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Seminar on the History of Mathematics
September 16, 2021 18:00, St. Peterburg, online
 


Who solved Goldbach problem?

N. A. Vavilov
Video records:
MP4 604.3 Mb
Supplementary materials:
Adobe PDF 615.7 Kb

Number of views:
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Video files:314
Materials:148

N. A. Vavilov



Abstract: Here we describe the definitive solution of the ternary = odd Goldbach problem, not its cheaper XX century asymptotic versions, but its original XVIII century absolute form. This is the statement that every odd natural number n>5 can be presented as the sum n=p1+p2+p3 of three natural primes. A solution of this problem was finalised by Harald Helfgott in 2013–2014 and could not have been obtained without the use of computers. In the talk, I discuss the history of this classical problem, both its statement and impact, and the ideas that eventually lead to its solution. The literature is full of gross historical mistakes. In particular, it is claimed that as early as 1930 Schnirelmann has proven that each integer is the sum of s<800.000 primes. In reality, he has never proven any such thing. The first similar results, with much worse bounds for s, were only published in the 1960-ies. From a psychologically viewpoint, the confusion between the Schnirelmann constant S and the absolute Schnirelmann constant s is easily explained by the fact that the first credible bound for Schnirelmann constant S was only published in 1936, while already in 1937 Ivan Vinogradov obtained the bound S<=4 [as a matter of comparison, Helfgott established that even s<=4]. I sketch a possible chain of events that could have lead to the fictitious 800.000 primes. Apart from that, I plan to describe the role of computers in the definitive solution of the odd Goldbach problem, the status of the binary = even Goldbach problem and the known partial results towards its solution, as well as some related problems. *) Zoom ID: 893-744-395-05, password mkn

Supplementary materials: 2021.06.25_vavilov_cm_goldbach_last.pdf (615.7 Kb)
 
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