Coprime Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In mathematics, the integers a and b are said to be coprime or relatively prime iff they have no common factor other than 1 and -1, or equivalently, if their greatest common divisor is 1.For example, 6 and 35 are coprime, but 6 and 27 are not because they are both divisible by 3. The number 1 is coprime to every integer; 0 is coprime only to 1 and −1.
A fast way to determine whether two numbers are coprime is given by the Euclidean algorithm.
The numbers a and b are coprime if and only if there exist integers
x and y such that ax + by = 1 (see Bézout's identity). Equivalently, b has a multiplicative inverse modulo a: there exists an integer y such that by ≡ 1 (mod a). In fancy language: a and b are coprime if and only if b yields a unit in the ring Za of integers modulo a.
As a consequence, if a and b are coprime and br ≡ bs (mod a), then r ≡ s (mod a) [because we may "divide by b" when working modulo a]. Furthermore, if a and b1 are coprime, and a and b2 are coprime, then a and b1b2 are also coprime [because the product of units is a unit].
If a and b are coprime and a divides a product bc, then a divides c.
The two integers '\'a and b are coprime if and only if the point with coordinates (a, b) in an Cartesian coordinate system is "visible" from the origin (0,0), in the sense that there is no point with integer coordinates between the origin and (a, b'').
The probability that two randomly chosen integers are coprime is 6/π2 (see pi).
Two natural numbers a and b are coprime if and only if the numbers 2a − 1 and 2b − 1 are coprime.
Two ideals A and B in the commutative ring R are called coprime if A + B = R. This generalizes Bézout's identity: with this definition, two principal ideals (a) and (b) in the ring of integers Z are coprime if and only if a and b are coprime.
If the ideals A and B of R are coprime, then AB = A∩B; furthermore, if C is a third ideal such that A contains BC, then A contains C. The Chinese Remainder Theorem is an important statement about coprime ideals.Properties
Generalization
