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Prove SG's theorem (Posted on 2016-07-12) Difficulty: 2 of 5
Prove that a4+4 is never prime for any a bigger than 1.

No Solution Yet Submitted by Ady TZIDON    
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Solution Factoring Solution | Comment 2 of 3 |
a^4+4 is a special case of a^4+4b^2, with b=1.  
Factoring a^4+4b^2 = (a^2+2ab+2b)*(a^2-2ab+2b).

Substitute b=1 to get (a^2+2a+2)*(a^2-2a+2).  The first term is greater than 1 for any a!=-1.  For the product to be prime one of the factors must equal 1.

For any integer a greater than 1 or less than -1, both terms are positive integers greater than 1, which makes the product composite.

This leaves a=-1, 0, 1 as potential prime generators If a=1 or -1 then a^4+4=5 (prime), and if a=0 then a^4+4=4 (composite).

Then the set of all integer values a which make a^4+4 prime is {-1,1}.

  Posted by Brian Smith on 2016-07-12 10:59:44
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