A Rutger's University Professor has finally solved a very complicated higher mathematical problem related to a 1955 problem.
A Rutger’s University Professor has finally solved a very complicated higher mathematical problem related to a 1955 problem.
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We are pretty sure this probably is way beyond our understanding, or comprehension, but it is great to know there are very talented and dedicated individuals who do not take ‘NO or IMPOSSIBLE’ for answer but rather are willing to spend time, energy and resources to take the ‘Bull by the Horns to resolve and find the solution”.
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“Double Victory in Mathematics.. Researcher Solves Two Historic Conjectures
Rutgers professor’s proofs will provide deeper understanding of math mysteries and may lead to advances in science and technology
A Rutgers University-New Brunswick professor who has devoted his career to resolving the mysteries of higher mathematics has solved two separate, fundamental problems that have perplexed mathematicians for decades.
The solutions to these long-standing problems could further enhance our understanding of symmetries of structures and objects in nature and science and of long-term behavior of various random processes arising in fields ranging from chemistry and physics to engineering, computer science and economics.
Pham Tiep, the Joshua Barlaz Distinguished Professor of Mathematics in the Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences Department of Mathematics, has completed a proof of the 1955 Height Zero Conjecture posed by Richard Brauer, a leading German-American mathematician who died in 1977. Proof of the conjecture – commonly viewed as one of the most outstanding challenges in a field of math known as the representation theory of finite groups – was published in the September issue of the Annals of Mathematics.
https://www.rutgers.edu/news/double-breakthrough-mathematician-solves-two-long-standing-problems
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