The ternary Goldbach problem
View/ Open
Date
2014Series
Snapshots of modern mathematics from Oberwolfach;2014-03Oberwolfach Lecture;2015
Author
Helfgott, Harald
Metadata
Show full item recordSNAP-2014-003-EN
Abstract
Leonhard Euler (1707–1783) – one of the greatest mathematicians of the eighteenth century and of all times – often corresponded with a friend of his, Christian Goldbach (1690–1764), an amateur and polymath who lived and worked in Russia, just like Euler himself. In a letter written in June 1742, Goldbach made a conjecture – that is, an educated guess – on prime numbers:
"Es scheinet wenigstens, dass eine jede Zahl, die größer ist als 2, ein aggregatum trium numerorum primorum sey. (It seems (...) that every positive integer greater than 2 can be written as the sum of three prime numbers.)"
In this snapshot, we will describe to what extent the mathematical community has resolved Goldbach's conjecture, with some emphasis on recent progress. [Also available in German and French]
Further versions of this publication
https://doi.org/10.14760/SNAP-2014-003-DEhttps://doi.org/10.14760/SNAP-2014-003-FR