Is Dickson's conjecture true?
4
56
110
2101
92%
chance

Dickson's conjecture states that for any finite set of tuples of integers (aᵢ, bᵢ) with the aᵢ all positive, there are infinitely many values of n such that aᵢn + bᵢ is prime for all i, unless there is a specific prime number p that always divides one of the linear forms aᵢn + bᵢ for any value of n.

Dickson's conjecture implies all the following conjectures:

/JosephNoonan/is-de-polignacs-conjecture-true

/JosephNoonan/is-the-first-hardylittlewood-conjec (at least according to OEIS wiki, though there's no citation for this, and it's not obvious how it follows)

/JosephNoonan/is-the-prime-patterns-conjecture-tr

/NcyRocks/are-there-infinitely-many-twin-prim

/JosephNoonan/are-there-infinitely-many-cousin-pr

/NcyRocks/are-there-infinitely-many-sexy-prim

/JosephNoonan/are-there-infinitely-many-prime-tri

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