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Mathematics 8 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Quiz: solve Riemann Hypothesis

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@ParthKohli , @lalaly

OpenStudy (anonymous):

its just a quiz if you want to take apart you are welcome

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Annas, nice joke.

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

- so this ,,proof" mean 1 million USA. dollars do you know it ?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

no i dont know that lol

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it is the toughest maths problem

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

yes till today so what say that ,,in plane of complex numbers every primes has areal part of 1/2 " ok ?

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

,,a real part "

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@jhonyy9, that's not the Riemann hypothesis.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

The Riemann Hypothesis is that all nontrivial zeroes of \(\zeta(s)\) have a real part of \(\frac{1}{2}\).

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

yes i have thought it the same --- sorry

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it's that the zeros of the Riemann Zeta function have a real part of 1/2 , the zeros correspond to errors in the function used to estimate the number of primes

OpenStudy (anonymous):

If anyone could prove the Reimann Hypothesis, they wouldn't be on Openstudy.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Gauss proved the Riemann Hypothesis in one line, and he did it while on a unicycle.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

hey dude Reimann Hypothesis is made by a man so a man can solve it too

OpenStudy (anonymous):

was the Riemann Hypothesis was "made" or "discovered" ? discuss.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@Hermeezey, you're insulting all of OS. (with statistically likelihood as a justification)

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

why you think it in this way ?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Some numbers have the special property that they cannot be expressed as the product of two smaller numbers, e.g., 2, 3, 5, 7, etc. Such numbers are called prime numbers, and they play an important role, both in pure mathematics and its applications. The distribution of such prime numbers among all natural numbers does not follow any regular pattern, however the German mathematician G.F.B. Riemann (1826 - 1866) observed that the frequency of prime numbers is very closely related to the behavior of an elaborate function ζ(s) = 1 + 1/2s + 1/3s + 1/4s + ... called the Riemann Zeta function. The Riemann hypothesis asserts that all interesting solutions of the equation ζ(s) = 0 lie on a certain vertical straight line. This has been checked for the first 1,500,000,000 solutions. A proof that it is true for every interesting solution would shed light on many of the mysteries surrounding the distribution of prime numbers.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

i found this in my search

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

this words was to Hermeezey

OpenStudy (anonymous):

so jhonyy can you give it a try

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@Limitless ok lemme rephrase. If anyone could prove the Riemann Hypothesis, they PROBABLY would not be on Openstudy right now. btw, i didn't mean it as an insult. I don't think the human race will ever discover time-travel either, but that doesn't mean I'm insulting the human race. If you did take offense to it, thats my bad for not wording it with enough sarcasm.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

calm down buddy ... Riemann Hypothesis was founded/discovered by some human so why not a human can solve it. and please stick to the topic

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@Hermeezey, I don't mean any harshness with what I said. I just wanted you to know that how you phrased it and that the implied meaning was offensive. Your actual views (as you have stated them now) aren't offensive at all. Also, time-travel is possible.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I should clarify: Time travel is possible in a very bizarre and theoretical sense.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

ok thank you all for participating in the quiz i really appreciate your love for helping other thank you very much :) have a nice day/night/evening :)

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

so let p an idifferent prime number from the set of prime numbers P ,p>2 note p3 =3 , p5 =5 ,p7 =7 ,....,pn =2n+1 where n is a natural number so what we know again that : 1 +1/2 = 3/2 --- what sign (p3)/2 2 +1/2 = 5/2 --- ------ (p5)/2 3 +1/2 = 7/2 --------- (p7)/2 5 +1/2 = 11/2 ------- (p11)/2 6 +1/2 = 13/2 ------- (p13)/2 ... ... - so how can you writing these for the case of Riemann"s zeta function ?

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

annas so do you like really ?

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

like it really ?

jhonyy9 (jhonyy9):

thank you very much good luck bye

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yap

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