Results 111 to 120 of about 1,226 (146)
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1996
Sometimes the most innocent question inspires the greatest effort in mathematics. Christian Goldbach (1690–1764) asked just such a question in 1742. Goldbach was a German mathematician who became professor of mathematics in 1725 in St. Petersburg, Russia. Three years later he traveled to Moscow to tutor Tsar Peter II.
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Sometimes the most innocent question inspires the greatest effort in mathematics. Christian Goldbach (1690–1764) asked just such a question in 1742. Goldbach was a German mathematician who became professor of mathematics in 1725 in St. Petersburg, Russia. Three years later he traveled to Moscow to tutor Tsar Peter II.
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On the second Goldbach conjecture
BIT, 1966The results in this paper suggest that Goldbach's conjecture that every odd number is the sum of three primes is true even under the requirement that two of the primes be the same and the third be “arbitrarily” small.
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A study on Goldbach conjecture
Journal of Mathematical Chemistry, 2016zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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Notes on further refining de Sitter swampland conjecture with inflationary models
Chinese Journal of Physics, 2022Mohammad Reza Alipour
exaly
Normal Scalar Curvature Conjecture and its applications
Journal of Functional Analysis, 2011Zhiqin Lu
exaly
From the Mahler Conjecture to Gauss Linking Integrals
Geometric and Functional Analysis, 2008Greg Kuperberg
exaly

