Solve This Mathematics Problem and Get 1 Million Dollars

Ойын-сауық

Let's look at the Millenium Prize Problems! 🚀
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For those of you that are new here, hi there 🌞 my name is Ellie and I'm a Part III Mathematics Graduate from the University of Cambridge and current Astrodynamics Software Engineer! This channel is where I nerd out about maths, physics, space and coding so if that sounds like something you're interested in, click the subscribe button to follow along ☺️
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  • @EllieSleightholm
    @EllieSleightholmАй бұрын

    🚀To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/EllieSleightholm. You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription!

  • @bozydarziemniak1853

    @bozydarziemniak1853

    Ай бұрын

    1:55 Pattern for prime numbers which I have found is: product function (big pi symbol) from j=2 to j=n-1 from [sin (PI*n/j)] Where j and n are natural numbers and n is number which we check as a potential prime number and n>2. This pattern gives not zero result for not prime numbers and 0 for prime numbers. If we normalize it by 1/{product function (big pi symbol) from j=2 to j=n-1 from [sin (PI*n/j)]} we obtain whole function form: For all {product function (big pi symbol) from j=2 to j=n-1 from [sin (PI*n/j)]} different than 0 there exist: f(k)= SUM from n=3 to n=k [{product function (big pi symbol) from j=2 to j=n-1 from [sin (PI*n/j)]}/{product function (big pi symbol) from j=2 to j=n-1 from [sin (PI*n/j)]}] k, n and j are natural numbers and k>2 f(k)+1 is order value of each particular prime number. Number 2 is first prime from its definition. f(k)=1 means 2nd prime number which is number k=3 because its order value is f(k)+1=1+1=2.

  • @frankansari3457
    @frankansari3457Ай бұрын

    My favorite is the Riemann hypothesis. One reason for this might be that it is the only one out of these seven where I understand what it is about.

  • @vincentzevecke4578

    @vincentzevecke4578

    21 күн бұрын

    Have you studied Riemann's zeta function?

  • @TiMdErStOrM
    @TiMdErStOrMАй бұрын

    We want them videos where you'll explain all of them problems individually in detail!

  • @Eggcellent_Sandwich

    @Eggcellent_Sandwich

    Ай бұрын

    Yes definitely

  • @stevenmellemans7215

    @stevenmellemans7215

    Ай бұрын

    Explaining them to an audience not knowing what a prime number is ? I’d watch that.

  • @EllieSleightholm

    @EllieSleightholm

    Ай бұрын

    Coming up!

  • @village716

    @village716

    27 күн бұрын

    ​@@EllieSleightholmnot only explanations but also solutions

  • @kshitijsingh2412

    @kshitijsingh2412

    26 күн бұрын

    ​@@village716 bro only one of them had actually been solved

  • @reyantener8672
    @reyantener8672Ай бұрын

    I like the Navier-Stokes existence and smoothness problem. Their equations are used in so many fields, and there are so many starting points to study this equation.

  • @chandranisahanone
    @chandranisahanoneАй бұрын

    Actually these problems holds more than billion dollars! That's the fact

  • @billgates6618

    @billgates6618

    Ай бұрын

    Surely they pay 1 million and get trillions

  • @krwada
    @krwadaАй бұрын

    Chemical Engineer / Electrical Engineer here. Of course, ever since my mass transport professor introduced us to the Navier Stokes equation, and the many ways to use it to solve problems, I have been fascinated as to how precise and accurate this thing is, and we still have NO idea as to whether we can ever find a closed form solution for all cases of fluid flow. As a person who works with coding, the Riemann hypothesis is absolutely fascinating. Also, elliptic curves are something that is quite common when in the area of cryptography.

  • @rohitnair7208

    @rohitnair7208

    Ай бұрын

    My F blessings son

  • @Juttutin
    @JuttutinАй бұрын

    When I was 15, I was near the very top nationally in maths. But I wanted to be out in the real world, not stuck in university... And I've had a great and varied career... But now, at 55, I wish I had my agile young brain back, or at least stuck with serious math, even as a hobby. I'd love to spend days exploring a couple of these problems in a deep meaningful, and perhaps even productive way. Young folk, if you have a real aptitude for math, then hang onto that, treasure that, stretch yourself, as a hobby at least. Because your brilliant young mind will not always absorb concepts and see abstractions as easily and automatically as it does today.

  • @Ordinal_Yoda

    @Ordinal_Yoda

    Ай бұрын

    Bet you can get it back. Here is a fun problem I enjoy doing as a mental excersize while at work. Take two values. AB and BC and build the function set returning the values A B and C. I don't know why but I've had alot of fun trying all kinds of things. Here is one as an example perhaps you would like. Made two triangles. The first triangle had legs A and B. For playing purposes I guess A as a smaller Number so I make a third triangle with legs B and B. Which places a Fourth Triangle onto the third. Where the missing value is the leg B - A. And of course we need it as a right triangle so this top triangle gets split in halfish giving a diameterish result let's call O. Of course then the same concept for the second triangle. Except since all new variables for all the lengths of the legs in stead of O let's just call it R (whatever). Then I like playing with the ratio difference between O and R and Comparing it with C/A. I thought it was cool that the ratio was the same for both AB -> BC and also A -> C. So today I took the Idea and plotted it in my head on a Three D Grid where A was the X value and B etc etc. So the new plan is to build some more triangles going through three D space. So can get some more comparisons. If you wanna play with me on my little journey figuring this out. You are more than welcome. A little excersize for the mind is always good. Plus it makes me a new friend. Just a note though I've got Q preserved as the square root of Pi.

  • @MrAmitkr007

    @MrAmitkr007

    Ай бұрын

    I'm in the same boat but only 34. Wish I didn't take biotechnology as my study area when I was great and highly interested in maths

  • @Ordinal_Yoda

    @Ordinal_Yoda

    Ай бұрын

    @@MrAmitkr007 It comes back with some practice. Placed a puzzle above if wanting to play.

  • @iteo7349

    @iteo7349

    Ай бұрын

    "As a hobby at least" is the critical caveat without which your advice is noble, but very dangerous. Academia is already overpopulated (like many other sectors) and it's hard to comprehend without experiencing it first hand how difficult it is to land a decent job. Telling people "if you like math and don't completely suck at it, then you should become a mathematician and worry about it later" (which I know you didn't) is awful advice.

  • @Juttutin

    @Juttutin

    Ай бұрын

    @@Ordinal_Yoda It comes back a little with practice. But not much. In my forties I did go to university (full time) and majored in math. I loved it mostly. But by the time I left, the differences between my old math brain and my young math brain was very clear.

  • @calicoesblue4703
    @calicoesblue4703Ай бұрын

    Thanks, Gregory Perelman.

  • @virais4605
    @virais4605Ай бұрын

    NP is the most important thing for me in professional terms, it is seen a lot in the Engineering that I studied, but without wanting to be flattering but being honest, I love Differential Equations and everything about calculus has always fascinated me the most, so Navier's equations Stokes has my heart too, because they actually keep incredible secrets of the explorable universe. Waiting for more videos in this series, Miss Ellie. ☺👍

  • @adil.14912
    @adil.1491223 күн бұрын

    Me: counting how many zero's are there in 1 million

  • @jarahfluxman20
    @jarahfluxman2016 күн бұрын

    I'm so happy to see your KZread channel is getting so popular!

  • @ercsey-ravaszferenc6747
    @ercsey-ravaszferenc67476 күн бұрын

    The thing about Perelman is that he's also a very severe case of Asperger's. He's completely sincere when he say that he doesn't see what he did as a big deal, in fact from what I read, he totally lost interest in mathematics, nobody knows what he does nowadays. He lives in the same tiny apartment with his mom, he doesn't give interviews, doesn't answer any questions, he rejects quite bluntly anyone who tries to approach him. One thing you forgot to mention is that anyone solving any of these problems will have to wait for two years before claiming the prize simply because that's how long it will take for the small handful of people on the planet who are even able to understand any such solution to check the correctness of it. I remember about a decade ago there was a huge sensation when someone (his first name was Vinay if I remember well) announced that he found a solution to P vs. NP. In a few days Terence Tao found a flaw in his method but before that the forums and discussion boards were very animated, everyone was excited.

  • @Unchained_Alice
    @Unchained_AliceАй бұрын

    I was almost driven insane by the fluid dynamics I did study so my feelings for that one are the polar opposite. As for my favourite, it's really hard to choose. P vs NP, the Riemann hypothesis and the Poincaré conjecture are all up there for me

  • @MinecraftMasterNo1

    @MinecraftMasterNo1

    Ай бұрын

    "Poincaré conjecture" Not really a conjecture anymore though. Thanks Perelman.

  • @ian_simbotin

    @ian_simbotin

    Ай бұрын

    I reckon that even if the Navier-Stokes conjecture is worked out, the computational handling of the equations will remain hellish.

  • @zoetropo1
    @zoetropo1Ай бұрын

    I contributed to the specification of the Yang-Mills problem, as I wrote to the Clay Institute to explain that the original formulation was too easy, as I had come close to solving it in 1979-1980. I apologise for that.

  • @AhmadKhan-dn6yh
    @AhmadKhan-dn6yhАй бұрын

    My favourite is the hodge conjecture!

  • @athulshaji1754
    @athulshaji1754Ай бұрын

    Can you please do a video on cohomology and how it is related to computation?

  • @letitiabeausoleil4025
    @letitiabeausoleil4025Ай бұрын

    Good work Ellie.

  • @user-lu4uw3fe2o
    @user-lu4uw3fe2oАй бұрын

    can you make video about how mathematics can be so good for physics and another sciences ? Thank you for all videos!!!!

  • @dustinbachstein3729
    @dustinbachstein3729Ай бұрын

    Nice overview, I enjoyed watching it :) At 2:36 the first 1 in the summation shouldn't be there. That's the only one out of the seven where I feel confident to say something about :D

  • @Ghulatz
    @Ghulatz5 күн бұрын

    Nice one, please could you make a video about what those 7 pbs have in common aside the prize and difficulties ? Gracias

  • @epikherolol8189
    @epikherolol8189Ай бұрын

    When she said stokes and fluid mechanics, me being a highschool student thought she was talking about stokes law and that F=-6πnrv Oh how wrong i was💀😭

  • @chiensyang
    @chiensyangАй бұрын

    I just discover the marvellous proofs, but the comment section is too small to contain them.

  • @algorithminc.8850
    @algorithminc.885028 күн бұрын

    Fun video. I look forward to scoping your channel. While solving primes-related bits is useful, I like the fluids physics problems the most myself too. Subscribed. Cheers

  • @TriPham-yo7we
    @TriPham-yo7we24 күн бұрын

    Prime = N+(n+1) if n is odd from beginning Prime = n+1 if even and move back 1 place if grater than 3 or discarded if repeated is arithmetic sequencing but if use π by secret classifed formula of whole number in π if new π is multiple of 3.1416 come out even whole when radius increase is mostly prime

  • @Hamzasyed_00
    @Hamzasyed_0024 күн бұрын

    Hey just wanna say, can you make a video about how these maths topic works in a real life or why they are essential like trigonometry ,complex number please.

  • @vincentzevecke4578
    @vincentzevecke457828 күн бұрын

    Also three body problem in fluid dynamics

  • @boalvarado4111
    @boalvarado41118 күн бұрын

    Beautiful problem /s to try

  • @kdog3908
    @kdog3908Ай бұрын

    'almost' certain. **glares mathematically** Favourite Maths Problem: I'll let you know. After bad experiences at school I'm still trying to decide if I am even able to enjoy maths again. I am, effectively, starting from scratch by revising GCSE and going from there. There have been a few 'lightbulb' moments already, which is encouraging, but i'm not quite sure if i'd use the words 'favourite & 'maths' in the same sentence yet. I do find your enthusiasm infectious though so your are acting as an encouragement boost! Thanks for the content!

  • @MANOJKUMAR-nz7zg
    @MANOJKUMAR-nz7zgАй бұрын

    Please make a video on mathematics subject classification 2020

  • @boptillyouflop
    @boptillyouflopАй бұрын

    I kinda feel like there must be a way to turn at least 1 or 2 of these problems into the turning halting problem ... possibly navier stokes (which can be used to create turing equivalent macroscopic systems) or the elliptic curve one (by building some turing equivalent system operating using elliptic curves).

  • @TheAAZSD
    @TheAAZSDАй бұрын

    Addendum to the Poincare conjecture, the Generalized Poincare Conjecture remains open for dimension 4 manifolds.

  • @calicoesblue4703

    @calicoesblue4703

    29 күн бұрын

    I think the 4 manifold was solved before they tried to solve for 3 which is the most difficult out of them all.

  • @TheAAZSD

    @TheAAZSD

    29 күн бұрын

    @@calicoesblue4703 you are thinking of the work done by Freedman which got him the Fields medal! But that was in the non generalized setting. In the generalized setting this is very much an open question. That said Freedman's work and the ensuing lectures he gave are very worthy of investigation and form the basis for a lot of beautiful math.

  • @intelligentdesign4435
    @intelligentdesign443526 күн бұрын

    You can add more unsolvable maths: (1) Existence Math, (2) Intelligence Math, (3) Gravity Math, the Squeezon, (4) Theory of Everything Math, (5) Certainty Principle...

  • @user-nw4zg4yc6g
    @user-nw4zg4yc6gАй бұрын

    The video was fab ❤ .. And my fav was Riemann hypothesis and u can see this problem in the movie the beautiful mind where the jhon nash try to solve it.. In the library.. What a movie and it is one of my fav ❤..

  • @Gekko858
    @Gekko858Ай бұрын

    Hi Ellie - would you provide online maths tuition?

  • @sjzara
    @sjzaraАй бұрын

    I’d love to see an explanation of why those problems were chosen.

  • @taylermontgomery2004
    @taylermontgomery200414 күн бұрын

    Navier-Stokes smoothness for 3D time-dependent vector functions will not likely be completed in the 21st century, as Terrance Tao said that solving them is analogous to "trying to climb a shear wall"; virtually impossible, even for the world's most experienced mountaineers, and that "we just don't have the tools to solve them yet." Having tackled the problem myself and independently stumbling upon Lamb-Oseen's equation, I think the best footholds in the wall occur where fluids tend to retain probabilistic structure: vortex motion. Vortexes in fluids are the most robust, well known, mysterious phenomenon that happens wherever rigid shear stresses become sporadically uniform for very short time intervals. Navier-Stokes has been my favorite equation, rivaling my love for Euler's identity.

  • @giga._.chadxd
    @giga._.chadxdАй бұрын

    try solving IOQM papers they are quite challenging

  • @user-zg8ny5tp4g
    @user-zg8ny5tp4gАй бұрын

    Hi, can you solve some series integral problems ?

  • @BELLAROSE21212
    @BELLAROSE21212Ай бұрын

    P vs NP complete P does not equal NP complete.. Could you solve this CHAT GPT 4 cannot, and does inherent repeatin cycle of failed generated response.. Where “X” is given 7,221,355,219,458,090 Where A minus B equal “X” And A times B equal 1e30 .. Hint there exist only 1 solution(A and B) that solved this correctly …. NP complete? The solution exist by the knowledge of this author and creater of this post ….. which can be simply checked in polynomial time for this quadratic equation

  • @aliy512
    @aliy51220 күн бұрын

    We want video Ellie!!

  • @mangeshghadge5539
    @mangeshghadge553929 күн бұрын

    Can u please make a video bout job opportunities being a math major

  • @reubenmckay
    @reubenmckayАй бұрын

    I'm surprised they never included the Collatz Conjecture as a Millennium Prize Question.

  • @DJF1947

    @DJF1947

    Ай бұрын

    They didn't include the 196 problem either. Those are unlikely to have any value in other fields.

  • @ianstopher9111

    @ianstopher9111

    28 күн бұрын

    Agreed: Collatz is very niche and the same for 196, which I have looked at recently. Knowing whether 196 is Lychrel , or the tools to crack it is not likely to open up lots of Mathematics - it might, but unlikely.

  • @prajwalmhatre9495
    @prajwalmhatre949514 күн бұрын

    you know lot of movies focused on mathematics, can you make a video on all the different movies that inspire people to dive into the world of mathematics?

  • @calicoesblue4703
    @calicoesblue4703Ай бұрын

    You should attempt to solve one on screen so we can see how you approach it.

  • @belle6631
    @belle6631Ай бұрын

    I’ve solved 6 of the 7 problems while doodling in 6th grade algebra, but I’m waiting to release the solutions until after I solve the 7th so I can collect all $7mm at once without having to deal with the complexity of multiple payments

  • @vcsonly

    @vcsonly

    Ай бұрын

    nice joke

  • @savitatawade2403

    @savitatawade2403

    Ай бұрын

    💀💀💀💀💀

  • @user-xp8tc2yl8j

    @user-xp8tc2yl8j

    Ай бұрын

    You can only collect up to 6M because one is already solved

  • @savitatawade2403

    @savitatawade2403

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-xp8tc2yl8j BRO I CANT BELIEVE HOW HE MISSED THAT

  • @sushantpokhriyal2531
    @sushantpokhriyal253122 күн бұрын

    Hi Ellie. I want to congratulate you for this nice video. You should make a video on how neural network is useful these days to learn about Navier Stokes.

  • @zuhirja4386
    @zuhirja438623 күн бұрын

    6:40 I study fluid dynamics too and don't really understand how could we not prove Navier Stokes equation while we could use it to find some ground breaking theories such as Ekman dynamics and Sverdrup dynamics which are almost totally based on Navier Stokes.

  • @hkhamzaa
    @hkhamzaa6 күн бұрын

    2:34 how we get 1 in first term? I think the series should start from 2nd term

  • @monugill6740
    @monugill674013 күн бұрын

    Mam plese give some tips to improve maths

  • @Kounomura
    @KounomuraАй бұрын

    In my understanding, prime numbers are bridges between integes. If two integers have a common prime factor, then they are related in some way, there is a transition, a connection between them. If they do not have a common prime factor, then they are strangers. Irrational numbers are the paths to infinity. I also consider complex numbers as bridges, but in this sense they play a much more complex and interesting role. In this way, the set of all numbers is a giant map where the most interesting and strange things can happen. The integers on this map only play the role of highways. Althougt you can get everywhere through them, with little or big tricks, or with very sophisticated ideas..

  • @miklee4834
    @miklee483423 күн бұрын

    Hopefully miss sleightholm can do a video on hydro magnetic dynamics. 😊😊

  • @teamomine
    @teamomineАй бұрын

    you are my inspiration ❤

  • @RosaLichtenstein01
    @RosaLichtenstein01Ай бұрын

    Excellent as usual, Ellie. But, isn't there a problem with the definiton of prime numbers usually given, that a number is prime if it is divisble by one and itself? The problem is that the number one would qualify as prime in that case. A better definition is that a number is prime if it has exactly two factors. That rules out one (which has only one factor), but allows all the other primes.

  • @MinecraftMasterNo1

    @MinecraftMasterNo1

    Ай бұрын

    1 used to be considered a prime back in the days. It is only recently in modern math because mathematicians got too tired of assigning properties and saying "all prime but 1" that they reclassified prime numbers to exclude 1.

  • @RosaLichtenstein01

    @RosaLichtenstein01

    Ай бұрын

    @@MinecraftMasterNo1 Yes, thanks, I did know that, but my point related to numbers that are currently counted as prime.

  • @MinecraftMasterNo1

    @MinecraftMasterNo1

    Ай бұрын

    @@RosaLichtenstein01 Well, how is it a problem if the way primes are defined is merely a choice? Primes can exclude/include 1 depending on how you choose to classify them. There is no problem with using one definition over the other. You just have to be consistent.

  • @nat-ku9dn

    @nat-ku9dn

    Ай бұрын

    can you say that?surely the whole point of a prime would be two factors, one and itself, making 1 not a prime because one is one… 😅

  • @RosaLichtenstein01

    @RosaLichtenstein01

    Ай бұрын

    @@MinecraftMasterNo1 It isn't a problem in that sense, it is just that the defintion usually heard, that Ellie repeated, allows one to be a prime when it no longer is a prime. It is hardly being consistent if one is no longer a prime but the defintion commonly used says it still is.

  • @SumanYadav-wr3cn
    @SumanYadav-wr3cn16 күн бұрын

    Provide lectures on sieve theory

  • @bozydarziemniak1853
    @bozydarziemniak1853Ай бұрын

    1:55 It isn't true. Pattern for prime numbers which I have found is: product function (big pi symbol) from j=2 to j=n-1 from [sin (PI*n/j)] Where j and n are natural numbers and n is number which we check as a potential prime number. This pattern gives not zero result for not prime numbers and 0 for prime numbers.

  • @CasparusBadenhorst
    @CasparusBadenhorstАй бұрын

    Fascinating. I will not reject a million dollar.

  • @calicoesblue4703

    @calicoesblue4703

    29 күн бұрын

    I wouldn’t either

  • @dlxaytra1087
    @dlxaytra1087Ай бұрын

    Nice video!

  • @user-zq3ty9tu2g
    @user-zq3ty9tu2g13 күн бұрын

    Pvs NP, I'm using this property in mathematics my entire life assuming P=NP .I thought it was a creative way to look at these things But now i know it was a problem not solved yet

  • @ianstopher9111
    @ianstopher911128 күн бұрын

    My background is in QCD, so the mass gap is closest to my heart, but BSD has stimulated more research and exploration for me. The equivalence between the rate vanishing of vanishing of the L-function and the RHS with #Tor and #Sha and the regulator, the equivalence looks like magic. I don't claim to understand Langlands is any meaningful depth, but there is enough voodoo with BSD to keep me happy about the wonder of Mathematics.

  • @mathishasler4093
    @mathishasler4093Ай бұрын

    I give you a week to do your homework. In the next video we want to see the solutions! My favorite one is P NP because it would change the world drastically if we could solve it. But im afraid i am not the chosen one

  • @WICKEDMagma
    @WICKEDMagmaАй бұрын

    What they teach in class vs whats on the test

  • @rudycummings4671
    @rudycummings4671Ай бұрын

    I thought you would have mentioned the Collatz conjecture

  • @Michael75579

    @Michael75579

    Ай бұрын

    The Collatz conjecture is interesting because it's one of a class of problems that is easy to state but unexpectedly hard to prove - the Twin Prime conjecture is another - but I don't know how much interesting new maths would flow from a proof either way. While most mathematicians believe the Riemann hypothesis to be true and it's been tested up to very large numbers, that doesn't necessarily mean it is true; as the video said we only need one counterexample, but there's no guarantee that exhaustive search will ever find it. Compare it to the Mertens conjecture. This has been proven to be false but we don't have any known counterexamples; all we know is that it must fail somewhere below 10^(6.91*10^39)

  • @henrikschmid
    @henrikschmidАй бұрын

    9:05 Not all mathematicians believe P does not equal NP. I think Don Knuth stated in an interview he believes P equals NP.

  • @karoshabudhram8219
    @karoshabudhram8219Ай бұрын

    Navierstokes equation I think griogri perelman can solve it but he is not interested in maths anymore. I think he solved it but he won't share it .

  • @childrenofkoris
    @childrenofkoris12 күн бұрын

    u dont need a patern to solve a patern for prime number, you can achieve this easily by writing a program to calculate a number input whether it can be divided by other numbers with integer value beside the number 1 and thr number itself.. this problem is solved

  • @alphonsesynrem28
    @alphonsesynrem28Ай бұрын

    Out of 7 problems, 4 and 1/2 already solved. Now only 2 and1/2 more to go. Keep the cash ready, coming with a bag to collect.

  • @calicoesblue4703

    @calicoesblue4703

    29 күн бұрын

    Hahaha🤣🤣🤣😎👍

  • @bobbobson6867
    @bobbobson6867Ай бұрын

    I could only solve 6 of them 😔Do I still get a prize?

  • @olivercollard8767
    @olivercollard8767Ай бұрын

    2:38 would it not be n=0 instead of n=1 if the first term is 1?

  • @henrikschmid

    @henrikschmid

    Ай бұрын

    The "1+" in the RHS ist incorrect.

  • @DomesticEsports
    @DomesticEsports6 күн бұрын

    Im watching this video rn because i think i broke math finding a new equation so find how many lines depending on how many dots depending on how many lines each dot gets i just started learning geometry and im breaking it

  • @DomesticEsports

    @DomesticEsports

    6 күн бұрын

    Example 1 is if you have 14 dots and connected all the dots to each other it would be +13'-1(my new equation) this is the same as 14(14-1)/2

  • @DomesticEsports

    @DomesticEsports

    6 күн бұрын

    Example 2 if you have 26 dots and want to connect the 26 dots to each other but each dot has to have only 5 lines no more no less it would be +25'-5=75 This is what I'm calling unsynced multiplication this can be written as 25+20+15+10+5 it has to get to zero or it won't work and has to be a pattern

  • @kinderzabawki545
    @kinderzabawki545Ай бұрын

    Gregory's thinking, the mathematician that solved Poincare conjecture was wrong - you can't think this way: to solve a big problem you need to be a big mathematician. Anyone can solve any problem. Anyone can be the lucky guy one day. Please remember this.

  • @kennethvalbjoern
    @kennethvalbjoernАй бұрын

    Thanks for a great video. You're a smart young woman 🤓

  • @samuelpak669
    @samuelpak669Ай бұрын

    What about the Goldbach Conjecture?

  • @DJF1947

    @DJF1947

    Ай бұрын

    It is not on the list.

  • @usic_imaging
    @usic_imaging3 күн бұрын

    The rules of submission are nearly as hard as the problem :)

  • @leematthews6812
    @leematthews6812Ай бұрын

    Back in 2000, when a million dollars was worth a lot more than it is now!

  • @calicoesblue4703

    @calicoesblue4703

    29 күн бұрын

    Facts, those questions should be worth more.

  • @thehint1954
    @thehint1954Ай бұрын

    BSD seems like it's the most solvable to me and easily my favourite

  • @Movies.com8989
    @Movies.com8989Ай бұрын

    Hii mam how to solve hard problem for jee advance ❤❤❤

  • @richardgomes5420
    @richardgomes5420Ай бұрын

    I like the last millennial problem, since, as far as I understand, it arises from observed facts in Nature. I mean: many times mathematicians invent stuff which later find some application in Physics. Here, it seems it was the other way round.

  • @viet_lekhanh
    @viet_lekhanhАй бұрын

    I love this🥰😍❤!!!

  • @mangeshghadge5539
    @mangeshghadge5539Ай бұрын

    do u have a msc degree in mathematics ?

  • @mathematicsclass1001
    @mathematicsclass1001Ай бұрын

    I want to connect to you for this question plz reply me

  • @sumrathtamang4791
    @sumrathtamang479123 күн бұрын

    Hey I am from Nepal a very very poor boy from itahari I learned the synopsis of pure and applied mathematics in 1 year and now when I observed that question them I think that I can break down that problem.

  • @ngok9063
    @ngok9063Ай бұрын

    why dont you solve it ellie sleightholm

  • @davethesid8960
    @davethesid8960Ай бұрын

    Great summary! It's pronounced [Poenkarey].

  • @lucidlynxxx
    @lucidlynxxxАй бұрын

    Okay I'm coming..

  • @StarNicolas3302
    @StarNicolas3302Ай бұрын

    Would 1000000 dollars cover the cost of a maths PhD in 2024?

  • @alex79suited
    @alex79suitedАй бұрын

    The p=np problem, I was told about that. When was this prize first established? When year if you could. Quickly please. Peace ✌️ 😎

  • @BELLAROSE21212
    @BELLAROSE21212Ай бұрын

    Okay if there is a pattern that will distributes primes , what’s next ?

  • @TheAAZSD

    @TheAAZSD

    Ай бұрын

    Given that RSA is dependent on larger and larger primes multiplied together, if we knew the pattern to the prime numbers, then it would be computationally cheaper to produce new primes for RSA. That's probably the application to most peoples lives. But frankly, knowing about patterns it beautiful on its own.

  • @swedishpsychopath8795
    @swedishpsychopath8795Ай бұрын

    I saw this video today and I started to look into a formula to give the n-th prime (straight and not by trial and error). I've spent 2 hours and I'm close to have a solution but I don't know how to have it verified? I've done some simulations using python and It is extremely promising. How can I make a test-suite to verify my formula since I need a index of primes to verify against? Btw: I have an iq of 157 so it wasn't too difficult. But plz? Where can i publish my solution?

  • @massivememer7893

    @massivememer7893

    Ай бұрын

    there are many formulas for the nth prime. they just arent very useful

  • @swedishpsychopath8795

    @swedishpsychopath8795

    Ай бұрын

    @@massivememer7893 I just found the pattern for prime numbers - and you are saying it doesn't matter? She clearly said nobody has found the pattern - yet here I am with the solution after investigating this for 2 hours.

  • @swedishpsychopath8795

    @swedishpsychopath8795

    Ай бұрын

    @@massivememer7893 I have NO IDEA why youtube is ghost banning and deleting my comments. Anyways: I don't understand why you say it doesn't matter when she clearly stated in the video nobody has found a pattern the prime numbers follow. Yet - here I am - I found a siginificant breakthrough after looking into this for 2 hours.

  • @massivememer7893

    @massivememer7893

    Ай бұрын

    @@swedishpsychopath8795 i didnt say they dont matter, just they exist and the ones we do have arent very useful. because they just reduce to encodings of algorithms for finding the nth prime: see willan's formula, for example

  • @savitatawade2403

    @savitatawade2403

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@swedishpsychopath8795 can you DM your solution to me(so that I can get the credit)

  • @janyjozsef
    @janyjozsefАй бұрын

    A folyadék szimulációban a részecskéknek adjatok spint.

  • @stephenhomewood1176
    @stephenhomewood1176Ай бұрын

    Surely the Collatz Conjecture should be in this list? It's easy to explain but so far impossible to prove.

  • @dihydrogen

    @dihydrogen

    Ай бұрын

    it's not one of the millennium problems so

  • @WinWitWon
    @WinWitWonАй бұрын

    I solved all of them for fun, but lost the paper...

  • @calicoesblue4703

    @calicoesblue4703

    29 күн бұрын

    Lmao🤣🤣🤣😎👍

  • @onyameabasa

    @onyameabasa

    23 күн бұрын

    then solve them again since you know the solution hahaha

  • @WinWitWon

    @WinWitWon

    23 күн бұрын

    @@onyameabasa sorry I have a headache, ill get back to you later...

  • @onyameabasa

    @onyameabasa

    23 күн бұрын

    @@WinWitWon hahaha

  • @Info-Mafia
    @Info-MafiaАй бұрын

    Anyone would like to be a team and think about solving them?

  • @ronaldo910
    @ronaldo910Ай бұрын

    Looking forward to do a phd in mathematics can you please help me🙏

  • @lennyaarons-ditson3372

    @lennyaarons-ditson3372

    Ай бұрын

    If you're in high school, look at university level math books. It will terrify you at first. Real analysis, get some logic books. I promise you that you can do it. People will say they don't study but they absolutely do study. Get your head down, don't drink or take anything and graps the concepts. Go to lectures, take proper notes, review note, go to office hours and go to problem set classes.

  • @ronaldo910

    @ronaldo910

    Ай бұрын

    @@lennyaarons-ditson3372 no no I completed btech and currently pursuing mba in finance

  • @user-mv9qy5cx8w
    @user-mv9qy5cx8wАй бұрын

    Is'nt collatz conjecture one of the millenium problems???

  • @lucidlynxxx

    @lucidlynxxx

    Ай бұрын

    nope: 1 Solved: - The Poincaré Conjecture 6 Unsolved: - Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture - Hodge Conjecture - Navier-Stokes Existence and Smoothness - P vs NP Problem - Riemann Hypothesis - Yang-Mills Existence and Mass Gap

  • @user-mv9qy5cx8w

    @user-mv9qy5cx8w

    Ай бұрын

    @@lucidlynxxx had anyone solved the collatz conjecture?

  • @Unchained_Alice

    @Unchained_Alice

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-mv9qy5cx8w It's unsolved but it isn't considered an important problem. It's more a fun one really. The millennium prize problems were some of the most important unsolved problems in maths

  • @MinecraftMasterNo1

    @MinecraftMasterNo1

    Ай бұрын

    @@Unchained_Alice The Millennium Prize selects problems with the largest set of immediate applications that are known. Because Collatz is unsolved and is probably unsolvable given current mathematical tools, the way in which someone solves it will likely be much more important than the conjecture itself and will open up entirely new areas of math, whose applications could be equally, if not more, important.

  • @user-mv9qy5cx8w

    @user-mv9qy5cx8w

    Ай бұрын

    @@Unchained_Alice thanks 😊

  • @Neodynium.the_permanent_magnet
    @Neodynium.the_permanent_magnetАй бұрын

    Riemann: "where _p_ is _a_ prime number", actually that's the product for _all_ prime numbers.

  • @abdelqadertaymouri6544
    @abdelqadertaymouri654425 күн бұрын

    hello Dear =😊》elllie 1- how old are you? 2- do you want get phd ¿

  • @Mangputt
    @MangputtАй бұрын

    Ooo lady, You can fix me...

  • @sunuwarpravakar6176
    @sunuwarpravakar6176Ай бұрын

    Ok will help to solve you. I'll cook food for you and do everything until you solve this.

  • @Simeulf
    @SimeulfАй бұрын

    I solved them in my head.

  • @IshanOtaku-sq9ou

    @IshanOtaku-sq9ou

    Ай бұрын

    😂😂😂😂

  • @savitatawade2403

    @savitatawade2403

    Ай бұрын

    most normal jee aspirant

  • @calicoesblue4703

    @calicoesblue4703

    29 күн бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣😎👍

  • @willjohnston2959
    @willjohnston2959Ай бұрын

    I wonder if Perelman having declined the million dollar prize will establish a precedent and the next person to solve one of these problems will likewise decline the money.

  • @calicoesblue4703

    @calicoesblue4703

    29 күн бұрын

    I doubt the next person to solve any of these problems will turn down the money. Unlike Perelman Nobody wants to live with there mom there whole lives.

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