Sumbission of answer to CMI
Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP
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I am very interested in maths and believe to have solved one of the millenial problems. I can understand half of the problems and the other half mean nothing to me but I think I have solved the problem about distribution of primes among natural numbers (The Riemann Hypothesis). I have worked out a formula (which I'm not showing here for obvious reasons) but how will I have to present it to the CMI. Should I just give them the formula or explain why the formula is and why there is a link between prime numbers (which I haven't worked out yet).
prime-numbers
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up vote
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I am very interested in maths and believe to have solved one of the millenial problems. I can understand half of the problems and the other half mean nothing to me but I think I have solved the problem about distribution of primes among natural numbers (The Riemann Hypothesis). I have worked out a formula (which I'm not showing here for obvious reasons) but how will I have to present it to the CMI. Should I just give them the formula or explain why the formula is and why there is a link between prime numbers (which I haven't worked out yet).
prime-numbers
Which of the millennium problems would that be? The Riemann hypothesis seems to come closest to what you claim, and that also matches that you were not even able to understand the entirety of the problem. The likelyhood of your solution being even remotely correct is zero since you did not even understand the problem.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:19
Yes. Sorry. I must have got you confused. It is the Riemann hypothesis (which I understand fully). I meant I couldn't understand half of the questions. I'll edit my question.
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
You understand the Riemann hypothesis, but your solution involved having "worked out a formula"? A formula for what?
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
The Riemann hypothesis is not about the zeta functiong being "correct" in any meaningful sense.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:27
1
What? The link between the Rieman zeta function and the distribution of primes is very well known. The problem is proving certain properties of the zeroes of the zeta function in order to make conclusions about this distribution.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:54
 |Â
show 3 more comments
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
I am very interested in maths and believe to have solved one of the millenial problems. I can understand half of the problems and the other half mean nothing to me but I think I have solved the problem about distribution of primes among natural numbers (The Riemann Hypothesis). I have worked out a formula (which I'm not showing here for obvious reasons) but how will I have to present it to the CMI. Should I just give them the formula or explain why the formula is and why there is a link between prime numbers (which I haven't worked out yet).
prime-numbers
I am very interested in maths and believe to have solved one of the millenial problems. I can understand half of the problems and the other half mean nothing to me but I think I have solved the problem about distribution of primes among natural numbers (The Riemann Hypothesis). I have worked out a formula (which I'm not showing here for obvious reasons) but how will I have to present it to the CMI. Should I just give them the formula or explain why the formula is and why there is a link between prime numbers (which I haven't worked out yet).
prime-numbers
prime-numbers
edited Aug 30 at 8:25
asked Aug 30 at 8:12
William Pennanti
1113
1113
Which of the millennium problems would that be? The Riemann hypothesis seems to come closest to what you claim, and that also matches that you were not even able to understand the entirety of the problem. The likelyhood of your solution being even remotely correct is zero since you did not even understand the problem.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:19
Yes. Sorry. I must have got you confused. It is the Riemann hypothesis (which I understand fully). I meant I couldn't understand half of the questions. I'll edit my question.
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
You understand the Riemann hypothesis, but your solution involved having "worked out a formula"? A formula for what?
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
The Riemann hypothesis is not about the zeta functiong being "correct" in any meaningful sense.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:27
1
What? The link between the Rieman zeta function and the distribution of primes is very well known. The problem is proving certain properties of the zeroes of the zeta function in order to make conclusions about this distribution.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:54
 |Â
show 3 more comments
Which of the millennium problems would that be? The Riemann hypothesis seems to come closest to what you claim, and that also matches that you were not even able to understand the entirety of the problem. The likelyhood of your solution being even remotely correct is zero since you did not even understand the problem.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:19
Yes. Sorry. I must have got you confused. It is the Riemann hypothesis (which I understand fully). I meant I couldn't understand half of the questions. I'll edit my question.
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
You understand the Riemann hypothesis, but your solution involved having "worked out a formula"? A formula for what?
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
The Riemann hypothesis is not about the zeta functiong being "correct" in any meaningful sense.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:27
1
What? The link between the Rieman zeta function and the distribution of primes is very well known. The problem is proving certain properties of the zeroes of the zeta function in order to make conclusions about this distribution.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:54
Which of the millennium problems would that be? The Riemann hypothesis seems to come closest to what you claim, and that also matches that you were not even able to understand the entirety of the problem. The likelyhood of your solution being even remotely correct is zero since you did not even understand the problem.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:19
Which of the millennium problems would that be? The Riemann hypothesis seems to come closest to what you claim, and that also matches that you were not even able to understand the entirety of the problem. The likelyhood of your solution being even remotely correct is zero since you did not even understand the problem.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:19
Yes. Sorry. I must have got you confused. It is the Riemann hypothesis (which I understand fully). I meant I couldn't understand half of the questions. I'll edit my question.
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:23
Yes. Sorry. I must have got you confused. It is the Riemann hypothesis (which I understand fully). I meant I couldn't understand half of the questions. I'll edit my question.
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
1
You understand the Riemann hypothesis, but your solution involved having "worked out a formula"? A formula for what?
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:23
You understand the Riemann hypothesis, but your solution involved having "worked out a formula"? A formula for what?
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
1
The Riemann hypothesis is not about the zeta functiong being "correct" in any meaningful sense.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:27
The Riemann hypothesis is not about the zeta functiong being "correct" in any meaningful sense.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:27
1
1
What? The link between the Rieman zeta function and the distribution of primes is very well known. The problem is proving certain properties of the zeroes of the zeta function in order to make conclusions about this distribution.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:54
What? The link between the Rieman zeta function and the distribution of primes is very well known. The problem is proving certain properties of the zeroes of the zeta function in order to make conclusions about this distribution.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:54
 |Â
show 3 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
Even though I highly doubt that you actually solved one of the millenium problems, I will still give you an answer. The CMI has certain rules for the millenium prizes. All rules are listed here.
Most important to you will be this part:
Before consideration, a proposed solution must be published in a
refereed mathematics publication of worldwide repute (or such other
form as the SAB shall determine qualifies), and it must also have
general acceptance in the mathematics community two years after.
Hence, you pick your favorite high quality journal, hand in your proof, wait until it is refereed and accepted, wait for two years and the one million dollars are yours. I wish you best of luck!
What is a millenium question... I haven't heard about it?
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:25
It's a list of six (originally seven) problems, each worth one million dollars issued by the Clay Mathematics Institute if you solve one. The seventh problem has been solved by Grigori Perelman in 2003. You can find the whole list here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Prize_Problems
â YukiJ
Aug 30 at 8:28
In 2000 the clay mathematics institute set seven "apparently unsolvable" questions, offering $1 million for anyone who could solve one. Since then, only one has been solved
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:30
Thanks for the information.
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:35
@YukiJ thanks for the answer
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:40
 |Â
show 2 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
Even though I highly doubt that you actually solved one of the millenium problems, I will still give you an answer. The CMI has certain rules for the millenium prizes. All rules are listed here.
Most important to you will be this part:
Before consideration, a proposed solution must be published in a
refereed mathematics publication of worldwide repute (or such other
form as the SAB shall determine qualifies), and it must also have
general acceptance in the mathematics community two years after.
Hence, you pick your favorite high quality journal, hand in your proof, wait until it is refereed and accepted, wait for two years and the one million dollars are yours. I wish you best of luck!
What is a millenium question... I haven't heard about it?
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:25
It's a list of six (originally seven) problems, each worth one million dollars issued by the Clay Mathematics Institute if you solve one. The seventh problem has been solved by Grigori Perelman in 2003. You can find the whole list here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Prize_Problems
â YukiJ
Aug 30 at 8:28
In 2000 the clay mathematics institute set seven "apparently unsolvable" questions, offering $1 million for anyone who could solve one. Since then, only one has been solved
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:30
Thanks for the information.
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:35
@YukiJ thanks for the answer
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:40
 |Â
show 2 more comments
up vote
3
down vote
Even though I highly doubt that you actually solved one of the millenium problems, I will still give you an answer. The CMI has certain rules for the millenium prizes. All rules are listed here.
Most important to you will be this part:
Before consideration, a proposed solution must be published in a
refereed mathematics publication of worldwide repute (or such other
form as the SAB shall determine qualifies), and it must also have
general acceptance in the mathematics community two years after.
Hence, you pick your favorite high quality journal, hand in your proof, wait until it is refereed and accepted, wait for two years and the one million dollars are yours. I wish you best of luck!
What is a millenium question... I haven't heard about it?
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:25
It's a list of six (originally seven) problems, each worth one million dollars issued by the Clay Mathematics Institute if you solve one. The seventh problem has been solved by Grigori Perelman in 2003. You can find the whole list here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Prize_Problems
â YukiJ
Aug 30 at 8:28
In 2000 the clay mathematics institute set seven "apparently unsolvable" questions, offering $1 million for anyone who could solve one. Since then, only one has been solved
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:30
Thanks for the information.
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:35
@YukiJ thanks for the answer
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:40
 |Â
show 2 more comments
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
Even though I highly doubt that you actually solved one of the millenium problems, I will still give you an answer. The CMI has certain rules for the millenium prizes. All rules are listed here.
Most important to you will be this part:
Before consideration, a proposed solution must be published in a
refereed mathematics publication of worldwide repute (or such other
form as the SAB shall determine qualifies), and it must also have
general acceptance in the mathematics community two years after.
Hence, you pick your favorite high quality journal, hand in your proof, wait until it is refereed and accepted, wait for two years and the one million dollars are yours. I wish you best of luck!
Even though I highly doubt that you actually solved one of the millenium problems, I will still give you an answer. The CMI has certain rules for the millenium prizes. All rules are listed here.
Most important to you will be this part:
Before consideration, a proposed solution must be published in a
refereed mathematics publication of worldwide repute (or such other
form as the SAB shall determine qualifies), and it must also have
general acceptance in the mathematics community two years after.
Hence, you pick your favorite high quality journal, hand in your proof, wait until it is refereed and accepted, wait for two years and the one million dollars are yours. I wish you best of luck!
answered Aug 30 at 8:23
YukiJ
1,6762624
1,6762624
What is a millenium question... I haven't heard about it?
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:25
It's a list of six (originally seven) problems, each worth one million dollars issued by the Clay Mathematics Institute if you solve one. The seventh problem has been solved by Grigori Perelman in 2003. You can find the whole list here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Prize_Problems
â YukiJ
Aug 30 at 8:28
In 2000 the clay mathematics institute set seven "apparently unsolvable" questions, offering $1 million for anyone who could solve one. Since then, only one has been solved
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:30
Thanks for the information.
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:35
@YukiJ thanks for the answer
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:40
 |Â
show 2 more comments
What is a millenium question... I haven't heard about it?
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:25
It's a list of six (originally seven) problems, each worth one million dollars issued by the Clay Mathematics Institute if you solve one. The seventh problem has been solved by Grigori Perelman in 2003. You can find the whole list here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Prize_Problems
â YukiJ
Aug 30 at 8:28
In 2000 the clay mathematics institute set seven "apparently unsolvable" questions, offering $1 million for anyone who could solve one. Since then, only one has been solved
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:30
Thanks for the information.
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:35
@YukiJ thanks for the answer
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:40
What is a millenium question... I haven't heard about it?
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:25
What is a millenium question... I haven't heard about it?
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:25
It's a list of six (originally seven) problems, each worth one million dollars issued by the Clay Mathematics Institute if you solve one. The seventh problem has been solved by Grigori Perelman in 2003. You can find the whole list here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Prize_Problems
â YukiJ
Aug 30 at 8:28
It's a list of six (originally seven) problems, each worth one million dollars issued by the Clay Mathematics Institute if you solve one. The seventh problem has been solved by Grigori Perelman in 2003. You can find the whole list here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Prize_Problems
â YukiJ
Aug 30 at 8:28
In 2000 the clay mathematics institute set seven "apparently unsolvable" questions, offering $1 million for anyone who could solve one. Since then, only one has been solved
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:30
In 2000 the clay mathematics institute set seven "apparently unsolvable" questions, offering $1 million for anyone who could solve one. Since then, only one has been solved
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:30
Thanks for the information.
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:35
Thanks for the information.
â Abhinav
Aug 30 at 8:35
@YukiJ thanks for the answer
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:40
@YukiJ thanks for the answer
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:40
 |Â
show 2 more comments
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Which of the millennium problems would that be? The Riemann hypothesis seems to come closest to what you claim, and that also matches that you were not even able to understand the entirety of the problem. The likelyhood of your solution being even remotely correct is zero since you did not even understand the problem.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:19
Yes. Sorry. I must have got you confused. It is the Riemann hypothesis (which I understand fully). I meant I couldn't understand half of the questions. I'll edit my question.
â William Pennanti
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
You understand the Riemann hypothesis, but your solution involved having "worked out a formula"? A formula for what?
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:23
1
The Riemann hypothesis is not about the zeta functiong being "correct" in any meaningful sense.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:27
1
What? The link between the Rieman zeta function and the distribution of primes is very well known. The problem is proving certain properties of the zeroes of the zeta function in order to make conclusions about this distribution.
â Tobias Kildetoft
Aug 30 at 8:54