THREE-DIGIT PRIMES
- Share via
“All three-digit primes have zero as the middle digit” (Book Review, Dec. 11)? You should get a deluge of mail on this one. Start with 113, 127, 131. . . . Of 143 three-digit primes, 15 have a zero in the middle: about the expected number. If this mistake is in Bernard O’Keefe’s book (“Trapdoor”) rather than in Jack Miles’ review, I would not believe any mathematics the author uses.
GEORGE W. ABBOTT JR.
HAWTHORNE
Editor’s note: The sentence should have read: “All three-digit primes with a zero have zero as the middle digit,” and Bernard O’Keefe does not make the same mistake. The relevant passage in “Trapdoor” reads:
“ ‘You’ve got it,’ replied Kane. ‘The two primes she transmitted to the Israelis had zeros in them. I’m convinced now that she assembled her large prime numbers from small ones. One- and two-digit primes have no zeros. In three-digit numbers the zeros would have to be in the middle. There are only fifteen of them, which she could memorize. How brilliant! She built up a fifty-digit series from only fifteen small numbers. This will cut hours out of the search. I’ll get on the programmers right away’ ” (Page 279).
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.