Block #228,726

TWNLength 9★☆☆☆☆

Bi-Twin Chain · Discovered 10/26/2013, 5:04:03 PM · Difficulty 9.9380 · 6,562,268 confirmations

TWN
Bi-Twin Chain

Interleaved pairs of primes that differ by 2, forming twin prime pairs at each level.

Block Header
Block Hash
708bd57d4ff231284f9db174984df15df30d0c9f655f70a25ea3c30abe35c385

Height

#228,726

Difficulty

9.938017

Transactions

10

Size

2.26 KB

Version

2

Bits

09f021e2

Nonce

33,466

Timestamp

10/26/2013, 5:04:03 PM

Confirmations

6,562,268

Merkle Root

b61de774f3050e855af4bf2d0aa8daa58b6184768414681269a30555a3bb8bc9
Prime Chain Origin

This is the prime chain origin stored in the block header. It is a composite number (not prime itself) — it equals the first prime in the chain multiplied by a primorial. The origin anchors the entire chain to this specific block.

1.779 × 10⁹⁹(100-digit number)
17790044401784158321…70507771029939671999
Discovered Prime Numbers
Lower: 2^k × origin − 1 | Upper: 2^k × origin + 1

These are the actual prime numbers discovered by this block, computed using the verified Primecoin formula. Each number has been independently confirmed to pass the Fermat primality test. Use the FactorDB links to verify any number independently.

Level 0 — Twin Prime Pair (origin ± 1)
origin − 1
1.779 × 10⁹⁹(100-digit number)
17790044401784158321…70507771029939671999
Verify on FactorDB ↗Wolfram Alpha ↗
origin + 1
1.779 × 10⁹⁹(100-digit number)
17790044401784158321…70507771029939672001
Verify on FactorDB ↗Wolfram Alpha ↗
Difference: origin + 1 − origin − 1 = 2 (twin primes ✓)
Level 1 — Twin Prime Pair (2^1 × origin ± 1)
2^1 × origin − 1
3.558 × 10⁹⁹(100-digit number)
35580088803568316642…41015542059879343999
Verify on FactorDB ↗Wolfram Alpha ↗
2^1 × origin + 1
3.558 × 10⁹⁹(100-digit number)
35580088803568316642…41015542059879344001
Verify on FactorDB ↗Wolfram Alpha ↗
Difference: 2^1 × origin + 1 − 2^1 × origin − 1 = 2 (twin primes ✓)
Level 2 — Twin Prime Pair (2^2 × origin ± 1)
2^2 × origin − 1
7.116 × 10⁹⁹(100-digit number)
71160177607136633285…82031084119758687999
Verify on FactorDB ↗Wolfram Alpha ↗
2^2 × origin + 1
7.116 × 10⁹⁹(100-digit number)
71160177607136633285…82031084119758688001
Verify on FactorDB ↗Wolfram Alpha ↗
Difference: 2^2 × origin + 1 − 2^2 × origin − 1 = 2 (twin primes ✓)
Level 3 — Twin Prime Pair (2^3 × origin ± 1)
2^3 × origin − 1
1.423 × 10¹⁰⁰(101-digit number)
14232035521427326657…64062168239517375999
Verify on FactorDB ↗Wolfram Alpha ↗
2^3 × origin + 1
1.423 × 10¹⁰⁰(101-digit number)
14232035521427326657…64062168239517376001
Verify on FactorDB ↗Wolfram Alpha ↗
Difference: 2^3 × origin + 1 − 2^3 × origin − 1 = 2 (twin primes ✓)
Level 4 — Twin Prime Pair (2^4 × origin ± 1)
2^4 × origin − 1
2.846 × 10¹⁰⁰(101-digit number)
28464071042854653314…28124336479034751999
Verify on FactorDB ↗Wolfram Alpha ↗

What this block proved

The miner who found this block proved the existence of 9 consecutive prime numbers forming a Bi-Twin Chain. The prime chain origin — the large number shown above — anchors the chain and is divisible by a primorial (the product of small primes), cryptographically tying these prime numbers to this specific block.

★☆☆☆☆
Rarity
CommonChain length 9

Found in most blocks. The baseline for Primecoin's proof-of-work.

How Primecoin's Proof-of-Work Constructs These Primes

Primecoin stores a value called the prime chain origin in each block. The miner found a large integer such that when divided by a primorial (the product of small primes: 2 × 3 × 5 × 7 × …), the result is the first prime in the chain. The origin is deliberately divisible by this primorial — that divisibility is part of the proof.

Prime Chain Origin = First Prime × Primorial (2·3·5·7·11·…)
Source: Primecoin prime.cpp — CheckPrimeProofOfWork()

This is why the origin has many small prime factors — those factors are the primorial divisor. The chain then extends from the first prime using the TWN formula:

TWN: twin pairs (p, p+2) where p = origin/primorial − 1 and p+2 = origin/primorial + 1
Circulating Supply:57,571,966 XPM·at block #6,790,993 · updates every 60s