
mathworld.wolfram.com/PrimeNumber.html
Preview meta tags from the mathworld.wolfram.com website.
Linked Hostnames
16- 104 links tomathworld.wolfram.com
- 35 links towww.amazon.com
- 8 links tooeis.org
- 5 links towww.wolfram.com
- 4 links towww.wolframalpha.com
- 3 links toprimes.utm.edu
- 2 links toreference.wolfram.com
- 2 links towww.inwap.com
Thumbnail

Search Engine Appearance
Prime Number -- from Wolfram MathWorld
A prime number (or prime integer, often simply called a "prime" for short) is a positive integer p>1 that has no positive integer divisors other than 1 and p itself. More concisely, a prime number p is a positive integer having exactly one positive divisor other than 1, meaning it is a number that cannot be factored. For example, the only divisors of 13 are 1 and 13, making 13 a prime number, while the number 24 has divisors 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, and 24 (corresponding to the...
Bing
Prime Number -- from Wolfram MathWorld
A prime number (or prime integer, often simply called a "prime" for short) is a positive integer p>1 that has no positive integer divisors other than 1 and p itself. More concisely, a prime number p is a positive integer having exactly one positive divisor other than 1, meaning it is a number that cannot be factored. For example, the only divisors of 13 are 1 and 13, making 13 a prime number, while the number 24 has divisors 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, and 24 (corresponding to the...
DuckDuckGo
Prime Number -- from Wolfram MathWorld
A prime number (or prime integer, often simply called a "prime" for short) is a positive integer p>1 that has no positive integer divisors other than 1 and p itself. More concisely, a prime number p is a positive integer having exactly one positive divisor other than 1, meaning it is a number that cannot be factored. For example, the only divisors of 13 are 1 and 13, making 13 a prime number, while the number 24 has divisors 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, and 24 (corresponding to the...
General Meta Tags
57- titlePrime Number -- from Wolfram MathWorld
- DC.TitlePrime Number
- DC.CreatorWeisstein, Eric W.
- DC.DescriptionA prime number (or prime integer, often simply called a "prime" for short) is a positive integer p>1 that has no positive integer divisors other than 1 and p itself. More concisely, a prime number p is a positive integer having exactly one positive divisor other than 1, meaning it is a number that cannot be factored. For example, the only divisors of 13 are 1 and 13, making 13 a prime number, while the number 24 has divisors 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, and 24 (corresponding to the...
- descriptionA prime number (or prime integer, often simply called a "prime" for short) is a positive integer p>1 that has no positive integer divisors other than 1 and p itself. More concisely, a prime number p is a positive integer having exactly one positive divisor other than 1, meaning it is a number that cannot be factored. For example, the only divisors of 13 are 1 and 13, making 13 a prime number, while the number 24 has divisors 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, and 24 (corresponding to the...
Open Graph Meta Tags
5- og:imagehttps://mathworld.wolfram.com/images/socialmedia/share/ogimage_PrimeNumber.png
- og:urlhttps://mathworld.wolfram.com/PrimeNumber.html
- og:typewebsite
- og:titlePrime Number -- from Wolfram MathWorld
- og:descriptionA prime number (or prime integer, often simply called a "prime" for short) is a positive integer p>1 that has no positive integer divisors other than 1 and p itself. More concisely, a prime number p is a positive integer having exactly one positive divisor other than 1, meaning it is a number that cannot be factored. For example, the only divisors of 13 are 1 and 13, making 13 a prime number, while the number 24 has divisors 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, and 24 (corresponding to the...
Twitter Meta Tags
5- twitter:cardsummary_large_image
- twitter:site@WolframResearch
- twitter:titlePrime Number -- from Wolfram MathWorld
- twitter:descriptionA prime number (or prime integer, often simply called a "prime" for short) is a positive integer p>1 that has no positive integer divisors other than 1 and p itself. More concisely, a prime number p is a positive integer having exactly one positive divisor other than 1, meaning it is a number that cannot be factored. For example, the only divisors of 13 are 1 and 13, making 13 a prime number, while the number 24 has divisors 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, and 24 (corresponding to the...
- twitter:image:srchttps://mathworld.wolfram.com/images/socialmedia/share/ogimage_PrimeNumber.png
Link Tags
4- canonicalhttps://mathworld.wolfram.com/PrimeNumber.html
- preload//www.wolframcdn.com/fonts/source-sans-pro/1.0/global.css
- stylesheet/css/styles.css
- stylesheet/common/js/c2c/1.0/WolframC2CGui.css.en
Links
173- http://functions.wolfram.com/NumberTheoryFunctions/Prime
- http://mathworld.wolfram.com/news/2006-09-11/mersenne-44
- http://oeis.org/A000040
- http://oeis.org/A006510
- http://oeis.org/A006988