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         Goldbach's Conjecture:     more books (25)
  1. Uncle Petros and Goldbach's Conjecture: A Novel of Mathematical Obsession by Apostolos Doxiadis, 2001-02-03
  2. The Goldbach Conjecture (2nd Edition)
  3. Transtheoretic Foundations of Mathematics, Volume 1C: Goldbach Conjecture by H. Pogorzelski, 1997-12
  4. Uncle Petros and Goldbach's Conjecture by Apostolos Doxiadis, 2001-03-05
  5. Oncle Petros ou la conjecture de Goldbach by Apostolos Doxiadis, 2002-01-14
  6. The Goldbach Conjecture and the Universe of Primes by Charles William Johnson, 2007-11-26
  7. Uncle Petros and Goldbach's Conjecture : A Novel of Mathematical Obsession by Apostolos K. Doxiadis, 2000
  8. Hilbert's Problems: Goldbach's Conjecture, Continuum Hypothesis, Consistency, Diophantine Set, Hilbert's Third Problem, Hilbert's Tenth Problem
  9. Uncle Petros and Goldbachs Conjecture - 2000 publication. by Apostolos Doxiadis, 2000
  10. Conjectures About Prime Numbers: Goldbach's Conjecture, Twin Prime Conjecture, Goldbach's Weak Conjecture, Schinzel's Hypothesis H
  11. Goldbach Conjecture
  12. Uncle Petros and Goldbach's Conjecture.(Review): An article from: World Literature Today by Minas Savvas, 2000-06-22
  13. Analytic Number Theory: Goldbach's Conjecture, Prime Number Theorem, Elliptic Curve, Elliptic Function, Brun's Constant
  14. Additive Number Theory: Goldbach's conjecture, Waring's problem, Goldbach's weak conjecture, Polite number, Schnirelmann density

81. Prime News
quite safe. For more information see News Article from the times; goldbach'sconjecture from the Prime Glossary; Verifying goldbach's
http://www.utm.edu/cgi-bin/caldwell/bubba/research/primes/cgi/news/
Prime News
We at the Prime Pages have decided to begin a page highlighting news related to prime numbers. If you have any news items, please let us know NEWS ITEMS (reverse chronological order) Chris Caldwell (no email) from 206.240.202.158 at 03/22/00 08:19AM
Title
One million dollars offered for Goldbach proof
News Item
ASSOCIATED PRESS, LONDON, March 17 THE THEORY, known as Goldbach’s Conjecture, was suggested by the Prussian mathematician Christian Goldbach in 1742. It’s easy enough to think of an even number that is the sum of two prime numbers — those which cannot be divided evenly by any number except themselves. For instance, 5 plus 7 equals 12, or 67 plus 3 equals 70. But so far it has been impossible to prove that it works for every imaginable even number. Faber and Faber, in conjunction with Bloomsbury Publishing in the United States, announced the challenge Friday to promote the coming release of “Uncle Petros and Goldbach’s Conjecture,” by Apostolos Doxiadis The proof must be completed wthin two yearsso most likely the publisher is quite safe. For more information see:

82. Mathematical Mysteries: The Goldbach Conjecture
Plus Online Maths Magazine Regular Item
http://pass.maths.org.uk/issue2/xfile
PRIME NRICH PLUS
Current Issue
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Mathematical mysteries: the Goldbach conjecture
Prime numbers provide a rich source of speculative mathematical ideas. Some of the mystical atmosphere that surrounds them can be traced back to Pythagoras and his followers who formed secret brotherhoods in Greece, during the 5th Century BC. The Pythagoreans believed that numbers had spiritual properties. The discovery that some numbers such as the square root of 2 cannot be expressed exactly as the ratio of two whole numbers was so shocking to Pythagoras and his followers that they hushed up the proof! Today, prime numbers are fascinating but they are also of commercial importance, since the best commercial and military ciphers depend on their properties. (See " Discovering new primes " in Issue 1 - it is yet to be proved that there are infinitely many Mersenne primes.)

83. Unsolved Problem 5
29Jan-1995 Unsolved Problem 5 Is every even integer larger than 2the sum of two primes? A prime number is an integer larger than
http://cage.rug.ac.be/~hvernaev/problems/Problem5.html
29-Jan-1995
Unsolved Problem 5:
Is every even integer larger than 2 the sum of two primes?
A prime number is an integer larger than 1 whose only positive divisors are 1 and itself. For example, the even integer 50 is the sum of the two primes 3 and 47.
Reference:
[Beiler 1966]
Albert H. Beiler, Recreations in the Theory of Numbers: The Queen of Mathematics Entertain. 2nd edition. Dover. New York: 1966. Page 225.
Each week, for your edification, we publish a well-known unsolved mathematics problem. These postings are intended to inform you of some of the difficult, yet interesting, problems that mathematicians are investigating. We do not suggest that you tackle these problems, since mathematicians have been unsuccessfully working on these problems for many years. general references
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