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Another Breakthrough in Prime Number Theory

Battal Boy writes "From aimath.org: Dan Goldston and his Turkish colleague Yalcin Cem Yildirim have smashed all previous records on the size of small gaps between prime numbers. This work is a major step toward the centuries-old problem of showing that there are infinitely many 'twin primes': prime numbers which differ by 2, such as 11 and 13, 17 and 19, 29 and 31,...I am especially proud of this achievement as Yalcin is a close friend of mine from way back! You may also want to check out the Mercury News Article and Dan Goldston's home page where you can see a photo of Dan's back being slowly but surely broken by two of his children ..." Finding patterns in primes seems to be all the rage.

2 of 241 comments (clear)

  1. Appreciate the beauty of mathematics, for petesake by neuro.slug · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's a small joke that goes around in the academic world

    Biologists like to think they are chemists. Chemists like to think they are physicists. Physicists like to think they are mathematicians. And mathematicians like to think they are god.

    Seriously, think of how much of what we learn boils down to our understanding of numbers, systems, and patterns within them. Mathematics, whether you like it or not, is really a beautiful and elegant subject that very few truly understand.

  2. Re:Interesting? by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Conversely, having knowledge of more prime numbers also means that new encryption tech can be based on those new theories and enhance privacy. It's kinda a double edge sword...