Millennium Problems: Math’s Million Dollar Bounties

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Жыл бұрын

For those not willing to roll the dice that their mathematical discoveries will be important enough to earn one of these large cash rewards, there is good news. There are a number of specific math problems for which there is a cash bounty given to the first person to solve them. The most famous of these are the Millennium Prize Problems, a set of seven math problems worth $1 million each.
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Пікірлер: 434
@HeavyMetalMouse
@HeavyMetalMouse Жыл бұрын
I love how weird and esoteric, but also how simple to actually express the Riemann Conjecture is. "There's this special function; it takes inputs and spits out outputs, just like any function. We're interested in what inputs make it spit out zero. The conjecture says that every input that makes the function spit out zero is either a 'trivial' value (one of a well known family of answers), or, if there be any others, they must be found on a very specific line." It's that latter part that's the hard part to prove or disprove. All the 'hard parts' of the problem are wrapped up in the consequences of what the specific function we're looking at is... the actual function itself is relatively simple to state, but once you start fiddling with it, it ends up falling right into a sort of 'uncanny valley' of mathematical implications that make actually working with it fiendishly hard. One of two things could be proven: that there exists a non-trivial input that *isn't* on the special line, but that still spits out zero (probably just by finding one); or that it is impossible to find such a counter example (likely by some kind of proof by contradiction). It isn't immediately obvious from looking at the problem why it's so important or interesting. Weirdly, it turns out that, if we assume the Conjecture is true, it makes a whole *slew* of other extremely important unknown results (many of which involve prime numbers) effectively 'free'. In a sense, it's a lynchpin that could make or break a *bunch* of other really big-deal maths. This is one reason that a lot of people are *pretty* sure it has to be right, though again, it doesn't actually prove it.
@HuheJass
@HuheJass Жыл бұрын
Yes! You may be interested in some of this man’s current work/research- Robert Edward Grant - I believe he already has a proof for the Riemann *hypothesis*, but as you mentioned it’s merely the key/lock or doorway, to a whole slew of new universal constants and understanding of the world around us. Funny thing about the prime numbers part is the pattern it creates, and the relationship between primes, means that almost all current prime number cryptology encryption and even quantum encryption methods will be essentially obsolete. (Part of why Robert has Not released everything he has found, is he had created/is working on a new method of encryption that can replace the now compromised methods)
@themoojuice89
@themoojuice89 10 ай бұрын
​@HuheJass you really sent me down a rabbit hole with that name, but having now learned an enormous amount about Robert edward grant as well as having read numerous of his published papers in full, I feel confident in saying that unfortunately he is not the prodigy which he professes to be. Instead, his significant intellect seems to be tainted with some form of narcissism which results in him being far more confident in his conclusions than he has any right to be. His work on the great pyramid at giza as shown on his website is a prime example of this, showcasing numerous absurd conclusions and his paper on prime numbers is a demonstration in misguided intellectual narcissism. I was super excited to have found a new genius out there pushing the boundaries of science and humanity, however I can sadly assure anybody reading this that Robert edward grant is definitely not that person, and I wouldn't trust his cryptography nor any of his other inventions/discoveries/assertions in the slightest. Sorry to burst your bubble 😞 I am just as saddened as you are by this, I assure you. Edit: Oh, actually I looked even deeper, and he's just a straight up fraudster. Google his name + fraud to learn more, but yeah. Definitely not going to solve any of the millennium problems, is Robert edward grant, I can tell you that much. Lol.
@lilbaz8732
@lilbaz8732 9 ай бұрын
@@HuheJass was he the one in witnail and i?
@HuheJass
@HuheJass 9 ай бұрын
@@lilbaz8732 No, I’ve never heard of that, but Witnail is a Richard Grant. Robert Grant isn’t an actor, he was the youngest CEO on the nasdaq, made Botox popular (he was president of Allergan Medical at the time), funds a real/working company that’s successfully working on transmutation of elements, and now spend his time bridging current physics theory’s and mathematics with the missing pieces- A true universal/working theory of physics for everything. Including the math to explain, and eventually manipulate, time, gravity, and space.
@calicoesblue4703
@calicoesblue4703 5 ай бұрын
Nothing is ever really proved.
@stranger6822
@stranger6822 Жыл бұрын
I both appreciate and associate with the "I have no idea what I'm talking about" energy in this video.
@Djoarhet001
@Djoarhet001 Жыл бұрын
@Brian Dawson So basically being omniscience? Feels a lot like that problem is asking if we can become God?
@Djoarhet001
@Djoarhet001 Жыл бұрын
@Brian Dawson Yeah I get you. I don't mean God in a literal sense but having the ability to know everything instantly sounds pretty "God like". I mean, imagine the implications of having that kind of knowledge.. I'm not religious btw, it would still have to be scientific to be acceptable. And to be fair, most of this goes way over my head and I am certainly misunderstanding a lot of it wrong , math is hard 😅
@ignitionfrn2223
@ignitionfrn2223 Жыл бұрын
3:30 - Chapter 1 - Clay mathematics institute 5:40 - Chapter 2 - P vs NP 8:45 - Chapter 3 - Navier stokes existence & smoothness 10:55 - Chapter 4 - Birch & swinnerton dyer conjecture 12:55 - Chapter 5 - Rieman Hypothesis
@aldopacchiano1
@aldopacchiano1 Жыл бұрын
Hello. A computer scientist here. Great video! apologies for being pedantic but the correct name is polynomial time not polynominal time.
@KristiContemplates
@KristiContemplates Жыл бұрын
You're right. He's unfamiliar with the jargon, and it's a 'cold read' without the generous off-script commentaries found in (eg) his The Casual Criminalist channel.
@patrickrauh996
@patrickrauh996 Жыл бұрын
It's at least correct in the sub
@thermidorthelobster4645
@thermidorthelobster4645 Жыл бұрын
There are a lot of other mispronunciations in this and other videos on this channel. I find it hard to trust he’s done his research on the topics if he hasn’t done the research on the jargon. Not saying he necessarily hasn’t, but it doesn’t inspire confidence. Anybody who has watched any one of thousands of videos on the Riemann hypothesis would know how to pronounce it surely? Or does he learn everything from reading without ever discussing it with others, watching videos or listening to talks? Puzzling.
@kjth2003
@kjth2003 Жыл бұрын
@@thermidorthelobster4645 Simon does very little, if any research himself. Think about how many channels he has, there's no way he'd be able to research for all of them. He has a team who researches for him, and writes the script. Often during the shoot it's the first time he's reading the script which is why he mispronounces words.
@Army_THE_TACSOP
@Army_THE_TACSOP Жыл бұрын
@@kjth2003 agreed he has little if any familiarity with the subject. That is kind of the point. Think of all of his videos as a reaction video. He is reading off a script he intentionally does not read prior in order to give his genuine reaction.
@EyesOfByes
@EyesOfByes Жыл бұрын
Fermat's Theorem is the biggest and best trolling in human history
@bethaltair812
@bethaltair812 Жыл бұрын
Can you expand on this?
@epicmarschmallow5049
@epicmarschmallow5049 Жыл бұрын
@@bethaltair812 it became famous after Fermat stated his "theorem", and made a wry comment about how nice his proof was without writing it down anywhere it could be found. A few hundred years of trying to recreate the proof followed, only for the final proof to be completely different to anything Fermat could have possibly come up with (meaning his own proof was almost certainly flawed)
@justanoman6497
@justanoman6497 Жыл бұрын
8:37 no, that's not the problem. The problem is that all existing encryption algorithm is NP. If P=NP, that means all of them can be easily cracked and we are all screwed. It's one of the few things that will affect people outside of the math/computer/science fields, it affects everyone.
@BuzzKiller23
@BuzzKiller23 Жыл бұрын
I picked one hell of an episode to watch while high.
@spinyslasher6586
@spinyslasher6586 Жыл бұрын
Being a physics major means this is right up my ballpark. And even I have a hard time trying to comprehend just how abstract these stuff can get sometimes.
@tttm99
@tttm99 Жыл бұрын
"Being a physics major means this is right up my ballpark", you say? And not being an English major (I'm guessing) you absolutely nailed mixing your metaphors there 🤣👍 Given you are a physicist though, I wouldn't put it past you that this is one of those brilliant self-digs along the lines of "yesterday I couldn't even spell engineer -- now I is one". Either way, I think your comment wins the internet today. 👍👍👍 Being a computer scientist myself, I appreciate oxymoronic one-liners...
@spinyslasher6586
@spinyslasher6586 Жыл бұрын
@@tttm99 You okay bro? Had a bad day? Got dumped or fired? Wanna vent? If so I'm all ears. It's okay to open up sometimes.
@StevenLockey
@StevenLockey Жыл бұрын
"good for you mate" This is Simon's way of saying his integrity isn't worth 1 million dollars. He'd even advertise raid shadow legends for that amount!!!
@Cameron655
@Cameron655 Жыл бұрын
Props to Andrew Wiles for the Fermat conjecture proof. I was at a cricket match at university when a math student friend strolled up and said that he'd been at a lecture the previous day where it was delivered. (Yeah it had one problem: thanks Taylor for the fix.) I've read the paper and it sort of makes sense, but the Riemann zeta function is more than my medium brain can cope with. But if you look it up on the wiki machine, there are some lovely colorful graphs, which would make excellent poster gifts for nerds whichever holiday season they observe. (Oh, and read Simon Singh's book.)
@williejohnson5172
@williejohnson5172 6 ай бұрын
Wiles is wrong. Proof? 1. Add the natural logs 2+3=5. 2. Take each log to a power of 4 yielding 2^4+3^4=5^4. 3. Using the power rule of natural logs yields [(4x2)+(4x3)=(4x5)]=[8+12=20] 4. Therefore Fermat's last theorem is negated. QED
@sgeskinner
@sgeskinner Жыл бұрын
The partial proof of specific cases of of Birch and Winnerton-Dyer was actually Andrew White solving Fermat as he proved elliptical curves are modular. (Technically he only needed to prove for semi-stable but all elliptical curves are now proved modular)
@gclishe
@gclishe Жыл бұрын
The Riemann zeta function is not written correctly at 13:56. The -s for each term should be an exponent
@Xoque551
@Xoque551 Жыл бұрын
Was looking for this comment
@RSLT
@RSLT 10 ай бұрын
Good point! The Riemann Zeta Function, represented as ζ(s), is defined by the series 1^s + 2^-s + 3^-s + 4^-s + ... or simply 1 + 2^-s + 3^-s + 4^-s + ... This marks just the beginning of a fascinating journey that leads to results like 1 + 2 + 3 + ... = -1/12 and other intriguing concepts.
@jaydenwilson9522
@jaydenwilson9522 9 ай бұрын
the Riemann hypothesis is false.@@RSLT
@RSLT
@RSLT 8 ай бұрын
​@@jaydenwilson9522 Interesting. Some people believe that R.H. is false, but I believe it's correct. There is no reason to believe R.H. is false; however, you certainly can have your opinion, and I hope you can come up with some proof and a video to explain why it's false.
@RSLT
@RSLT 8 ай бұрын
@jaydenwilson9522 Also, please remember that it's very likely there won't be a 1 million dollar bounty, as there is a high possibility it can be reformulated.
@Hillbilly001
@Hillbilly001 Жыл бұрын
First trip into the Whistlerverse today. Mashed that like button. Cheers.
@martinstallard2742
@martinstallard2742 Жыл бұрын
3:23 clay mathematics institute 5:33 p versus np 8:41 navier-stokes existence and smoothness 10:48 birch and winnerton-dyer conjecture 12:51 Riemann hypothesis
@badelementofstyle5238
@badelementofstyle5238 Жыл бұрын
Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture, not winnerton
@ExarchGaming
@ExarchGaming Жыл бұрын
my friend, whom was a math professor at georgia tech worked on the Riemann Hypothesis.
@joshuakurian206
@joshuakurian206 Жыл бұрын
Which of the 7 millennial problems remain unsolved?
@jaydenwilson9522
@jaydenwilson9522 9 ай бұрын
I solved it! but they won't accept my submission lol @@ExarchGaming
@buxeessingh2571
@buxeessingh2571 Жыл бұрын
I know several people who are working on the Riemann Hypothesis and the Navier-Stokes equations. The issue is not the money -- it is the bragging rights.
@Vaeldarg
@Vaeldarg Жыл бұрын
Simon didn't consider that those who can solve these problems, are already capable of making enough money to trivialize the prize amount.
@StoneInMySandal
@StoneInMySandal Жыл бұрын
Navier-Stokes is the secret project of every engineer in my field. The amount of time any individual spends on it varies wildly, but I’d stake my company on the fact everyone in vacuum engineering has a secret folder full of their work on the problem. It’s definitely for the bragging rights.
@jacksonmagas9698
@jacksonmagas9698 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, if you are trying to earn a million dollars then solving one of the millennium problems might just be the hardest way to earn that million.
@jaydenwilson9522
@jaydenwilson9522 9 ай бұрын
i already solved the Reimann hypothesis you bot
@williejohnson5172
@williejohnson5172 6 ай бұрын
Well I beat them all. My solution to the Riemann hypothesis is iron clad. s=0 when Zeta(0)=-.5=i=sqrt(-1)= nontrivial zeroes.
@philhuling8174
@philhuling8174 Жыл бұрын
The statement of the Zeta function didn’t have the requisite exponents and I have always heard it pronounced as “Ree”man
@michaelsommers2356
@michaelsommers2356 Жыл бұрын
Yours is the correct pronunciation. In German 'ie' and 'ei' are pronounced oppositely to how they are pronounced in English. Compare 'Einstein'.
@derekstonjames3451
@derekstonjames3451 Жыл бұрын
I actually didn't really understand a thing and he was speaking clear and plain English. Wow
@duckyoutube6318
@duckyoutube6318 22 күн бұрын
Math is a language so its understandable. You can do it though. Just remember you are about 10,000 hours of study away from being anything you want.
@RSLT
@RSLT 10 ай бұрын
Actually, I'm a fan of this channel, but I didn't expect to see this topic featured here. The presentation was impressively simple and provided a good introduction, along with well-researched content.
@magnemoe1
@magnemoe1 Жыл бұрын
10:00 is an multi billion dollar problem, increase the efficiency of car or jet engines with 1% and its an major gain.
@euanthomas3423
@euanthomas3423 Жыл бұрын
Understanding turbulent flow would help with improving jet engine efficiency.
@elishmuel1976
@elishmuel1976 Жыл бұрын
One should check out the video of Wiles after proving Fermat's Last Theorem in which he basically breaks down in joy and heartache.
@pedrorequio5515
@pedrorequio5515 Жыл бұрын
The issue with P vs NP is that there are NP problems that have very good algorithms that can do it in linear logaritmic time, that is a lot faster than exponential for a great number of samples. One example of such problem is the Fast Fourier Transform(FFT) this makes computation of the fourrier transform almost instante, whereas without this algorithm it is an untractable problem, and this is huge because this is so important in comunication, identification(Think medical exames), it is one of the top algorithms of XX century.
@John_Henry83
@John_Henry83 9 ай бұрын
The reason that most elementary and high school students HATE math is that schools are still teaching it using the terms and methods that Archimedes used 2800 years ago. The students get so confused just trying to understand the words that they never understand the actual principles. I took six semesters of math in high school and another 3 semesters in college. Because I went to what was basically an engineering school I had to use all that math in my major course even after those three semesters. I graduated (barely) but all I did was memorize. I knew which formulas to use in which situations. It was not until decades later when I was in my 40 that many of those proofs and principle started to make sense to me. I had several EUREKA moments.
@lordhorus01
@lordhorus01 Жыл бұрын
To be honest, I'm still stumped by the understanding that you cannot successfully make 1 third of a number of a whole. You end up with .33333ad-infinim. If you convert even one digit to a 4 you gain a greater number then the whole you started with.
@ProSquidGaming
@ProSquidGaming 9 ай бұрын
Something really sad is, the Field’s medal is the highest math prize, however Andrew Wiles didn’t get it as he was 41 years old when he proved the conjecture :(
@mochure
@mochure Жыл бұрын
I saw the mean equation and felt smug. Now after finishing this video I am doubting whether I deserve my degree or not bc I understood nothing lol
@bubblebaath7840
@bubblebaath7840 Жыл бұрын
I hated maths until I started extension 1 in high school and realised how fun it is
@edvin884
@edvin884 Жыл бұрын
As usual, my brain hurts after videos like this.
@Ozgipsy
@Ozgipsy 10 ай бұрын
Math is such a fascinating area.
@Jen39x
@Jen39x Жыл бұрын
That was a fun video; I was one of those crazies that liked math once I was far enough along to study algebra. Unfortunately I’m just not brainy enough to have been good at. I think my differential equations professor let me pass from pity. He was always saying I had creative ideas; a polite way of saying that’s the craziest messed up proof I’ve ever seen
@Draco_ironside
@Draco_ironside Жыл бұрын
This is funny🤣🤣
@androgynousspidermonkey8634
@androgynousspidermonkey8634 Жыл бұрын
Nice derail Kevin! 😂
@y-not
@y-not Жыл бұрын
Maybe you should do a video on all the prizes available for proving the existence of various supernatural things... (which unsurprisingly all go unclaimed 🤔😂)
@SRW_
@SRW_ Жыл бұрын
I want to believe
@jonhall2274
@jonhall2274 Жыл бұрын
Well people believe a multithousand year old magical, mythological, invisible, genocidal psychopath skydaddy is "all loving", and is " more real" than all the other previous multithousand year old, magical, mythological, imaginary fantasy genocidal psychopathic fairytale skydaddies(Ra, Zeus, Jupiter {not the planet obviously it exists}, odin, thor, Yaweh, allah, god, ect) 🤷😂😄
@thedeadbatterydepot
@thedeadbatterydepot Жыл бұрын
I have what you seek,I have ghosts figured out, I have the science caculated, people normally want to make the ghosts leave. Is that the "thing" you have in mind?
@Sideprojects
@Sideprojects Жыл бұрын
Lol, I like that idea.
@TheRotnflesh
@TheRotnflesh Жыл бұрын
The derision at the end...a snort! I'm....amused.
@RichardMcCrory_Neph
@RichardMcCrory_Neph Жыл бұрын
Credit to Kevin for the first description of P vs NP that I can understand, sort of...
@zaco-km3su
@zaco-km3su Жыл бұрын
In a more simplified way, the P vs NP problem is if there is a problem that is very complex that can be solved as fast as a far simpler problem.
@Chris-hx3om
@Chris-hx3om Жыл бұрын
@@zaco-km3su And here I was thinking it was to do with being able to solve the problem as fast as verify the solution... Silly me.
@ImpmanPDX
@ImpmanPDX Жыл бұрын
A couple of days ago I spent a good chunk of an evening going over it with my wife and now I realize I should have just waited haha
@zaco-km3su
@zaco-km3su Жыл бұрын
@@Chris-hx3om Or that. It's just a bit more specific.
@Chris-hx3om
@Chris-hx3om Жыл бұрын
@@zaco-km3su It always is...
@arekkrolak6320
@arekkrolak6320 Жыл бұрын
Grigori Perelman is a legend regardless if he takes the money or not
@marklondon9004
@marklondon9004 Жыл бұрын
Fact Boy goes 3Blue1Brown! Impressive!
@mho...
@mho... Жыл бұрын
The Problem with "higher" math in schools is, that we get it presented as some abstract number/fomulas/equations/etc, that kids have to be able to recite in tests, but rarely with grounded real life applications on why its important or where its used! really a shame, i bet more kids would be interested in it (&physics) if it would be taught closer to "real life"
@SRW_
@SRW_ Жыл бұрын
50 000 dollars to anyone who can finish a yoko ono album
@rtyrsson
@rtyrsson Жыл бұрын
Simon... checking updates on your channels is the highlight of my evening after work. But today... maths. It was like selecting a nice bottle of wine and uncorking it to find your welcome libation wasn't sealed well and has gone sour and you are now denied your relaxing moment. I didn't understand a bit of this episode as maths was not my forte, at all. I'm not certain you (or your writers) were speaking English. I suspect your writer was showing off. But if I understood this subject I would have too. Nonetheless, thank you for your work. It is very much appreciated.
@nedmerrill5705
@nedmerrill5705 Жыл бұрын
uhhh...It's not polyNOMINal time, it's polyNOMIal time. That is, can you solve the problem in polynomial time in terms of the size of the inputs, and not exponential time in terms of the size of the inputs? It's okay, I understand you don't get it. This is just for the record.
@bipolarminddroppings
@bipolarminddroppings Жыл бұрын
Couldn't Perelmen just accept the prize then split it with the other dude? For someone who solved such a hard problem, he seems to have missed an obvious solution to an easy one...
@adriftonasea
@adriftonasea Жыл бұрын
It is a really tiny nitpick but it is polynomial not polynominal; it only has one N.
@chrism6880
@chrism6880 Жыл бұрын
Proving P=NP may lead researchers to look into creating polynomial time algorithms for complex problems, but they're isn't a compelling reason to believe they will quickly develop any
@lool8421
@lool8421 Жыл бұрын
i guess P=?=NP problem could get some help with quantum computing, or eventually find some really basic problem that literally allows you to calculate the minimal possible time it takes to verify and minimal possible time to solve, if it says "everything", then just 1 thing that could disprove it would be enough, but then there's quantum computing which might completely mess up the way we currently think about time complexity
@marklondon9004
@marklondon9004 Жыл бұрын
We need a crossover where Simon gets taught some Numberphile stuff!
@RSLT
@RSLT 10 ай бұрын
Yeap!
@Diamond_Brony
@Diamond_Brony 10 ай бұрын
oH. Cool... Ferb, I know what we are gonna be doing today.
@davedavies8002
@davedavies8002 Жыл бұрын
N vs NP would work if N was asked to complete the sudoku in 100x100 ways, if a computer asked every variant of the question once instead of trying every combination
@omnigar9611
@omnigar9611 Жыл бұрын
As always the answer to all of life's hardest problems is 42
@reddog-ex4dx
@reddog-ex4dx Жыл бұрын
Really? I thought it was 97!
@Chris-hx3om
@Chris-hx3om Жыл бұрын
How many roads must a man walk down?
@omnigar9611
@omnigar9611 Жыл бұрын
@@Chris-hx3om depends on how far you're goin
@wadeperlot671
@wadeperlot671 Жыл бұрын
"Super Computer being super smart?" No Simon! "Super Computer being super Terrifying"!..."Inconceivably Terrifying"!....
@twocvbloke
@twocvbloke Жыл бұрын
When it comes to mathematics, I'm that person that looks a the price of toilet roll and giggles at the "cost per 100 shts" on the label... :P
@jamo491
@jamo491 Жыл бұрын
The opening to this video was on full surround sound top volume and bass in my room.when Simon came in with' MATHEMATICS' I near shit myself
@jarahfluxman20
@jarahfluxman20 Жыл бұрын
Simon, I'm a mathematics PhD student and you got some of the pronunciations wrong. Riemann is pronounced Reeman, Not Ryeman. It's polynomial time, not polynominal time.
@timbeaton5045
@timbeaton5045 Жыл бұрын
Was going to point this out, but you beat me to it. A bit worrying that they will put out a video on this, without checking that the pronunciation is correct. Almost as if they didn't understand it in the first place!
@tommersch4296
@tommersch4296 Жыл бұрын
Countably infinite versus Uncountably infinite
@williejohnson5172
@williejohnson5172 6 ай бұрын
14:40 Hello. Yes I am a maths genius. Here is the solution to the Riemann Hypothesis: s=0 when Zeta(0)=-.5=i=sqrt(-1)= nontrivial zeroes.
@the-chillian
@the-chillian Жыл бұрын
Polynomial is po-lee-no-mee-al, not po-lee-nom-in-i-mal. So we know Simon doesn't really do math.
@HavianEla
@HavianEla Жыл бұрын
I think it’s also about how math is taught. In a school I attended with common core math, I was crying every math class and the teachers were notoriously awful at teaching it. Go to a school in a different state that doesn’t use common core and I almost overnight started understanding it better. By the end of the year, I had the highest grade in my math class and was considering pursuing Economics. Then my old arch-nemesis of incompetent teachers came up to bat again
@titaniusanglesmith9690
@titaniusanglesmith9690 Жыл бұрын
You are aware that students feel the same way about how math is traditionally taught, and that common core was the only time math clicked for them? You also had teachers who disliked the concept so they poorly explained it.
@tommyrjensen
@tommyrjensen 3 ай бұрын
The NP=P problem must logically be more important than even RH: it will be easy to verify a proof or counterexample to the Riemann Hypothesis, so it would follow from NP=P that it is easy to find such a proof or counterexample.
@NoName-rd6et
@NoName-rd6et 5 ай бұрын
"Polynominal" "Rye men"
@ggEmolicious
@ggEmolicious Жыл бұрын
All those numbers, but she still won't give you her's.
@larryscott3982
@larryscott3982 Жыл бұрын
Bravo. Was that in one take?
@keithkearns93
@keithkearns93 Жыл бұрын
You would think a mathematician could divide by two and share the prize.
@keithkearns93
@keithkearns93 Жыл бұрын
Or he could of accepted the money and given the lot to the other person. Not so smart after all .
@perriannesimkhovitch1127
@perriannesimkhovitch1127 Жыл бұрын
The expanded spherical numberline of the hyperbolic cow: I broke in here to avoid trying to speak up using MSNBC
@shaddr_4975
@shaddr_4975 Жыл бұрын
I knew something was off with the youtube algorithm, only took this video to put 2 and 2 together.
@Eric-zo8wo
@Eric-zo8wo 9 ай бұрын
0:06: 🧠 Mathematics is paradoxical, as our brains are hardwired for basic math but struggle with abstract concepts, yet it remains both the most loved and most hated subject among students. 3:39: 💰 The video discusses the Millennium prize problems, a set of seven unsolved math problems worth one million dollars each. 6:29: 🧩 The video discusses the P vs NP problem and the Navier-Stokes equations. 9:49: 🧮 The video discusses three unsolved problems in mathematics: the Navier-Stokes equations, the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture, and the Riemann hypothesis. 13:07: 💡 The Riemann hypothesis is a problem in number theory that has eluded mathematicians for over a century. Recap by Tammy AI
@TheThisisliving
@TheThisisliving Жыл бұрын
Turbulence is friction...As opposed to going through a undisturbed substance. I guess I don't understand why this would be a problem. Thanks for the video. It keeps me a humble human. Kind of like golf. :)
@peronkop
@peronkop 8 ай бұрын
Well, turbulence isn't friction. It can be caused by and cause friction, but it isn't friction. It's chaos.
@WoodyHHG
@WoodyHHG Жыл бұрын
Feels like Kevin is asking for a pay rise.
@antiisocial
@antiisocial Жыл бұрын
I didn't even try to understand that. LOL
@jonwallace6204
@jonwallace6204 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the if NP != P, then we’ll still get to super smart AI, but if NP = P we could make god-like machines.
@fullfungo
@fullfungo Жыл бұрын
“Polynominal [sic]” “Smooth and globally-defined basically means the equations are consistent and universally applicable” “Vague terms like «chaotic»” “… to prove that a theory [sic] or conjecture is false” “ζ(s) = 1 + 2-s + 3-s + 4-s + …” I’m just disappointed.
@Chrispydotbe
@Chrispydotbe Жыл бұрын
What’s on the back of the door and why is it always half open? Sorry mate but i’ve been watching you for a while (thanks for your great content) but all I can do is stare at that door handle. I’m a camera and editor and it just bugs me. Also, today you forgot to turn on the light in the corridor 😂😂 keep up the good work 😊
@Cap_Olimar
@Cap_Olimar Жыл бұрын
I feel like if your smart enough to solve these problems your smart enough figure out how to make some money
@thedeadbatterydepot
@thedeadbatterydepot Жыл бұрын
The 1 dollar prize is a joke, you have to have your solution public for 2 years. If you can't figure out how to make money with it in two years, they give you some pity money, cause you got robbed for billions from the industries, who did make money from your breakthrough.
@epicmarschmallow5049
@epicmarschmallow5049 Жыл бұрын
@@thedeadbatterydepot completely wrong lmao. The proof has to be public because it needs to be verified, which is incredibly hard to do and takes a lot of time. Most of the problems here are only of interest to pure mathematicians, so most businesses would never be able to monetize it (hell most people outside of university maths departments won't even understand the ramifications of the problem). The million dollar prize is advertising to raise the profile of mathematics as an academic discipline. Nobody good enough at maths to even stand a chance of solving one of the problems (or more likely, contributing to an eventual solution at all) needs money to motivate them
@calicoesblue4703
@calicoesblue4703 5 ай бұрын
@@epicmarschmallow5049Exactly 😎👍
@jilldover2554
@jilldover2554 Жыл бұрын
Well this is going to be shown to 3 classes of 5th graders in August! All they will remember is a million dollars and math, but that’s good enough 🤣
@emceeofmc944
@emceeofmc944 Жыл бұрын
I feel smarter with every Whistler video I cram into my eyeballs.
@Djoarhet001
@Djoarhet001 Жыл бұрын
That's funny because I feel a lot dumber after watching this one 🥲
@ImpmanPDX
@ImpmanPDX Жыл бұрын
Solving for the quadratic equation will tell you if there are rational number solutions for any given standard polynomial right? I'm not a serious mathematician but it seems to me like there should be an analysis equation for elliptical curves that could be reasonably quickly used to determine if the solutions to that curve are rational or non-real. Anyone feel free to tell me if I'm wildly off. That would solve that Birch Winnerton-Dyer conjecture.
@Handelsbilanzdefizit
@Handelsbilanzdefizit Жыл бұрын
The last one I solved two years ago. Easy, when you know the trick. Unfortunately, KZbin deleted my comments with links.
@user-ff8qw2ry6u
@user-ff8qw2ry6u 6 ай бұрын
P = NP P calculate N Divided equally.
@carlstanland5333
@carlstanland5333 Жыл бұрын
Sideprojects humor is like Brain Blaze Lite.
@kalt7990
@kalt7990 8 ай бұрын
He turned down a million dollars because he didn't feel he alone deserved it? Well Mr. Mathematician that's incredibly noble, but from a lowly peasant why didn't you take the money and split it with him? Which seems significantly smarter than turning down completely.
@scooby45247
@scooby45247 Жыл бұрын
lets be honest, if any of the viewers figure out any of these, it wont be for the money.. sure, they may take the money but it wont be the reason they pursued the maths problem..
@glennmcgurrin8397
@glennmcgurrin8397 Жыл бұрын
It kind of sound like if p=np we are all screwed as encryption, digital signatures, and hashes become quickly breakable, most especially public key crypto that is entirely based on trapdoor functions easy to compute in one direction but exceptionally difficult in the other, like factoring large numbers composed of just two very large primes, but it's exceptionally easy to verify whether two primes are the factors, determining them from the product is hard
@nikkirazelli3250
@nikkirazelli3250 Жыл бұрын
regarding turbulence.. maybe I missed something, but it's it just compound, negative, interference patterns, in the flow of the medium?
@bradlevantis913
@bradlevantis913 Жыл бұрын
The math proof I just came up with is this video showed me I’m 7 times stupider than I thought before I watched it
@sanjaykamath90210
@sanjaykamath90210 11 ай бұрын
I know someone who claims to have a solution to one of the problems... Should I believe him?
@RSLT
@RSLT 10 ай бұрын
In science, belief only arises after attempting to challenge and disprove a concept. This approach not only benefits the individual but also extends as valuable assistance to others, especially when one possesses expertise in the subject.
@Montie-Adkins
@Montie-Adkins Жыл бұрын
I got a D minus in high school algebra. So there.
@prakashraj4519
@prakashraj4519 Жыл бұрын
I saw the thumbnail and thought, "what's Vsauce doing here?"
@accountname1047
@accountname1047 Жыл бұрын
Riemann isn't pronounced Rhyman
@kingjeremysircornwell7847
@kingjeremysircornwell7847 Жыл бұрын
I wrote the million dollar math problem as a cubic and I did not get paid.
@linuxophile
@linuxophile Жыл бұрын
"Polynomial", not "polynominal". And the formula flashed on screen for the zeta function was totally mistyped!
@SpiritmanProductions
@SpiritmanProductions 9 ай бұрын
Is he trying to say "polynomial"?
@vincentmiller420
@vincentmiller420 Жыл бұрын
Turbulence is the lack of laminar flow.
@ashleymiller7439
@ashleymiller7439 Жыл бұрын
this guy has the best crackups
@copypaste_pro
@copypaste_pro 11 ай бұрын
The actual problems start here, the first 5 minutes is trash talking 5:37
@newwaveinfantry8362
@newwaveinfantry8362 7 ай бұрын
13:49 - This is wrong. How didi you even get this? It's the analytic continuation of the sum of all reciprocals of powers of s for Re(s) > 1.
@vezokpiraka
@vezokpiraka Жыл бұрын
Butchered Riemann's name and his conjecture. It's actually extremely simple to understand what his conjecture is actually about if you have a graph of the Zeta function. That's the beauty of it. Almost everyone even with minimal understand of math can grasp it, but the solution is so unbelievably complex that you'd spend a lifetime finding it. Out of all the Millenium prize problems, the Riemann conjecture is the most approachable for even high school students. All the others require really advanced concepts in math to even begin to understand and solve, but this one is basically show that Sum(x) = 0.
@williamtell1477
@williamtell1477 Жыл бұрын
Polynomial time != Polynominal time
@joshmajor8662
@joshmajor8662 Жыл бұрын
I’m actually working on a tattoo sleeve for my arm that consists of ALL of the unsolvable equations such as these!! Lol it’s an abstract art sleeve on one arm and mathematical equations on the other. I’ll post pics once it’s done 😉👍😎 haha 😂
@johndavidtackett
@johndavidtackett Жыл бұрын
No lag here bro!
@erikmontville4413
@erikmontville4413 Жыл бұрын
I now feel dumber than I was before watching this. Back to my 3x3 soduku.
@acratone8300
@acratone8300 Жыл бұрын
Money? Money? Who needs money? Do you need money?
@mathswithmike9330
@mathswithmike9330 Жыл бұрын
Which one should I tackle ?
@racheladamjuliewhite
@racheladamjuliewhite Жыл бұрын
Ghosts are real simon
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