In mathematics, an Eisenstein prime is an Eisenstein integer
that is irreducible (or equivalently prime) in the ring-theoretic sense: its only Eisenstein divisors are the units (±1, ±ω, ±ω2), a + bω itself and its associates.
The associates (unit multiples) and the complex conjugate of any Eisenstein prime are also prime.
An Eisenstein integer z = a + bω is an Eisenstein prime if and only if either of the following (mutually exclusive) conditions hold:
- z is equal to the product of a unit and a natural prime of the form 3n − 1,
- |z|2 = a2 − ab + b2 is a natural prime (necessarily congruent to 0 or 1 modulo 3).
It follows that the absolute value squared of every Eisenstein prime is a natural prime or the square of a natural prime.
The first few Eisenstein primes that equal a natural prime 3n − 1 are:
- 2, 5, 11, 17, 23, 29, 41, 47, 53, 59, 71, 83, 89, 101 (sequence A003627 in OEIS).
Natural primes that are congruent to 0 or 1 modulo 3 are not Eisenstein primes: they admit nontrivial factorizations in Z. For example:
- 3 = −(1 + 2ω)2
- 7 = (3 + ω)(2 − ω).
Some non-real Eisenstein primes are
- 2 + ω, 3 + ω, 4 + ω, 5 + 2ω, 6 + ω, 7 + ω, 7 + 3ω.
Up to conjugacy and unit multiples, the primes listed above, together with 2 and 5, are all the Eisenstein primes of absolute value not exceeding 7.
As of March 2010, the largest known (real) Eisenstein prime is 19249 × 213018586 + 1, which is the tenth largest known prime, discovered by Konstantin Agafonov. All larger known primes are Mersenne primes, discovered by GIMPS. Real Eisenstein primes are congruent to 2 mod 3, and Mersenne primes (except the smallest, 3) are congruent to 1 mod 3; thus no Mersenne prime is an Eisenstein prime.
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—Herman Melville (18191891)