Fermat's little theorem

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Fermat's little theorem (not to be confused with Fermat's last theorem) states that if p is a prime number, then for any integer a,

a^p \equiv a \pmod{p}\,\!

This means that if you start with a number, initialised to 1, and repeatedly multiply, for a total of p multiplications, that number by a, and then subtract a from the resulting number, the final result is divisible by p (see modular arithmetic).

A variant of this theorem is stated in the following form: if p is a prime and a is an integer coprime to p, then

a^{p-1} \equiv 1 \pmod{p}\,\!

In other words, if p is a prime number and a is any integer that does not have p as a factor, then a raised to the p-1 power will leave a remainder of 1 when divided by p.

Fermat's little theorem is the basis for the Fermat primality test.

Examples of the theorem include:

  • 43 − 4 = 60 is divisible by 3.
  • 72 − 7 = 42 is divisible by 2.
  • (−3)7 − (−3) = −(2 184) is divisible by 7.
  • 297 − 2 = 158 456 325 028 528 675 187 087 900 670 is divisible by 97.

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Pierre de Fermat first stated the theorem in a letter dated October 18, 1640 to his friend and confidant Frénicle de Bessy as the following [1]: p divides a^{p-1}-1\, whenever p is prime and a is coprime to p.

As usual, Fermat did not prove his assertion, only stating:

Et cette proposition est généralement vraie en toutes progressions et en tous nombres premiers; de quoi je vous envoierois la démonstration, si je n'appréhendois d'être trop long.
(And this proposition is generally true for all progressions and for all prime numbers; the proof of which I would send to you, if I were not afraid to be too long.)

Euler first published a proof in 1736 in a paper entitled "Theorematum Quorundam ad Numeros Primos Spectantium Demonstratio", but Leibniz left virtually the same proof in an unpublished manuscript from sometime before 1683.

The term "Fermat's Little Theorem" was first used in 1913 in Zahlentheorie by Kurt Hensel:

Für jede endliche Gruppe besteht nun ein Fundamentalsatz, welcher der kleine Fermatsche Satz genannt zu werden pflegt, weil ein ganz spezieller Teil desselben zuerst von Fermat bewiesen worden ist."
(There is a fundamental theorem holding in every finite group, usually called Fermat's little Theorem because Fermat was the first to have proved a very special part of it.)

It was first used in English in an article by Irving Kaplansky, "Lucas's Tests for Mersenne Numbers," American Mathematical Monthly, 52 (Apr., 1945).

Chinese mathematicians independently made the related hypothesis (sometimes called the Chinese Hypothesis) that p is a prime if and only if 2^p \equiv 2 \pmod{p}\,. It is true that if p is prime, then 2^p \equiv 2 \pmod{p}\, (this is a special case of Fermat's little theorem). However, the converse (if \,2^p \equiv 2 \pmod{p} then p is prime) is false, and therefore the hypothesis as a whole, is false (e.g. 341=11×31 is a pseudoprime, see below).

It is widely stated that the Chinese hypothesis was developed about 2000 years before Fermat's work in the 1600s. Despite the fact that the hypothesis is partially incorrect, it is noteworthy that it may have been known to ancient mathematicians. Some, however, claim that the widely propagated belief that the hypothesis was around so early sprouted from a misunderstanding, and that it was actually developed in 1872. For more on this, see (Ribenboim, 1995).

Fermat explained his theorem without a proof. The first one who gave a proof was Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in a manuscript without a date, where he wrote also that he knew a proof before 1683.

See Proofs of Fermat's little theorem.

A slight generalization of the theorem, which immediately follows from it, is as follows: if p is prime and m and n are positive integers with m\equiv n\pmod{p-1}\,, then a^m\equiv a^n\pmod{p} \quad\forall a\in\mathbb{Z}. In this form, the theorem is used to justify the RSA public key encryption method.

Fermat's little theorem is generalized by Euler's theorem: for any modulus n and any integer a coprime to n, we have

a^{\varphi (n)} \equiv 1 \pmod{n}

where φ(n) denotes Euler's φ function counting the integers between 1 and n that are coprime to n. This is indeed a generalization, because if n = p is a prime number, then φ(p) = p − 1.

This can be further generalized to Carmichael's theorem.

The theorem has a nice generalization also in finite fields.

If a and p are coprime numbers such that \,a^{p-1} - 1 is divisible by p, then p need not be prime. If it is not, then p is called a pseudoprime to base a. F. Sarrus in 1820 found 341 = 11×31 as one of the first pseudoprimes, to base 2.

A number p that is a pseudoprime to base a for every number a coprime to p is called a Carmichael number (e.g. 561 is a Carmichael number).

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