Fermat's primality test

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Fermat's primality test is an algorithm. It is a recipe for computers. It can test if a given number p is probably prime. There is a flaw however: There are numbers that pass the test, and that are not prime.

[edit] Concept

Fermat's little theorem states that if p is prime and 1 \le a < p, then

a^{p-1} \equiv 1 \pmod{p}.

If we want to test if n is prime, then we can pick random a's in the interval and see if the equation above holds. If the equality does not hold for a value of a, then n is composite (not prime). If the equality does hold for many values of a, then we can say that n is probably prime, or a pseudoprime.

It may be in our tests that we do not pick any value for a such that the equality fails. Any a such that

a^{n-1} \equiv 1 \pmod{n}

when n is composite is known as a Fermat liar. If we do pick an a such that

a^{n-1} \not\equiv 1 \pmod{n}

then a is known as a Fermat witness for the compositeness of n.

pmod(n) is the modulo operation. Its result is what remains, if you divide p by n. As an example: 5 mod 3 \equiv 2

[edit] What the test is used for

The RSA algorithm for public-key encryption can be done in such a way that it uses this test. This is useful in cryptography