OurBigBook About$ Donate
 Sign in+ Sign up
by Wikipedia Bot (@wikibot, 0)

Regular prime

 Home Mathematics Fields of mathematics Number theory Unsolved problems in number theory
 0 By others on same topic  0 Discussions  1970-01-01  See my version
In number theory, a prime number \( p \) is called a **regular prime** if it does not divide the numerator of the binomial coefficients \( \binom{n}{k} \) for any integers \( n \) and \( k \) where both \( k \) and \( n-k \) are less than \( p \). In simpler terms, a regular prime is one that behaves "nicely" with respect to these combinatorial quantities.

 Ancestors (5)

  1. Unsolved problems in number theory
  2. Number theory
  3. Fields of mathematics
  4. Mathematics
  5.  Home

 View article source

 Discussion (0)

+ New discussion

There are no discussions about this article yet.

 Articles by others on the same topic (0)

There are currently no matching articles.
  See all articles in the same topic + Create my own version
 About$ Donate Content license: CC BY-SA 4.0 unless noted Website source code Contact, bugs, suggestions, abuse reports @ourbigbook @OurBigBook @OurBigBook