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In mathematics, a Woodall number or Riesel number is a natural number of the form n · 2n − 1 (written Wn). Woodall numbers were first studied by A. J. C. Cunningham and H. J. Woodall in 1917, inspired by James Cullen's earlier study of the similarly-defined Cullen numbers. The first few Woodall numbers are 1, 7, 23, 63, 159, 383, 895, ... (sequence in OEIS).
Woodall numbers that are also prime numbers are called Woodall primes; the first few exponents n for which the corresponding Woodall numbers Wn are prime are 2, 3, 6, 30, 75, 81, 115, 123, 249, 362, 384, ... (sequence in OEIS); the Woodall primes themselves begin with 7, 23, 383, 32212254719, ... (sequence in OEIS).
Like Cullen numbers, Woodall numbers have many divisibility properties. For example, if p is a prime number, then p divides
if the Jacobi symbol
is +1 and
if the Jacobi symbol
is −1. It is conjectured that almost all Woodall numbers are composite; a proof has been submitted by