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More on Riemann Hypothesis 276

Anonymous Coward writes "The NYTimes has a little story on a recent conference at New York University's Courant Institute where mathematicians gathered to discuss potential attacks on the Riemann hypothesis. The Clay Mathematics Institute had announced an award of a million dollars for a proof (or refutation) of the Riemann hypothesis during the millenial celebrations. That million dollars won't be worth much if it takes as long as that Last Theorem by Fermat to solve. There were some interesting observations such as the statistical distribution of the zeros looked just like calculations on the energy levels of large atoms." We did a related story on hard math problems two years ago.
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More on Riemann Hypothesis

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  • by Torgo's Pizza ( 547926 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @10:45AM (#3807295) Homepage Journal
    We're already being searched at airports, now mathematicians can't carry a protractor or a compass without being looked as being suspicious. When will terrorists learn that attacking math problems never solves anything. Wait, maybe it does...
    • by capt.Hij ( 318203 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @12:01PM (#3807789) Homepage Journal
      The problem is that these mathematical terrorists form small cells (usually located near institutions of "higher education") which are extremely difficult to penetrate. It usually requires connections made early during college and 4-5 years after that. Some people have been known to take much longer.

      Even if you are able to get into a cell it can be extremely difficult to stay in and keep your sanity. Many people who do get in just sort of drift off from society and are all but lost. Those few that make it often end up working alone, late at night in the back of dimly lit coffee houses.

      There is simply no way to stop someone who is willing to make such sacrifices.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Once upon a time (1/t), pretty little Polly Nomial was strolling across a field of vectors when she came to the edge of a singularly large matrix.

      Now Polly was convergent and her mother had made it an absolute condition that she must never enter such an array without her brackets on. Polly, however, who had changed her variables that morning and was feeling particularly badly behaved, ignored this condition on the grounds that it was insufficient, and made her way in amongst the complex elements.

      Rows and columns enveloped her on all sides. Tangents approached her surface. She became tensor and tensor. Suddenly two branches of a hyperbola touched her at a single point. She oscillated violently, lost all sense of direction, and went completely divergent. As she reached a turning point she tripped over a square root that was protruding from the erf, and she plunged headlong down a steep gradient. When she was differentiated once more, she found herself, apparently alone, in a non-Euclidean space.

      She was being watched, however. That smooth operator, Curly Pi, was lurking inner product. As he numerically analyzed her, his eyes devoured her curvilinear coordinates, and a singular expression crossed his face. Was she still convergent, he wondered. He decided to integrate improperly at once.

      Hearing a common fraction behind her, Polly rotated and saw Curly approaching her with his power series expanding. She could see by his degenerate conic that he was up to no good.

      "What a symmetric little polynomial you are," he said. "I can see that your angles have lots of secs."

      "Oh sir," she protested, "keep away from me. I haven't got my brackets on."

      "Calm yourself, my dear", said our suave operator. "Your fears are purely imaginary."

      "I, i," she thought. "Perhaps he's homogeneous."

      "What order are you?" the brute demanded.

      "Seventeen," replied Polly.

      "I suppose you've never been operated on?"

      "Of course not," Polly cried indignantly. "I'm absolutely convergent."

      "Come, come," said Curly. "Let's go off to a decimal place, and I'll take you to the limit!"

      "Never!" gasped Polly.

      "Abscissa!" he swore, using the vilest oath he knew. His patience was gone. Coshing her over the head with a log until she was powerless, Curly removed her discontinuities. He stared at her significant places and began smoothing her points of inflection. Poor Polly. She felt his hand tending to her asymptotic limit. Her convergence would soon be gone forever.

      There was no mercy, for Curly was a heavyside operator. Curly's radius squared itself. Polly's loci quivered. He integrated by parts. He integrated by partial fractions. After he cofactored, he performed Runge-Kutta on her. The complex beast even went all the way around and did a contour integration. Curly went on operating until he satisfied her hypothesis, then he exponentiated and became completely orthogonal.

      When Polly got home that night her mother noticed that she was no longer piecewise continuous, but had been truncated in several places. As the months went by, Polly's denominator increased monotonically. Finally she went to l'Hospital and generated a small but pathological function which left little surds all over the place and drove Polly to deviation.

      The moral of the story is, "If you want to keep your expressions convergent, never allow them a single degree of freedom."

  • Eureka! (Score:4, Funny)

    by Ass-Gas-Istan ( 523702 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @10:48AM (#3807306)
    I have discovered a truly remarkable proof which this post is too small to contain.
  • by Mr Guy ( 547690 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @10:48AM (#3807311) Journal
    Can someone explain exactly what this is and what it means in very small words?

    My understanding of the article is that:

    A) You can't predict prime numbers.
    B) That guy predicted prime numbers.
    C) Alot of money goes to whoever proves how the hell he predicted prime numbers.
    Ca)If we know how he predicted them we can crack old codes and make new ones?
    • He wrote a function called the "zeta function." Any number, when fed into this equation, will yield a result somewhere on a plane. For some reason, primes always plot along one of the axes. No one can figure out why.
      • by NASAKnight ( 588155 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @10:56AM (#3807364) Homepage Journal
        Wrong. Primes do not always plot along one of the axes. Zeroes to the function are always (well, that's the hypothesis) of the form 1/2 + bi. This means they lie on a line parallel to the imaginary axis.
      • He wrote a function called the "zeta function." Any number, when fed into this equation, will yield a result somewhere on a plane. For some reason, primes always plot along one of the axes. No one can figure out why.

        How is this a Score:5 Informative when it is wrong? The reply [slashdot.org], however, is correct. Too bad I can't moderate today..
      • by Florian Weimer ( 88405 ) <fw@deneb.enyo.de> on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @12:00PM (#3807784) Homepage
        He wrote a function called the "zeta function."

        The function had already been discussed by Euler.

        For some reason, primes always plot along one of the axes. No one can figure out why.

        Actually, that's easy. Primes (at least over the integers) are real numbers, and the zeta function maps real numbers greater than one to real numbers, which is evident from the definition as a Dirichlet series.

        Quite a few proofs in analytical number theory rely on the fact that in certain areas on the right side of the line {z : Re z = 1/2} contain no zeroes of the zeta function. So far, mathematicians have tried to carefully choose these areas in order to get good results (so that you can still use them efficiently, but you can also prove that no zeroes lie in it). If we knew that no such zeroes exist at all (the Riemann Hypothesis), we could avoid all these rather technical details and theorems would improve considerably as well (for example, the error term in the Prime Number Theorem).
    • he didn't predict prime numbers, he predicted the distribution of prime numbers.
    • sort of avoiding your question (which you could answer using google) but ...

      with these sort of mathematical questions, a proof really means understanding the question. The question really is just so many words ("where are the zeroes on the critical line?") but the reason a proof is important is that it tells you why the question was worth asking in the first place.

      Phrasing the question in english just doesnt get the point across.... thats what makes mathematics so incredible. take the time to read up on it, even if you dont feel so confident with the maths, it is well worth it.

      • just so many words ("where are the zeroes on the critical line?")

        of course that should be "are the zeroes on the critical line".
        Preview, dammit, preview!

    • You can read about the Riemann Hypothesis [wolfram.com] and the Zeta Function [wolfram.com] at MathWorld [wolfram.com].

      However, for more details, you would have to look it up in a book on number theory or something like that.

    • Another great challenge would be to express the value of Pi absolutely using a mixed number, rather than a decimal. For a simpler challenge, check this out. [uncoveror.com]
      • Simple, really! Just take the limit as n goes to infinity of:

        first n digits of pi
        --------------------
        10 ^ (n-1)

        Next!

      • Perhaps you should be thinking in terms of "rational" and "irrational" numbers rather than ambiguous terms like "mixed number" and "decimal". Then you might realize how ludicrous it sounds to say: "Another great challenge would be to express the value of Pi absolutely using a rational number, rather than an irrational number." Given that the value of Pi is an irrational number, that statement doesn't even make sense!

        I am assuming basic knowledge of the difference between rational and irrational numbers however. Rational basically means "can be expressed as a ratio". Irrational is the opposite.

        Oh, and that Uncoveror puzzle is a rather tired old trick question that relies on the mind mixing up balances. $9 + $9 + $9 is $27 and the extra dollar for the maid is subtracted, not added, giving a total amount paid to the clerk of $26.
    • by markmoss ( 301064 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @11:59AM (#3807781)
      A) You can't predict prime numbers.
      B) That guy predicted prime numbers

      Riemann discovered a function that reasonably well matches the number of primes found within long intervals of numbers. It can't find primes per se, it just predicts how many you'll find between 'm' and 'n'. And it's no help for factoring a product of two primes, so it won't crack codes.

      Of course, winning the prize (by taking Riemann's work a few steps further) might happen to suggest a method for factoring a product of primes, but it's more likely it will be of interest only to those few mathematicians that can remember what Riemann's hypothesis was in the first place. (I used to know but no longer remember, and that d!@#d article didn't give an equation or otherwise say anything really useful.)
    • Almost...

      A) You can't predict prime numbers
      B) That guy came up with a formula that SEEMS to predict prime numbers
      C) A lot of money goes to whoever proves that the formula REALLY DOES predict prime numbers

      Just because a formula SEEMS to work for every number you try doesn't mean that it REALLy DOES work for all numbers. The classic example

      All numbers are less than 43 billion.

      I call this "The Rinker Hypothesis"

      Is it true? It seems to be..I tried 1, 2 & 3 and it worked. I tried every number up to one million and it worked. In fact, I tested the hypothesis for every number up to one billion and it was true for all those numbers. This example is rather trivial and silly, but it demonstrates the point: simply because a mathematical hypothesis (aka a conjecture) is true for every number you try doesn't mean that it's true for ALL NUMBERS.

      Riemann's hypothesis seems true for every number they try, but they haven't proved that it's true for ALL NUMBERS.
    • Well -- having been in this business myself, I'll try to explain the relevancy of this problem. In Fourier analysis, the problem is usually to take a look at data, apply a transform and look at the underlying harmonics of the data (this works best on sound or light because the harmonics correspond to actual physical properties such as "pitch" or "frequency"). For example such techniques can be used to clean up images by removing the "noise" type frequencies in the data. A similar technique can be applied to numeric entities such as prime numbers. Ideas such as this produce something called the Zeta function which can capture various statistical properties of prime numbers (statistical properties of the entire infinite series of prime numbers). The "zeros" of the Zeta function (I'll avoid explaining what I mean by this) capture some of the statistical properties of primes in the way Fourier transforms explain light and sound. The Riemann hypothesis comes down in essense to claiming that prime numbers never behave too statistically perverse (the equivalent in Fourier transform data of saying that the harmonics are not too skewed -- the "sound" never "gangs" up on certain frequency areas). Although the mathematics can seem a bit obscure to those outside the field, it is probably one of the more profound questions out there. As a comparison, Fermat's last theorem (when evaluated purely for its mathematical significance) is merely a curiousity and was proved as a minor consequence of proving more important theorems in elliptic curves, which themselves are only stepping stones towards another really large unproved mathematical question. For the record, the question is: "Are all elliptic curves modular?" -- which is way more obscure than the Riemann Hypothesis and I consider to be the number one potentially solvable mathematical question that has ever been posed. It is a really cool problem.
  • For a second there I thought that said 'Rainman Hypothesis.' Somethine to do with counting cards maybe?
  • Log in blues? (Score:1, Informative)

    by BoBaBrain ( 215786 )
    As ever with the NYT, log in with:

    User : nospamnospam
    Password : nospamnospam
    • for the love of christ, the times does not spam people! there is an obnoxious and incestuous ignorance around here that really has to stop.
  • Proofs delicate? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by micromoog ( 206608 )
    But mathematical proofs are extremely delicate structures that can vanish at the merest touch.

    Wha-wha? I was under the impression that proofs are rock-solid demonstrations of a particular fact given a set of well-defined mathematical laws . . .

    • by discstickers ( 547062 ) <.chris. .at. .discstickers.com.> on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @11:07AM (#3807437) Homepage
      When they are completed, yes they are rock-solid. But in development, one tiny, almost insignificant error can throw off the whole thing.

      Think about it in terms of spacecraft. A couple of vehicles were perfect and landed on Mars. One had a small defect, it wasn't complete (meters and miles were mixed up). It was lost.
      • I don't get your sig. What's so remarkable about that uptime report? I don't see it.
        • Obviously, he is a previous Windows 9x user, so uptimes of 32 minutes were impressive. In that light, 32 days seems like an eternity. Although, honestly, I don't see what the big deal is about uptime for non-server boxes. I have no problem turning off my computer at work every evening. It's just burning power needlessly. I set my BIOS to start up every morning before I come to work, so when I get here it's already booted. (Sorry, I know this is offtopic, but I'm an engineer, not a mathemetician, so I have only a fundamental grasp of what all these mathematicians are talking about).
    • Theorems are delicate.
      Theorys are rock solid.
  • "We did a related story on hard math problems two years ago."

    I know various people complain when Slashdot re-posts stories, and it's good to see you're taking note and warning us, but that's going a little too far back.

    Maran
  • Things have changed since my day. It used to be that anyone who was capable of a serious attempt on the Riemann hypothesis would get to work because the problem needed solving and the kudos would be immense. Any monetary reward would be incidental. I suppose a million dollars will attract mathematicians who are today working on other topics. Presumably the Clay Institute feels that Riemann has to compete hard against other avenues of research. Or maybe they are targetting all the rich quants who were just laid off On Wall Street.
    • Man, you must be old, because people have been offering rewards for proofs for hundreds of years.
      • True rewards have been around since the dawn of maths, but these have mostly been from rich sponsors paying what amounted to the living expenses of the successful mathematician.

        My days were in the 70s and I think the richest prizes were like the Booker prize, £20,000 ($30,000)Hardly the same league as a million green 'uns.

        That's not counting salaried positions which are sometimes awarded as prizes
    • Hardly a blip on the radar screen... now, if it were in the billions we could finally have a mathematician in the Forbes 400 ... that would be signficiant. A million dollars is puny; hardly worth the time. Hell, even Lotto winners get more money. Picking random numbers in a lotter must be more important.
    • Or maybe they are targetting all the rich quants who were just laid off On Wall Street.


      You'd think they would target people who are good at math.
  • by bearnol ( 259150 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @11:12AM (#3807468)
    http://www.bearnol.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Math/riema nn.htm
  • Full Circle (Score:2, Interesting)

    What's amazing is how the patterns of the prime tend to match the energy levels from the atoms that Freeman Dyson noted. Math has been used by physics to define the world. Now mayhaps physics will define math.
    • Physics as always *defined* maths, for some definition of *define* (define "define") :)
      Physics need to describe the world, so they define maths to do so... In this particular case of energy levels and prime numbers, again, maths will probably explain a physical observation, I don't see it being the other way around. The only thing so far that I know about that could potentialy make it the other way around, would be some consequence of Goedel's theorem leading mathematicians to start to accept "local truthes" (to name it somehow) based on physical observations rather than on proofs, on the ground that maybe the proof doesn't exist, yet the fact could still be true, and its usefulness makes it worth including in the new encyclopedia of "experimental truthes"... Well.. that's what I think anyway :)
  • From the article:

    There is no simple way to tell if a number is prime, and that is the basis for most modern encryption schemes. Solving the hypothesis could lead to new encryption schemes and possibly provide tools that would make existing schemes, which depend on the properties of prime numbers, more vulnerable.

    AFAIK, modern PK encryption depends on either the RSAP (RSA problem), related to the IFP (integer factorization problem), or the DHP (Diffie-Hellman problem), related to the DLP (discrete logarithm problem). (Then there are elliptic curves, but those aren't used much except in some proprietary systems; they haven't been studied as much and therefore aren't considered as trustworthy.)

    I fail to see how breakthroughs in prime distribution theory would affect either the IFP or the DLP, or lead to new cryptosystems. So, am I clueless, or has the NYT done it again?

    • It's the Times... (Score:5, Informative)

      by freeBill ( 3843 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @12:07PM (#3807822) Homepage

      ...and your description of the mathematical basis for modern encryption is essentially correct. One could argue that there is a relationship between finding out if a number is prime and determining its prime factors. But such a relationship has so far eluded mathematicians.

      The statement "there is no simple way to tell if a number is prime" is true only for a limited definition of "simple way." The impossibly complex ways of the past have been replaced with complex-but-definitely-possible techniques, which would definitely make encryption vulnerable if encryption depended on the properties of prime numbers. Which it doesn't. (As you correctly point out.)

      Another quote from the article (paraphrased by the submitter), is also erroneous unless something has changed:

      Two years ago, to celebrate the millennium, the Clay Mathematics Institute announced an award of a million dollars for a proof (or refutation) of the hypothesis.
      --"New York Times"

      I believe the Clay Mathematics Institute award specifically excludes refutation. (Presumably because someone could refute the hypothesis simply by stumbling onto a single counter-example: a zeta-function zero which does not lie near the complex axis. This would be the mathematical equivalent to hitting the lottery and might do little to advance mathematics.)

      • I believe the Clay Mathematics Institute award specifically excludes refutation. (Presumably because someone could refute the hypothesis simply by stumbling onto a single counter-example: a zeta-function zero which does not lie near the complex axis. This would be the mathematical equivalent to hitting the lottery and might do little to advance mathematics.)

        I would argue that it would do much to enhance mathematics, if for no other reason than by freeing up the time of all of the good mathematical minds who are trying to figure out the proof.

      • Re:It's the Times... (Score:2, Informative)

        by Ed6514 ( 576786 )
        "...I believe the Clay Mathematics Institute award specifically excludes refutation." That is partially correct. The paragraph from the rules concerning counter-examples at http://www.claymath.org/prizeproblems/rules.htm states: "In the case that a mathematician discovers a proposed counterexample to a prize problem, the SAB will consider this counterexample after publication and the same two-year waiting period as for a proposed solution will apply. If the counterexample shows that the original problem survives after reformulation or elimination of some special case, then the SAB may recommend that a small prize be awarded to the author. The money for this prize will not be taken from the Millennium Prize Problem fund, but from other CMI funds. In the case of the P versus NP problem, the SAB may recommend the award of the Millennium Prize for deciding the question in either direction." The "fine print" here is the phrase: "If the counterexample shows that the original problem survives..." If it turns out that the counter-example totally blows away the hypothesis, then it seems that the full prize could be awarded. The actual determination of the quality of the proof or counter-example comes from extensive peer review of the submitter's published work, so any submissions, postive or negative, will be carefully scrutinized (at least that's what the Clay Institute is counting on!). Cheers!
    • Primes is in ZPP, that means there is a polynomial-time probabilistic algorithm for determining if a number is prime or not.

      Note, that even though the algorithm is probabilisitic, its answer is guaranteed to be correct. The probabilitsitc aspect is that it might take a long time in increasingly improbable cases.

      Search Google for more info... [google.com]

      • Primes is in ZPP, that means there is a polynomial-time probabilistic algorithm for determining if a number is prime or not.

        Note, that even though the algorithm is probabilisitic, its answer is guaranteed to be correct. The probabilitsitc aspect is that it might take a long time in increasingly improbable cases.


        I believe this is true. To clarify: if the generalized Riemann hypothesis holds, then testing primality using a certain algorithm will always terminate in polynomial time. Otherwise we don't have this time bound. The Times article didn't get this quite right, but that's to be expected.
  • I'm still waiting for someone to prove this:
    Step One: Steal Underpants
    Step Two: ...
    Step Three: Profit.
    When they can prove that, THEN I'll be impressed. :)
  • by Anonymous Coward
    After I finish my Linux Xbox port, I'll solve the Riemann Hypothesis. That will give me:
    $200,000 + $1,000,000 = $1,200,000
    I'll be well on my way to my second million!
  • Here is a proof that has eluded many men throughout their life time.
    Keep in mind this proof looks much better if you can actually use the square root symbol

    The problem:

    Prove that women are all evil.

    (With written proof, men don't have to worry about women arguing this fact anymore ... just show them the paper. This will end debates that have been going on for centuries)


    The proof:

    Given that:
    • Time = money (we all know this)
    • Women = time * money (another well known fact)
    • Money = sqrt(evil) (after all, money is the root of all evil)


    Proceede with the proof:
    1. Women = money * money (substitution)
    2. Women = money^2 (restating #1)
    3. Women = ( sqrt(evil) )^2 (substitution)
    4. Women = evil
    5. Q.E.D.


    See what an undergrad in Mathematics, an undergrad in C.S., and a Master's in C.S. gets you .... the ability to prove what you already know to be true!! What a waste of time!!! And that time cost me money!! So I got screwed twice!!! (and not by women in this case) I suppose this proof would also apply to college as well as women (since college = time * money). In fact, I just proved another well known fact .... college = women!!! And since college = women, it follows that college = evil as well. Wow, I never proved this much good stuff while in school! Practical theory!!!!

    Seriously, I wish someone could prove that P=NP. I hated graduate Algorithms! This would have eliminated a portion of my least favorite topic in that course (NP and NP-completeness). If this world is not truely hell, someone will prove that and share it to help prevent the suffering of innocent C.S. graduate students.

    • Love of money is the root of evil. Introducing evil breaks the proof.
  • While I admit that it's certainly possible that Riemann's Hypothesis may, God willing, be proven or disproven, isn't it also possible that it cannot be either proven or disproven under the applicable mathematical system? Gödel's Theorem means that that's a possibility, doesn't it? Not everything has to necessarily be true or untrue...
    • by PenguiN42 ( 86863 ) <taylork@aluQUOTEm.mit.edu minus punct> on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @11:52AM (#3807735) Journal
      First off, not being able to prove or disprove something doesn't mean it's not true or untrue, just that one can't prove it either way. Incompleteness specficially means that there are true statements in the system that can't be proven or derived in the system. It doesn't mean that "not everything has to necessarily be true or untrue."

      Secondly, iirc, Gödel showed that sufficiently complex systems have to either be inconsistant or incomplete using a very specific paradox ... the equivalent of "this statement is unprovable" (if you prove it's true, you've contradicted yourself. if you can't prove it's true, then it's true, but you're not able to prove it so it's incomplete). The overwhelming majority of mathematics is complete and consistant, and there's no reason to expect it not to be and give up prematurely.

      Finally, who's being "hasty"? What exactly are you suggesting? That they give up the search for a proof because there's a tiny chance that it may be unprovable? Why doesn't the entire field of theoretical math just stop right now, then?
  • ZetaGrid (Score:5, Informative)

    by c.emmertfoster ( 577356 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @11:47AM (#3807703)

    Apparently there's a distributed computing project called ZetaGrid [hipilib.de] which has calculated the first 50 billion zeros out ... if you're bored of SETI@Home, this might be a nice change of pace.

    Riemann Hypothesis [wolfram.com]
    Riemann Zeta Function [wolfram.com]
    Also, there's some rather technical details on the subject, from Stephen Wolfram's (A New Kind of Science) pet site.

  • by Rocky ( 56404 ) on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @11:54AM (#3807745)
    ...that these proofs will not be solved using conventional methods, but they will eventually be solved using SMALL PROGRAMS with SIMPLE RULES. These rules can be run on a simple computer using my program, Mathematica. Easy!

    Either that, or you can solve them by buying REAL ESTATE with NO MONEY DOWN! or by placing SMALL ADS in NEWSPAPERS with your own 900 NUMBER!!!!!
  • by ImaLamer ( 260199 ) <john.lamar@gma[ ]com ['il.' in gap]> on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @12:00PM (#3807782) Homepage Journal
    "that God -- with whom he waged a very personal war -- would not let Hardy die with such glory."

    That has to be the funniest things I've read, today.

    Is it me or does it seem that all "hard" mathematicians are either at war with God or trying to "refute"/"prove"/divide/discover/humiliate him/her/it/Taco?
    • It's said that Hardy died a happy man, very happy that none of his pure math was ever used by applied mathematicians.

      He's said to have gloated over the fact that atleast for quite sometime into the future, applied mathematicians would leave the realm research done by pure mathematicians alone. :-)
  • ... on the Riemann Hypothesis:

    Riemann Hypothesis [wolfram.com]
  • harmony (Score:3, Interesting)

    by oliverthered ( 187439 ) <oliverthered@hotmail. c o m> on Tuesday July 02, 2002 @01:45PM (#3808651) Journal
    Well reading thought the article, they seem to miss? a few things.

    Of course primes have a generally log distribution, because every prime you find provides a factor later on down the line so the primes become more sparse.

    Then there's the atoms thing, sfaik shells/energy levels are basically harmonic and a harmonic is more-or-less the opposite of a prime.

    since harmonics and the increasing sparseness of primes could be taken as identical you're going to get the same distribution patterns out.

    here goes

    primes v harmonics

    2 is prime and a harmonic root
    3 is prime and a discord (root)
    4 is non prime, and the second octave of the first root
    5 is prime and a discord (root)
    6 is non prime, and cord of the first and second roots
    7 is prime and a discord (root)
    8 is non prime, and third octive of the first root
    9 is non prime, and first octave of the second root
    etc....

  • ANKOS to the rescue! (Score:2, Interesting)

    by gcooke ( 259897 )
    I'm only on chapter 4 of Wolfram's opus 'A New Kind of Science' [wolframscience.com] but reading about the Riemann Hypothesis just screams out connections with Wolfram's work. ANKOS is littered with these odd little diagrams [wolframscience.com] of cellular automata, many of which exhibit prime number relationships.

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