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Young Primes & Twin Primes

🔗David Beardsley <xouoxno@virtulink.com>

1/29/1999 7:20:37 AM

Mr. Pagano writez:

>I know a portion of the primes are what Hennix calls twin Young
>primes --or something to that effect like for example-17&19 ,
>29 &31 [examples not necessarily in the piece].

Young Primes: p x 2n-1
where p = any prime and n = any positive interger.

Example: 2 x 32 -1=17 or 2 x (3x2) -1 = 17

Twin Primes are pairs of primes seperated by 2.

29, 31
59, 61
227,229

and when you think of these as ratios, give a bit of thought to sum &
difference tones.

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* xouoxno@virtulink.com
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🔗David Beardsley <xouoxno@xxxxxxxxx.xxxx>

1/29/1999 8:08:43 PM

I wrote:

>Young Primes: p x 2n-1
>where p = any prime and n = any positive interger.
>
>Example: 2 x 32 -1=17 or 2 x (3x2) -1 = 17

The first example doesn't show as 3 square in some email readers.

And that's why I included the second example. Wow.

Next: how many angels do fit on the head of a pin! ;)

--
* D a v i d B e a r d s l e y
* xouoxno@virtulink.com
*
* J u x t a p o s i t i o n E z i n e
* M E L A v i r t u a l d r e a m house monitor
*
* http://www.virtulink.com/immp/lookhere.htm