Twin Prime Conjecture - Numberphile

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  • Опубліковано 2 чер 2024
  • Dr James Maynard is a leading figure in recent progress on the Twin Prime Conjecture.
    More links and stuff below ↓↓↓
    More Twin Primes from Numberphile:
    • Gaps between Primes - ... and • Gaps between Primes (e...
    Prime Number Playlist:
    bit.ly/primevids
    Riemann Hypothesis videos:
    • The Key to the Riemann... and • Riemann Hypothesis - N...
    Terry Tao video:
    • The World's Best Mathe...
    James Maynard's Small Gaps Between Primes: arxiv.org/abs/1311.4600
    Polymath8: bit.ly/polymath8
    With thanks to George Csicsery who made a documentary about Yitang Zhang: bit.ly/2nYNEIF
    Numberphile is supported by the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI): bit.ly/MSRINumberphile
    We are also supported by Science Sandbox, a Simons Foundation initiative dedicated to engaging everyone with the process of science.
    NUMBERPHILE
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    Videos by Brady Haran
    Support us on Patreon: / numberphile
    Brady's videos subreddit: / bradyharan
    Brady's latest videos across all channels: www.bradyharanblog.com/
    Sign up for (occasional) emails and never our best videos or important announcements: eepurl.com/YdjL9
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 988

  • @johnredberg
    @johnredberg 7 років тому +2276

    Nice to see how humble he is, given the massive contribution he made.

    • @johnredberg
      @johnredberg 7 років тому +32

      Cheers Brady! Love your work!!

    • @fiqihfandrian8416
      @fiqihfandrian8416 7 років тому +18

      John Redberg isn't he just humble bragging? ;)

    • @gralha_
      @gralha_ 7 років тому +84

      No, he is just being modest

    • @johnredberg
      @johnredberg 7 років тому +43

      Fiqih Fandrian if he is (which I think he isn't), then he's doing an excellent job. Which itself would be something to complement him on. ;-)

    • @lzhedmitriy2719
      @lzhedmitriy2719 7 років тому +5

      LOL NOPE

  • @RichardButt
    @RichardButt 7 років тому +721

    It feels like Brady is trying to assemble a team of top mathematicians to crack the Riemann Hypothesis. Unfortunately, they don't seem very interested.

    • @aazimshahul7488
      @aazimshahul7488 4 роки тому +45

      Your username says it all

    • @lordx4641
      @lordx4641 4 роки тому +2

      @@aazimshahul7488 yeah disgusting

    • @erichodge567
      @erichodge567 3 роки тому +29

      Problems like the RH are career-killers. No prizes are given for almost being right. None at all.

    • @SamuelHauptmannvanDam
      @SamuelHauptmannvanDam 3 роки тому +3

      Or just overwhelmed.

    • @stanbest3743
      @stanbest3743 3 роки тому +8

      3 years ago, its still out there :-). Intuitivley the RH is unprovable. So much hinges on it and it works so well that there is some fundemental property of numbers that means its unprovable. If you could prove its unprovable you would be famous.

  • @financeexplainedgraphics
    @financeexplainedgraphics Рік тому +363

    James, congrats on the Fields Medal! Well deserved.

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt Рік тому +11

      Recently I saw a TV show on PBS about the "Twin Prime Conjecture" featuring both Tom Zhang and James Maynard, two very smart guys. :)
      On April 2013 professor Tom (Yitang) Zhang of the University of New Hampshire has submitted a paper to the Annals of Mathematics as proof that there are an infinite pairs of prime numbers that differ by 70 million or less. This spurred a lot of activity in the field, such as the Polymath8 project, which lowered the bound to k ≤ 246 and recently to k ≤ 6 (general Elliott-Halberstam conjecture). The human mind is truly amazing being able to tackle and solve such difficult problems.

    • @apusapus71
      @apusapus71 Рік тому +1

      I suspect he found it in a field.

    • @financeexplainedgraphics
      @financeexplainedgraphics Рік тому +1

      ​@@apusapus71 I need to start visiting farms more often then.

  • @fernandopaul1
    @fernandopaul1 Рік тому +67

    Now a fields medalist!

  • @stylus59
    @stylus59 7 років тому +904

    A prime minister is a minister that is divisible by 1 and him/herself.

    • @vlogdemon
      @vlogdemon 7 років тому +41

      stylus59 but only 1 and theirself

    • @kamoroso94
      @kamoroso94 7 років тому +2

      stylus59 I heard that joke from a comedian on Conan's show.

    • @KWGTech
      @KWGTech 7 років тому +72

      Most prime ministers cant even

    • @Mrtheunnameable
      @Mrtheunnameable 7 років тому +12

      Look at Justin Trudeau.

    • @fossilfighters101
      @fossilfighters101 7 років тому +1

      +

  • @andre.queiroz
    @andre.queiroz 7 років тому +676

    Such a passionate person! Would love to see more episodes with him.

    • @numberphile
      @numberphile  7 років тому +353

      We have another one in the works.

    • @andre.queiroz
      @andre.queiroz 7 років тому +100

      You are one of the best channels on UA-cam! Thanks for existing!

    • @Fk67Lg
      @Fk67Lg 5 років тому +14

      And cute too.

    • @MrP4RR0TT
      @MrP4RR0TT 5 років тому +3

      Numberphile he needs a podcast episode

    • @ihsahnakerfeldt9280
      @ihsahnakerfeldt9280 4 роки тому +5

      @@Fk67Lg get in line

  • @gildedbear5355
    @gildedbear5355 7 років тому +133

    The partially erased blackboard is driving me crazy.

    • @imrozzahan7328
      @imrozzahan7328 7 років тому +7

      GildedBear , You are psychologically sick.

  • @bogdanpetrovic3641
    @bogdanpetrovic3641 Рік тому +39

    This man has been awarded with the Fields Medal in 2022. for his contribution.

  • @michaelblakey7794
    @michaelblakey7794 Рік тому +87

    Huge congratulations to James on winning the fields medal for 2022, absolutely amazing we get to watch him talk through his work

  • @flymypg
    @flymypg 7 років тому +293

    Brady, well done!
    This is what I like so much about Brady's videos across all his channels: Unlike many interview-based videos, Brady so often gets his subject to tell a full story arc before getting to their own contributions. It takes careful reading and prompting to make this happen, and to look so effortless and flow so naturally.
    Best of all is Brady's infectious excitement: He wouldn't be doing this unless he was genuinely thrilled by it. He calls himself a videographer, but I think that's his secondary talent. You can't do great edits if the material isn't there in the first place.
    And then there are the times when his subject goes into awesome mode, and Brady knows to just step back, be a videographer, and let things go wherever. Talk about being in the moment.
    Thanks!

  • @BrianBlock
    @BrianBlock 7 років тому +172

    This has been one of my favorite videos in recent times. Dr. Maynard was clear in his explanation and he looked so happy to be explaining it. That is the type of passion everyone needs to find in their life.

  • @senc1971
    @senc1971 7 років тому +16

    I love that Numberphile gets these top mathematicians who are still willing to start from first principles (reminding the viewer that 2 is the first prime, etc.)....

  • @porriale
    @porriale Рік тому +18

    Nice to see how humble he is, given that in 5 years he will win the Fields Medal

    • @j.vonhogen9650
      @j.vonhogen9650 Рік тому +1

      As a matter of fact, James just won the Fields medal a few days before you wrote that comment.

    • @primenumberbuster404
      @primenumberbuster404 Рік тому +10

      @@j.vonhogen9650 I think you didn't get the comment above.
      Porriale means that James was still humble 5 years ago when he knew that he might win a fields soon.

  • @markstanbrook5578
    @markstanbrook5578 7 років тому +75

    There's not a single video on this channel that I don't like but this one I found particularly enjoyable to watch.

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 2 роки тому +2

      Gabriel's horn is amazing too!

  • @Joker9586
    @Joker9586 7 років тому +991

    I've made a wonderful proof in which i bringed the gap down to 2 proving The Twin Primes Conjecture.
    However there is not enough space in the youtube comments section to write that here.

    • @bojandimovski1504
      @bojandimovski1504 7 років тому

      Hahaha

    • @helloitsme7553
      @helloitsme7553 7 років тому +19

      Pierre de Fermat *brought

    • @Michaelonyoutub
      @Michaelonyoutub 7 років тому +36

      DAMN YOU FERMAT!!!

    • @BobStein
      @BobStein 7 років тому +9

      Dude, maybe you'd be happier in another line of work. Like running for office.

    • @akshatsethi6384
      @akshatsethi6384 7 років тому +8

      i dont think people realize what you just did there

  • @Goryllo
    @Goryllo 5 років тому +180

    of course you can't check with a computer, they're doing it the wrong way! They start at 0 and go towards infinity, but if they instead started from infinity and went backwards, by the time you reach 0 you would have checked ALL THE NUMBERS! Fields Medal please...
    Oh, it also works with the digits of Pi

    • @CalamityInAction
      @CalamityInAction 4 роки тому +13

      Goryllo OK THIS is epic

    • @leonhardeuler9839
      @leonhardeuler9839 4 роки тому +6

      Computers don’t know the definition of infinity since their memory is finite

    • @Hartfeltet
      @Hartfeltet 4 роки тому +40

      We can start at the Parker infinity, which is not quite infinity, but kinda close

    • @kaiserauthoria
      @kaiserauthoria 3 роки тому +2

      Cant start at a quantified number since it defeats the point of Infinite.

    • @asheep7797
      @asheep7797 2 роки тому +1

      BREAKTHROUGH IN THE METHOD!

  • @rosePetrichor
    @rosePetrichor 7 років тому +29

    The fact that he lives and works in Oxford, where I study, makes this video a little weird as he sounds practically identical to many of my younger lecturers and tutors. This video more than many others on numberphile felt like I was being taught a class! Very well explained

  • @onecanina
    @onecanina 7 років тому +53

    Such a humble and genuine young man. It is so refreshing and encouraging to see a brilliant intelectual mind with this personality . All the best wishes to Dr. James. Looking forward to see more videos of him!

  • @sanskarsharma9494
    @sanskarsharma9494 Рік тому +10

    Congratulations on the Fields Medal Professor!

  • @rimonshahriar9205
    @rimonshahriar9205 Рік тому +5

    So happy to see James Maynard has become the fields medalist❤️

  • @pavelhoral
    @pavelhoral 7 років тому +4

    Really great video... congrats to dr. Maynard and Brady, your questions always amaze me... great work as well.

  • @SaveSoilSaveSoil
    @SaveSoilSaveSoil 3 роки тому +22

    I am very much surprised at how amazingly accurately James Maynard pronounces YiTang Zhang.

  • @jazzsoul69
    @jazzsoul69 4 роки тому +3

    I like the way he moves when he talks, like he got a funky side 😎 but also very humble nice and smart !! thank you very much to him for his wonderful work and sharing that, so adorable human

  • @hankroest6836
    @hankroest6836 7 років тому +47

    How beautifully constructed and expressed his sentences are!

  • @plackiplicki3531
    @plackiplicki3531 7 років тому +63

    Could Numberphile do a video about the recent Abel Prize earning work subject from Yves Meyer, the "Wavelette Theory" ? The Abel Prize is like the Nobel of maths (after Fields medal), and it was awarded less than a month ago --- it's a cool thing to make a video on, especially since there is little information about it on the Internet ! Please !

    • @imrozzahan7328
      @imrozzahan7328 7 років тому

      Placki Plicki , No one cares for this rubbish idea. Throw it in dustbin, you fool.

    • @EGarrett01
      @EGarrett01 6 років тому +9

      Imroz, calm down douchebag.

    • @uuu12343
      @uuu12343 6 років тому +7

      Imroz zahan
      No one cares for this rubbish comment, throw it in *the* dustbin, you fool

    • @badereric
      @badereric 5 років тому +2

      no idea what that is honestly, but if it was abel prize worthy there probably should be a video on it

  • @DennisMathgod
    @DennisMathgod 7 років тому +11

    I absolutely love these videos. Number theory is one of my favorite subjects.

  • @barmouthbridge8772
    @barmouthbridge8772 9 місяців тому +1

    Congratulations on winning the Fields medal James. I admire these humans so much . I went to Oxford read Zoology from 1989 - 1992, I got an upper class second degree. Also got a boxing blue for boxing against Cambridge on March 12th 1992. I arrived at Oxford as a bright boy with serious memory capability and a thirst for competition in tests. I very quickly observed around me a level of student that I could only marvel at. A healthy reset of expectations. The very best of my peers were like James in the way that their ability was to them normality and like a frequency hum in their background. No frills; no interest in recognition. They were simply unbelievable in their fields.

  • @corydiehl764
    @corydiehl764 7 років тому +20

    I hope I'm able to prove something that is worthy of being presented on Numberphile some day.

  • @julienfb4693
    @julienfb4693 7 років тому +152

    Is there a website where we can find some mathematical papers? Like where do mathematicians publish their papers online?

    • @Xentillus
      @Xentillus 7 років тому +38

      Try Google Scholar as a starting point

    • @samb443
      @samb443 7 років тому +114

      arxiv.org

    • @julienfb4693
      @julienfb4693 7 років тому +4

      Ok thank you very much guys!

    • @John77Doe
      @John77Doe 7 років тому

      Julio Presidente In what language do you want the papers?

    • @John77Doe
      @John77Doe 7 років тому +6

      William White Albert Einstein published without peer review and citation in his seminal year. Do not discourage Julio. Maybe Julio has insights that give us that "quantum leap" forward. 😑😑😑😑😑😑😑😑😑

  • @PinkChucky15
    @PinkChucky15 7 років тому +8

    This is great. I'll never get tired of learning about prime numbers :-)

  • @L4Vo5
    @L4Vo5 7 років тому +244

    I hope to see the day the Riemann Hypothesis is solved...

    • @sinx2247
      @sinx2247 7 років тому +174

      I have found a truly marvelous solution to the Riemann Hypothesis, but my brain is too small to contain it.

    • @freshbeans1608
      @freshbeans1608 7 років тому +104

      +Symbiosinx what an original joke

    • @uuu12343
      @uuu12343 6 років тому +29

      Fresh beans
      It actually is original because he said "my brain is too small to contain it" not the comment box

    • @ChefXbb
      @ChefXbb 6 років тому

      probably armageddon

    • @newkid9807
      @newkid9807 5 років тому +1

      I already solved it

  • @zubmit700
    @zubmit700 7 років тому +4

    It's really fascinating to see this kind of breakthrough when you don't understand the most fundamental principles of prime numbers other than it's only divisible with itself and 1.

  • @indyd9322
    @indyd9322 5 років тому +9

    It's inspiring to see a younger mathematician talk about his work!

  • @agamkohli3888
    @agamkohli3888 7 років тому +112

    You missed a twin prime at 2:51 (19541 and 19543)

  • @DustinRodriguez1_0
    @DustinRodriguez1_0 7 років тому +7

    My understanding (from watching talks by Terence Tao) is that the barrier he refers to several times in this video is something called the 'parity problem'. I would love to see a video explaining what the 'parity problem' is.

  • @matteogirelli1023
    @matteogirelli1023 Рік тому +4

    Who's back to this after he won the fields medal?

  • @bryanc1975
    @bryanc1975 5 років тому +7

    This is one cool, down to earth mathematician. I'm a layman, but I look forward to seeing what else he can come up with.

  • @gold4963
    @gold4963 7 років тому +24

    My mom is still trying to decide where to move the sofa...

  • @mathsmontage1070
    @mathsmontage1070 7 років тому +1

    Prime numbers aside, it is refreshing to see you present your perspective on mathematical thinking. I am looking at how to inject this aspect into the high school arena since it is virtually uncatered for (at least in Australian schools). Schools are results driven and are more or less merely a set curriculum production line. My argument is that there is more - it is what YOU do and there is a way to cater for it at high school level with students of the right mindset. You have clearly expressed the "genius factor" that is lacking and not really understood in our education system. The thing is, how do we turn what you do into a television series to show how some mathematical ideas can be explored with predominately high school mathematics? Well done, so far!

  • @errmoc5682
    @errmoc5682 7 років тому +1

    very good video, thank you Brady and the mathamtitions for your work and generosity

  • @j9dz2sf
    @j9dz2sf 7 років тому +4

    Watched this video just after having watched another one about the Twin Paradox. So now, I imagine two twin primes, and one of them taking a rocket, flying at the speed of light, and returning close to his twin prime. But now, their distance had become more that 2, because of Special Relativity.

  • @yourlordandsaviouryeesusbe2998

    Dude, this guy won the Field's medal in 2022

  • @alfredhitchcock45
    @alfredhitchcock45 Місяць тому

    He explains so clearly and humbly

  • @rajarshichatterjee3281
    @rajarshichatterjee3281 Рік тому

    Congratulations for the Fields medal 2022 Prof Maynard!

  • @Venator1230
    @Venator1230 7 років тому +16

    This James Maynard guy is pretty Keen

  • @fapplejacks4172
    @fapplejacks4172 7 років тому +4

    I like this guy, more videos with him please :)

  • @vikramanbaburaj525
    @vikramanbaburaj525 24 дні тому

    I would say thanks to Zhang, Maynard and Tao et al. Because I had no idea about such beautiful results involving prime numbers.

  • @Crazytesseract
    @Crazytesseract Рік тому

    Nice to see he is so humble. "Intuition" or the "inspiration", that "i am on the right track" even though you are not sure you will get to the proof, comes from the supersoul within (Sanskrit: paramātmā). We live in a virtual reality. The mind is the real cause of our suffering and happiness. Never think that "I am the doer," especially when you do not know who exactly "I am".

  • @handsome_man69
    @handsome_man69 7 років тому +42

    weren't you also the lead singer of Tool?

    • @Trynottoblink
      @Trynottoblink 7 років тому +9

      Yeah man his new album drops in a few months.

    • @justarandompally
      @justarandompally 7 років тому +2

      Trynottoblink Lol not if it's Tool we're talking about, everyone knows Tool doesn't ever release anything.... (/wrists)

  • @yvesnyfelerph.d.8297
    @yvesnyfelerph.d.8297 4 роки тому +8

    "...alot of fumbling around in the darkness before you understand how things work..."
    I see

  • @_Holy_Lance_
    @_Holy_Lance_ 6 років тому +1

    Thank you Dr. Maynard.

  • @PowerIsReal
    @PowerIsReal 7 років тому +2

    Wonderful video, thank you. Exciting to see these advancements taking place!

  • @michaelmatter1222
    @michaelmatter1222 7 років тому +27

    Friday nights, "phew a long week of rigorous mathematics, time to kick back, relax and think about that ole' twin prime conjecture"

  • @shubhramishra8698
    @shubhramishra8698 7 років тому +3

    2:52 You guys missed the pair of 19541 and 19543

  • @RnR369
    @RnR369 Рік тому

    i just nticed that whn they had he list going up that they missed a set of twin primes 19541 and 19543 that thy didnt highlight. i love how even in my late 20's this channel makes me fell ok to still find math interesting.

  • @venkateshbabu5623
    @venkateshbabu5623 6 років тому

    It is like a huge pond when you tap the surface at the either end the chances of two troughs being close is difficult. Waves have these kind of patterns as the distance of the jitter becomes larger.

  • @Friek555
    @Friek555 7 років тому +3

    You missed the twin primes 19541 and 19543 at 2:51

  • @WhisperVT
    @WhisperVT 7 років тому +13

    Wow, this was a great video :D

  • @berrieds
    @berrieds Рік тому

    Congratulations James!

  • @danwhite425
    @danwhite425 7 років тому

    I think this is the best number file so far.

  • @heliocentric1756
    @heliocentric1756 7 років тому +260

    I proved that no two prime numbers differ by 7.
    I'm a famous mathematician now :)

    • @Teo-uw7mh
      @Teo-uw7mh 7 років тому +15

      Heliocentric post your proof

    • @pushkarsoni8927
      @pushkarsoni8927 7 років тому +10

      email me so that I can also be famous.. thanks in advance.

    • @williamchristman1165
      @williamchristman1165 7 років тому +5

      Heliocentric 2017 2027 differ by 10 both are primes

    • @pushkarsoni8927
      @pushkarsoni8927 7 років тому +8

      -5 is a prime? do we count negative integers also? just asking cuz I really don't know>

    • @williamchristman1165
      @williamchristman1165 7 років тому +4

      Heliocentric oh oops i misunderstood

  • @gautampassi3863
    @gautampassi3863 7 років тому +8

    I love Numberphile :)

  • @falafelbleuh
    @falafelbleuh Рік тому +1

    Glad to see him get awarded with the Fields medal this year!

  • @ts4gv
    @ts4gv Рік тому +2

    james recently won the Fields medal! congrats

  • @JamesxKo
    @JamesxKo 7 років тому +5

    I didn't know that the guy from Tool was so gifted at mathematics

  • @BarneyKB
    @BarneyKB 7 років тому +3

    is there any upper bound on gaps between two primes?

    • @BrouwerEK
      @BrouwerEK 7 років тому +12

      No. They can be as far apart as one demands.
      Take k=N! and numbers k+2, k+2,... k+N. They are all composite.
      Now pick any large N as you wish.

    • @tutorsoar
      @tutorsoar 4 роки тому

      Yes that's what the video is all about
      246

  • @kushalthaman3110
    @kushalthaman3110 Рік тому

    Congratulations to Dr. Maynard on the Field's medal!

  • @disgruntledtoons
    @disgruntledtoons 3 роки тому +1

    There also seem to be lots of prime quads, consisting of sets of values 30k + 11, 30k + 13, 30k + 17, and 30k + 19. The gaps are, as is to be expected, larger than the gaps between prime pairs, but the JavaScript that I am currently running to find them has reached 170 million and is still finding them.

  • @Yakushii
    @Yakushii 7 років тому +34

    Nice to see that Benedict Cumberbatch is interested in maths too.

    • @TykoBrian7
      @TykoBrian7 7 років тому +1

      Yakushii ... who?

    • @aoimiyazaki6291
      @aoimiyazaki6291 7 років тому +7

      Bendadick Cucumberpatch is a famous actor.

    • @benjaminlehman3221
      @benjaminlehman3221 5 років тому

      Tyko Brian he plays Dr.Strange

    • @want-diversecontent3887
      @want-diversecontent3887 5 років тому +1

      Benjamin Lehman
      Yeah, Bean pick comber patch did.
      Or was his name Bin trick clapper catch?

  • @Ripa
    @Ripa 7 років тому +14

    Classic but still nice! Good job :-)

  • @raymondjones2651
    @raymondjones2651 3 роки тому +1

    The equation 6n+-1, can be used as a serial equation or a matrix. The matrix first column is odd numbers and the top row is factoials of prime numbers, 6n, 30n, 210n, 2310n and etc. The result is: 30 + 11 and 13, 30 + 29 and 31, 210 + 29 and 31, 2310 + 29 and 31 all twin primes.

    • @azzteke
      @azzteke Рік тому

      6n+-1 is not an equation.

  • @dggrossman7217
    @dggrossman7217 6 років тому +1

    1451, 1453 is a twin prime pair associated with protons and neutrons. If you divide half the difference of their masses into them you get the twin prime pair.Proton's mass = 938.272081 Mev/c2 Neutron's mass = 939.565413 Mev/c2

  • @siddhantsharma9316
    @siddhantsharma9316 7 років тому +173

    Prime numbers make me uncomfortable

    • @joshurlay
      @joshurlay 7 років тому +54

      Prime numbers make me wet, and that makes me uncomfortable

    • @aela_the_bard
      @aela_the_bard 7 років тому +1

      I feel like a philosophical argument that counting numbers and whole number division are a part of the real world would be fairly easy to construct. And primes are numbers for which whole number division is impossible. Integers and Real numbers however technically have little to no direct basis in reality.

    • @Shadowmere29
      @Shadowmere29 7 років тому +7

      All numbers are just mathematical objects that are defined as they are. You could easily say anything is part of reality just because you are thinking about it, so it is pointless to even talk about it.

    • @aela_the_bard
      @aela_the_bard 7 років тому +5

      you must be fun at parties.

    • @Kalumbatsch
      @Kalumbatsch 7 років тому +2

      +Ishaan Sabnis
      Statements about numbers are also quantifiable statements about physical reality. Whether you can divide a number of objects into equal piles is something that you can measure. No, numbers are not purely mental constructs, I've seen that claim before.

  • @krishnasharma7607
    @krishnasharma7607 7 років тому +8

    Identical or fraternal ?

  • @stevestarcke
    @stevestarcke Рік тому

    What an amazing mathematician. He is an inspiration to us all!

  • @KalikiDoom
    @KalikiDoom 7 років тому +2

    5 & 251 is the first gap of 246.
    11 & 257 is the second gap of 246.

  • @OriginalPiMan
    @OriginalPiMan 7 років тому +4

    I would like to suggest, without evidence, something even more specific. That there are an infinite number of pairs of primes separated by 2, where the prime factors of the inbetween number are consecutive primes. For example, 29 and 31 and primes, and the factors of 30 are the consecutive primes 2, 3 and 5.

    • @Tiqerboy
      @Tiqerboy 7 років тому +1

      The next number is 2x3x5x7 = 210. 209 isn't prime, 211 is.
      then 210x11 = 2310. 2309 & 2311. Both of these are primes. 2nd example.
      Then 2310x13 = 30030. 30031 isn't prime, 30029 is
      Then 30030x17 = 510510. Neither 510509 and 510511 are prime
      Then 510510x19 = 9699690. Doesn't work.
      Then 9699690x23 = 223092870. Doesn't work.
      Then 6469693230. Doesn't work.
      Need a computer to take it much further.
      The way it looks, I don't see a third example coming, and you think there are infinite number of these? If you can prove that, then you've proven the twin prime conjecture and then some.
      But I think a proof would be very hard to come by, for this simple reason: eventually you're going to end up with numbers on either side that are so large, you won't be able to factor them, or even test they are prime with the computer technology we have, so you'll in effect get 'stuck'.
      Notice you have to start at 2, because if I took a sequence like 5x7x11 I end up with an odd number and those on either side will be even and obviously not prime.

    • @OriginalPiMan
      @OriginalPiMan 7 років тому

      I'm aware how rare they would likely be if I'm right, and I'm aware it would certainly be more difficult to prove than the twin prime conjecture. But if you compare it to Mersenne primes, we only know 49 of those, going up to 274,207,281 − 1 but we know those are infinite in number.
      And I didn't merely notice that you have to start it 2; it is by design. My original thought was on multiplying all primes up to an arbitrary value, but I realised I could phrase it more clearly by saying consecutive primes and leaving the start implicit.

    • @Tiqerboy
      @Tiqerboy 7 років тому

      If you know of a proof that there are inifinite primes of the form 2^n - 1, I'd like to see it.
      Again, by computation theory as we know it, you eventually end up with a number so huge you can't factor it, rendering you stuck. But if there's a proof that gets around this, excellent, I'd like to see it.

    • @OriginalPiMan
      @OriginalPiMan 7 років тому

      Sorry, my mistake. I thought that was proven, but it is merely conjectured. I must have misremembered the content of an earlier Numberphile video.

  • @aslamjm
    @aslamjm 7 років тому +37

    nth

  • @olivierdutreuilh6535
    @olivierdutreuilh6535 7 років тому +1

    Great video ! Thank you very much !

  • @Professional-Hater
    @Professional-Hater 7 місяців тому +2

    Hmm, he looks pretty smart, maybe he would win a fields medal for his contributions to number theory

  • @reububble
    @reububble 7 років тому +18

    I wish I was a mathematician sometimes.

    • @MrRenanwill
      @MrRenanwill 4 роки тому +2

      Just take a mathcourse or go study by yourself

    • @alexandertownsend3291
      @alexandertownsend3291 2 роки тому +1

      You do not have to be a professional or even go to college to contribute to math. Study some books, papers, and videos. Find a challenging problem, you are passionate about and try to make some progress. Even as an amatuer, any progress is better than none.

  • @bexowr
    @bexowr 4 роки тому +3

    Congratulations to this man for proving the Duffin - Schaeffer conjecture (do you guys see the news?)

    • @cptn_n3m012
      @cptn_n3m012 4 роки тому +1

      He annouced a proof with another mathematician, it hasn't been reviewed yet

    • @bexowr
      @bexowr 4 роки тому

      @@cptn_n3m012 oh, I see.... Thanks for pointing that out

  • @ericzhao5642
    @ericzhao5642 Рік тому

    James Maynard just won the field medal this year.

  • @stephenhughes1862
    @stephenhughes1862 7 років тому +1

    James Maynard is very impressive, he has done the UK well

  • @renedescartes1058
    @renedescartes1058 7 років тому +5

    We can thank gödel who proved that we can t prove some things.

  • @Dsschuh
    @Dsschuh 7 років тому +12

    They missed a twin in the list: 19541, 19543

    • @imrozzahan7328
      @imrozzahan7328 7 років тому +1

      Duane Schuh , well done old man. :-)

  • @ribsb747
    @ribsb747 Рік тому

    Congratulations on winning the Fields Medal !!

  • @kamilziemian995
    @kamilziemian995 Рік тому +2

    Who else watching again after it was announced that James Maynard will receive Fields Medal this year (2022)?

  • @grzegorzcichosz8240
    @grzegorzcichosz8240 7 років тому +9

    Do professional mathematicians have any other job aside from teaching at university?

    • @Q99g
      @Q99g 7 років тому +6

      Grzegorz Cichosz They can work in engineering companies

    • @grzegorzcichosz8240
      @grzegorzcichosz8240 7 років тому

      Oh really? I thought that some engineers work their not mathematicians

    • @Q99g
      @Q99g 7 років тому

      Grzegorz Cichosz Well I know a mathemathician who worked in a engineering​ company. But now he is a teacher, he says he prefers being with people rather than being all day in front of a computer.

    • @rosePetrichor
      @rosePetrichor 7 років тому +4

      Plenty of mathematicians take time out of their academic careers to work for technology firms (or do so alongside their career if they can balance it). Some others work for government bodies on cryptography based problems

    • @wohdinhel
      @wohdinhel 7 років тому +4

      Grzegorz Cichosz I don't know if you are aware, but there is a lot of math involved in engineering
      Also pretty much every field of hard science

  • @daksh8747
    @daksh8747 7 років тому +4

    Just how many channels does Brady have for crying out loud?!

    • @TykoBrian7
      @TykoBrian7 6 років тому

      Docobonbon The one how many do you know?

    • @alexandertownsend3291
      @alexandertownsend3291 4 роки тому

      1.Numberphile
      2.Computerphile
      3.Sixty Symbols
      4.Periodic Table of Videos
      5.Objectivity
      There are probably more, but those are the ones I know about.

  • @nicknamenescio
    @nicknamenescio Рік тому

    Huge congrats on winning the Fields medal! :)

  • @syedmohaiminulhoque9901
    @syedmohaiminulhoque9901 Рік тому

    congratulations Dr.Maynard

  • @insidetrip101
    @insidetrip101 7 років тому +12

    What's the largest gap that we can create?
    There doesn't seem any reason why (at least that I can think of) gaps between primes can't be found to be arbitrarily large (since primes exist onto infinity, it would seem we could make the gaps between them as large as we want by increasing the number of primes). But if we can find a gap of any number, then how at the same time can there be infinite number of gaps of a finite size?
    This is truly a really difficult problem.

    • @username17234
      @username17234 7 років тому +18

      We can create a gap as large as we want very easily, take a number n and consider the string of numbers {n!+2,...,n!+n}, they are all composite numbers and the string is n-1 elements long, so by increasing n this gets as large as you want.
      You should rethink the second question, you'll see it's very clear too.

    • @zanti4132
      @zanti4132 7 років тому +3

      insidetrip101 Clearly there is no limit to how large the gap between primes can be. Given a positive integer n and k = n!, then k+2, k+3, k+4, etc. up to k+n are all necessarily composite, for a guaranteed gap of n-1. So we have the paradox that the number of primes is infinite, but that's not so illogical - an infinite subset can be taken from an infinite set (for example, take all the primes from the set of positive integers) and still be left with an infinite set.

    • @eratzleretour1027
      @eratzleretour1027 7 років тому +4

      The state of the art in finding big gaps formed of primes lowest as possible is this paper of Ford, Green, Konyagin, Maynard & Tao : arxiv.org/abs/1412.5029
      It is an improvement over an almost 80 year-old result of Rankin. It uses almost the same method but tweaks a final argument by using (an involved version of) the improvement of Maynard concerning small gaps.

    • @insidetrip101
      @insidetrip101 7 років тому +1

      "You should rethink the second question, you'll see it's very clear too."
      I don't think it is. Because if we can create a gap that is arbitrarily large, then we can create a gap that goes on forever; however, that's impossible because we can also prove that there is an infinite number of primes.
      Thinking about infinity is never simple. For example:
      "So we have the paradox that the number of primes is infinite, but that's not so illogical - an infinite subset can be taken from an infinite set (for example, take all the primes from the set of positive integers)
      and still be left with an infinite set."
      You can say that, but do we actually have an understanding for what that means? I genuinely can't wrap my head around it. Yea I know we can do such a thing in number theory; but I can't get an understanding of how we can have an infinite amount of *integers* in between two primes.
      I hear what you guys are saying, I understand the proof that you guys are also citing, but it still doesn't sit right with me.

    • @elirox100
      @elirox100 7 років тому +5

      Arbitrarily large != infinite

  • @subh1
    @subh1 7 років тому +6

    This makes me ask the very pressing question: What the hell am I doing with my life??

    • @subh1
      @subh1 7 років тому

      Dekinain Janai : What constitutes "real life"? Food, reproduction and survival? Technology? More money to buy stuffs? Inner peace? Staying high on THC? Understanding the nature of the universe and reality itself?

    • @pushkarsoni8927
      @pushkarsoni8927 7 років тому

      calm down bro. drink milk. you'll be fine.

    • @draganjonceski2639
      @draganjonceski2639 4 роки тому

      @@subh1 just THC

  • @modolief
    @modolief 7 років тому

    Great interview, thanks!!!!

  • @user-nb1pf3gd4z
    @user-nb1pf3gd4z 5 років тому +1

    The set {2,3,A,B} contains all prime numbers in the natural set.
    Where:
    A={6n-1: n is natural}/{36xy-6y+6x-1: (x,y) are natural}
    B={6n-5: n is natural}/[{1} U { 36xy-6y-6x+1} U { 36xy+6y+6x+1}: (x,y) are natural]
    The formula A+2=B contains all the cases of prime sum of two primes, except 2+3=5.
    The set {2,3,A} contains all the Sophie Germain primes.
    B can't be Sophie Germain due to divisibility of 2B+1 by 3.

  • @MilkLikeSubstance
    @MilkLikeSubstance 7 років тому +5

    And you missed the twin primes of 19541 and 19543.

    • @MKD1101
      @MKD1101 7 років тому +5

      Nicholas Todor 2:52

  • @deathssiren6028
    @deathssiren6028 7 років тому +64

    Someone disliked the video before even watching half of it..

    • @julianha5473
      @julianha5473 7 років тому +13

      Death's Siren what if he watched in 2x speed? :P

    • @besserwisser4055
      @besserwisser4055 7 років тому +1

      Julian Ha wouldn't work dumbass lol

    • @deathssiren6028
      @deathssiren6028 7 років тому

      Justin K That's very true.

    • @DustinRodriguez1_0
      @DustinRodriguez1_0 7 років тому +2

      Anywhere online you see a 'score', it is being gamed by bots. Especially UA-cam videos.

    • @codycast
      @codycast 7 років тому +1

      I'm always surprised when I see a video has 1000s of views or 100s of comments in a short amount of time.
      I'm surprised that there are that many people who set up alerts and scramble to their phone to instantly watch something.
      From time to time when I want to browse videos I simply look to see what might be new and play it. And like this one, I guess it came out 10 hours ago or so? And already thousands of people of watched it?
      Pretty amazing
      Then again I also don't look to see how many people liked it or didn't like it. I mean who cares

  • @IllumTheMessage
    @IllumTheMessage 7 років тому +2

    Excellent explanations

  • @kilian8250
    @kilian8250 Рік тому +2

    And now he’s got a Fields medal for his work :)