Landau's Conjectures
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Landau's Conjectures
At the 1912 International Congress of Mathematicians, Edmund Landau listed four basic problems about prime numbers. These problems were characterised in his speech as "unattackable at the present state of mathematics" and are now known as Landau's problems. They are as follows: # Goldbach's conjecture: Can every even integer greater than 2 be written as the sum of two primes? # Twin prime conjecture: Are there infinitely many primes ''p'' such that ''p'' + 2 is prime? # Legendre's conjecture: Does there always exist at least one prime between consecutive Square number, perfect squares? # Are there infinitely many primes ''p'' such that ''p'' − 1 is a perfect square? In other words: Are there infinitely many primes of the form ''n''2 + 1? , all four problems are unresolved. Progress toward solutions Goldbach's conjecture Goldbach's weak conjecture, every odd number greater than 5 can be expressed as the sum of three primes, is a conseque ...
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Edmund Landau
Edmund Georg Hermann Landau (14 February 1877 – 19 February 1938) was a German mathematician who worked in the fields of number theory and complex analysis. Biography Edmund Landau was born to a Jewish family in Berlin. His father was Leopold Landau, a gynecologist and his mother was Johanna Jacoby. Landau studied mathematics at the University of Berlin, receiving his doctorate in 1899 and his habilitation (the post-doctoral qualification required to teach in German universities) in 1901. His doctoral thesis was 14 pages long. In 1895, his paper on scoring chess tournaments is the earliest use of eigenvector centrality. Landau taught at the University of Berlin from 1899 to 1909, after which he held a chair at the University of Göttingen. He married Marianne Ehrlich, the daughter of the Nobel Prize-winning biologist Paul Ehrlich, in 1905. At the 1912 International Congress of Mathematicians Landau listed four problems in number theory about primes that he said were parti ...
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