Prime Obsession tells the life story of the mid-19th-century German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, who declared
the prime number problem utterly solvable and then died before completing his proof.
Not exact matches
With 10 goals in 12 appearances this term, he is about to reach his
prime at the age of 26 and would solve the
problems of anyone a
number of sides including Manchester United and Chelsea.
But life at
Number 10 is not all about crisis management as we find out about the intricacies of the
prime pinisters» domestic arrangements including late - night whiskies, the delicate
problem of balancing a cup of tea and a cream bun whilst explaining the poll tax - and even making sure the PM had a proper meal in the evening.
A decline in the City's quality of life is her overarching theme, with subway delays, public urination, crippling traffic and increasing
numbers of homeless people on the street
prime examples she offers of
problems caused, or at least not adequately addressed, by Mayor de Blasio.
Zhang, for his part, has already moved on to «another important, unsolved
problem in
number theory» related to the Goldbach conjecture, which holds that every even
number is the sum of two
primes.
Extending that approach can identify
primes well beyond 100, of course, but the method is far too slow and unwieldy to solve theoretical
problems, like the twin
prime conjecture, which can run into truly enormous
numbers.
Like many
problems in
number theory, the twin
prime conjecture appealed to him because the idea could be stated so simply, even if the solution was anything but.
Working on math alone and in total obscurity ever since he received his Ph.D. at Purdue University in 1991, Zhang had solved a
problem in
number theory known as the twin
primes conjecture, which had confounded leading experts for millennia.
Why
prime numbers clump the way they do is one of the most maddening
problems in mathematics — and thanks to an unlikely hero we're starting to crack it
We also like... Books The Music of the
Primes: Searching to Solve the Greatest Mystery in Mathematics Marcus du Sautoy, HarperCollins, $ 24.95
Prime Obsession: Bernhard Riemann and the Greatest Unsolved Problem in Mathematics John Derbyshire, Joseph Henry Press, $ 27.95 In 2000 the Clay Mathematics Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, offered $ 1 million to anyone who could crack an enduring conundrum: devising an equation to predict how many prime numbers occur within any given range of inte
Prime Obsession: Bernhard Riemann and the Greatest Unsolved
Problem in Mathematics John Derbyshire, Joseph Henry Press, $ 27.95 In 2000 the Clay Mathematics Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, offered $ 1 million to anyone who could crack an enduring conundrum: devising an equation to predict how many
prime numbers occur within any given range of inte
prime numbers occur within any given range of integers.
A group of maths enthusiasts pooled their computer power to discover a new
prime number, edging closer to a solution to the decades - old Sierpinski
problem
Zhang, a mathematician at the University of New Hampshire, stunned the mathematical world in May when he reported a major step toward solving one of the oldest outstanding
problems in
number theory, called the twin
prime conjecture (SN: 10/19/13, p. 38).
«There are going to be a
number of different ways to go after this
problem,» Obama said during a press conference in Ottawa with Canadian
Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
Furthermore, should quantum computers ever become commonplace, everything that's currently secure could be compromised: such computers can consider many solutions to a
problem at once and could quickly factor the
prime numbers whose inscrutability lie at the root of modern encryption.
Often referred to as the holy grail of unsolved
problems, it implies that while
prime numbers display unpredictable patterns, there is an underlying orderliness determined by the zeros of the Riemann zeta function.
It's special for another reason: the discovery brings us one step closer to solving the 50 - year - old Sierpinski
problem, which seeks the smallest
number for which the expression k × 2n + 1 is not
prime, for any n.
Miscellaneous Math Songs Action Fraction — Hap Palmer Adding and Subtracting Decimals — Jim Thompson Alligator Fractions (Teaching the Relative Values of Fractions)-- Jennifer Fixman Bar Graph Dance — Science Maniacs Check Your Work — Professor Larry Lesser Counting by 1, 2, 5 and 10 — Jennifer Fixman Cause and Effect: If... Then «Cowboy Logic» — It All Adds Up A Fraction is Part of a Whole — Jennifer Fixman Fraction Rock — Joe Crone Fractions (1/2, 1/3 and 1/4)-- Kathleen Wiley The Funky Fractions Rap — Earth Tone Productions Learning the «Greater Than» and «Less Than» Signs — Jennifer Fixman The Metric Song — Kathleen Carroll Multiplying Decimals — Jim Thompson
Numbers On My Mind — Ken Whiteley Place Value — Learning Math by Song
Prime Numbers — Kathleen Wiley The
Prime Numbers Song — Tim Pacific Range Dog (Median, Mode, Mean and Range)-- Jim Thompson Round it Off — Mr. R's Songs That Teach Slip to the Side (Rounding
Numbers)-- Joe Crone Smell My Feet (The Time Song)-- Tim Pacific Solving Word
Problems — Learning Math by Song Try Again — Ken Whiteley What Place?
Solid
numbers, then, and in - game the
Prime performed very well, providing fast and accurate movement with no discernible acceleration
problems or hiccups.
You will find many high school math elements such as word
problems, percentages, ratios, averages, estimates, rounding, decimals, fractions,
prime numbers, scientific notation, absolute values, square roots and pre-algebra functions.
I remember always enjoying the process of factoring whole
numbers down to
prime factors in order to find common denominators for fraction
problems (weird I know, but true).