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Science News April 24, 2004 Ivars Peterson |
Progressive Primes In one step toward elucidating certain primal mysteries, two mathematicians have now apparently proved that the population of primes contains an infinite collection of arithmetic progressions. |
Science News June 2, 2001 Ivars Peterson |
Prime Twins Although most mathematicians believe that there are infinitely many twin primes, no one has yet proved this conjecture to be true. Indeed, the twin prime conjecture is considered one of the major unsolved problems in number theory... |
Science News August 6, 2005 Ivars Peterson |
Playing with Ruth-Aaron Pairs Mathematicians have taken the home run records of Hank Aaron and Babe Ruth and made the fascinating discovery that the numbers have more in common than just baseball. |
Science News October 11, 2003 Ivars Peterson |
Goldbach Computations Goldbach's conjecture that every even number larger than 2 is the sum of two prime numbers remains unproven, but recent research may provide some insight. |
Science News June 22, 2002 Ivars Peterson |
Conquering Catalan's Conjecture Preda Mihailescu of the University of Paderborn in Germany finally may have the key to a venerable problem known as Catalan's conjecture, which concerns the powers of whole numbers. |
Science News March 20, 2004 Ivars Peterson |
Deriving the Structure of Numbers The study of prime numbers has long been a central part of number theory, a field traditionally pursued for its own sake and for the mathematical beauty of its results. |
Science News December 2, 2000 Ivars Peterson |
Zeroing In on Catalan's Conjecture Preda Mihailescu of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich has proved a theorem that is likely to lead to a solution of Catalan's conjecture, a venerable problem involving relationships among whole numbers... |
Science News August 19, 2000 Ivars Peterson |
Goldbach's Prime Pairs Evenly divisible only by themselves and one, primes are a rich source of speculative ideas that mathematicians often find simple to state but difficult to prove. The Goldbach conjecture is a prime example of such a conundrum. |
Science News August 28, 2004 Ivars Peterson |
More Progressive Primes In July, Markus Frind, Paul Jobling, and Paul Underwood announced that they had discovered the first sequence consisting of 23 prime numbers in arithmetic progression. This surpasses the previous record of 22 primes in arithmetic progression, set in 1993. |
Science News May 4, 2002 Ivars Peterson |
Prime Spirals There is truly not only mystery but also beauty in the distribution of prime numbers... |
Science News January 18, 2003 Ivars Peterson |
A Perfect Collaboration Together, Euclid of Alexandria (c325-c265 BC) and Leonard Euler (1707-1783), born in Switzerland and at various times resident in St. Petersburg and Berlin, collaborated on proving an interesting result in number theory -- without the benefit of e-mail or time travel. |
Science News August 27, 2005 Ivars Peterson |
Primes, Palindromes, and Pyramids Many questions about palidromic prime pyramids remain open. Is there a better way than exhaustive search for finding the tallest pyramids with fixed step sizes? Can you prove that fixed step size pyramids are finite? |
Science News January 14, 2006 Ivars Peterson |
Team Mersenne A Central Missouri State University computer identified the 43rd Mersenne prime, setting the record for the largest known prime number. This behemoth, 2 30402457 - 1, runs to a whopping 9,152,052 decimal digits. |
Science News January 11, 2003 Ivars Peterson |
A Remarkable Dearth of Primes The pursuit of prime numbers -- integers evenly divisible only by themselves and 1 -- can lead to all sorts of curious results and unexpected patterns. In some instances, you may even encounter a mysterious absence of primes. |
Science News June 5, 2004 Ivars Peterson |
Priming Upward The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS) continues to unearth new Mersenne primes. |
Science News July 29, 2006 Ivars Peterson |
Names for Numbers Recreational mathematics offers a vast playing field for amateur and professional mathematicians alike. Named numbers, such as Smiths, have all sorts of intriguing properties. |
Science News August 17, 2002 Ivars Peterson |
Testing for Divisibility Few people, including many mathematicians, know all the simple rules by which large numbers can be tested quickly for divisibility by numbers 1 through 12. Nonetheless, they can be handy for solving digital puzzles, reducing fractions, and as targets for algorithm development. |
InternetNews December 28, 2005 Sharon Gaudin |
Grid Discovers Largest Known Prime Number Using an international grid of about 70,000 computers, researchers this month discovered the largest known prime number. |
Science News April 5, 2008 Julie J. Rehmeyer |
Math Trek: Creeping Up on Riemann Mathematicians move a step closer to unraveling the mystery of prime numbers. |
Science News December 6, 2003 Ivars Peterson |
Megaprime Champion The catalog of humongous prime numbers has a new entry -- the champion prime (2^20996011 - 1), which has 6,320,430 decimal digits. It's the largest known prime number and the 40th Mersenne prime ever found. |
Science News March 5, 2005 Ivars Peterson |
Primal Surge Last month saw the discovery of the 42nd known Mersenne prime, the largest prime yet identified... Puzzle of the Week... |
Science News April 6, 2002 Ivars Peterson |
The EKG Sequence Sequences of numbers have long fascinated both amateur and professional mathematicians. Here's a recently discovered example that has prompted some serious mathematical investigation... |
National Defense August 2007 Grace Jean |
Overlooked Business Model Could Benefit Small Firms Suppose a small business has produced a technology that will help troops fighting in Iraq, contract lawyers say it's better to sell off the business unit that developed the product. |
Wall Street & Technology February 14, 2006 Paul Allen |
Prime Time for Primes Once an esoteric business controlled by three players, the prime brokerage business has become a hotbed of competition as rival banks and brokers have sought to profit from the hedge fund explosion. |
AskMen.com Terry Baldwin |
Top 10: Views Our top finishers include a well-rounded bunch of timeless sites and some lesser-known spots -- all worth a look. |