A virtually unknown
professor has taken a major step towards solving a numerical problem which has
baffled the finest minds in mathematics for centuries.
Dr Yitang Zhang is a
researcher at the University of New Hampshire Photo: UNH
Dr Yitang Zhang, who
once resorted to working at Subway when he could not find an academic job, has
received glowing reviews for his "astounding" new paper on number
theory.
His breakthrough is a
significant step towards proving a long-standing theory on prime numbers –
numbers which can only be divided by themselves and by one.
The development is all
the more astonishing because Dr Zhang, a researcher at the University of New
Hampshire, had until now been a virtual unknown even among experts in his
field.
A quirk of prime
numbers is that they often come in pairs separated by two, which are known as
"twin primes", for example three and five, 11 and 13 or 18383549 and
18383551.
Prime numbers are
common at the lower end of the numerical scale and become much rarer among
larger numbers, but although twin primes become extremely hard to find there is
no suggestion they vanish completely.
Mathematicians have
long theorised that there is an infinite number of twin primes – an idea known
as the "twin prime conjecture" – but none have ever been able to
prove it.
Dr Zhang took a major
step towards doing so, however, by demonstrating that no matter how large a
twin prime is, there will always be another pair of primes separated from it by
less than 70 million.
Although his paper
does not conclusively show that there is an infinite number of twin primes, it
effectively proves that the gaps between prime pairs does not keep on growing
to an infinite size.
Richard Taylor, a
member of the editorial board at the Annals of Mathematics journal, where the
paper was published, said Dr Zhang had published "hardly anything"
before and was not regarded as a "big name".
"It's a steady
stream of papers which tends to get you jobs," he added. "Maybe he
likes to think about the big problems – and you don't solve those very
often".
Dr Zhang told The
Independent the 70 million figure in his paper could in fact be
reduced to a smaller number, but he may leave that work to someone else and
"turn my interest to some other problems".
He added that working
at Subway while searching for a job at a university "wasn't bad" but
that "whenever I was doing it I was thinking about maths".
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