Explicit bounds for primality testing and related problems
Abstract
Many number-theoretic algorithms rely on a result of Ankeny, which states that if the Extended Riemann Hypothesis (ERH) is true, any nontrivial multiplicative subgroup of the integers modulo m omits a number that is O({log ^2}m) . This has been generalized by Lagarias, Montgomery, and Odlyzko to give a similar bound for the least prime ideal that does not split completely in an abelian extension of number fields. This paper gives a different proof of this theorem, in which explicit constants are supplied. The bounds imply that if the ERH holds, a composite number m has a witness for its compositeness (in the sense of Miller or Solovay-Strassen) that is at most 2{log ^2}m .
- Publication:
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Mathematics of Computation
- Pub Date:
- July 1990
- DOI:
- 10.1090/S0025-5718-1990-1023756-8
- Bibcode:
- 1990MaCom..55..355B
- Keywords:
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- Primality;
- Extended Riemann Hypothesis