name 
403e60 / 0  
4511e6600Dmitry DomanovMay 18, 2009
600 / 3076  
/ 2476
5043e6200Dmitry DomanovMay 18, 2009
200Dmitry DomanovMay 19, 2009
400 / 7419 (1106)  
/ 7019 (706)  
5511e70 / 17589 (2912)  
/ 17589 (2912)  
6026e70 / 41961 (7566)  
/ 41961 (7566)  
Command line to find prime factors up to about 45-digit
echo 19932756512603613805537617547909718330804698132888310510455011242343011729605214247504057026096081092532311130097139778827231495420334733940846765405069 | ecm -n -c 2476 11e6
Command line to find prime factors up to about 50-digit
echo 19932756512603613805537617547909718330804698132888310510455011242343011729605214247504057026096081092532311130097139778827231495420334733940846765405069 | ecm -n -c 7019 43e6
Command line to find prime factors up to about 55-digit
echo 19932756512603613805537617547909718330804698132888310510455011242343011729605214247504057026096081092532311130097139778827231495420334733940846765405069 | ecm -n -c 17589 11e7
Command line to find prime factors up to about 60-digit
echo 19932756512603613805537617547909718330804698132888310510455011242343011729605214247504057026096081092532311130097139778827231495420334733940846765405069 | ecm -n -c 41961 26e7

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