tekkmortal
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Genius solves $1m mystery
JOHN INNES
ONE of the seven great unsolved mysteries of mathematics may have been cracked by a reclusive Russian who has no interest in the million dollar prize his solution could win him.
The Poincare Conjecture tries to explain the behaviour of multi-dimensional shapes. Since Henri Poincare suggested the theorem in 1904, great mathematicians have failed to prove it either right or wrong.
But Dr Grigori Perelman, of the Russian Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg, has published two papers offering a solution to a larger-scale problem and experts say that within it is proof that the Poincare Conjecture works.
The cash prize is being offered by the Clay Mathematics Institute in the United States.
JOHN INNES
ONE of the seven great unsolved mysteries of mathematics may have been cracked by a reclusive Russian who has no interest in the million dollar prize his solution could win him.
The Poincare Conjecture tries to explain the behaviour of multi-dimensional shapes. Since Henri Poincare suggested the theorem in 1904, great mathematicians have failed to prove it either right or wrong.
But Dr Grigori Perelman, of the Russian Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg, has published two papers offering a solution to a larger-scale problem and experts say that within it is proof that the Poincare Conjecture works.
The cash prize is being offered by the Clay Mathematics Institute in the United States.

