Chen prime
English
    
    Etymology
    
Named after Chinese mathematician Chen Jingrun, who proved in 1966 that there are infinitely many such numbers.
Noun
    
Chen prime (plural Chen primes)
- (number theory) Any prime number p such that p+2 is either a semiprime or another prime.
- 2013, Laura Hemphill, Buying In, Haughton Mifflin Harcourt (New Harvest), page 278,
- She tried counting Chen primes. 2, 3, 5... 7, 11... 13... 17... She couldn't concentrate.
 
- 2014, Christian Bessiere, et al., Reasoning about Constraint Methods, Duc-Nghia Pham, Seong-Bae Park (editors), PRICAI 2014: Trends in Artificial Intelligence, Springer, page 804,
- There are even magic square of primes, like this one containing Chen primes discovered by Rudolf Ondrejka: […]
 
- 2014, Rajesh Kumar Thakur, The Power of Mathematical Numbers, Ocean Books, page 155,
- A prime number p is called a Chen prime if p + 2 is either a prime or a product of two primes. […] There are infinitely [many] Chen primes and the first ten are: 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23 and 29.
 
 
- 2013, Laura Hemphill, Buying In, Haughton Mifflin Harcourt (New Harvest), page 278,
See also
    
- cousin prime
- prime gap
- prime pair
- sexy prime
Further reading
    
- Chen Prime on Wolfram MathWorld
 Prime gap on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Prime gap on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 Prime pair on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Prime pair on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 Twin prime on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Twin prime on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 Twin prime conjecture on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Twin prime conjecture on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 Polignac's conjecture on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Polignac's conjecture on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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