March 22, 200719 yr http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/21/AR2007032100404.html PALO ALTO, Calif. -- An international team of mathematicians says it has cracked a 120-year-old puzzle that researchers say is so complicated that its handwritten solution would cover the island of Manhattan. The 18-member group of mathematicians and computer scientists was convened by the American Institute of Mathematics in Palo Alto to map a theoretical object known as the "Lie group E8." Lie (pronounced Lee) groups were invented by 19th-century Norwegian mathematician Sophus Lie in his study of symmetrical objects, especially spheres, and differential calculus. The E8 group, which dates to 1887, is the most complicated Lie group, with 248 dimensions, and was long considered impossible to solve. "To say what precisely it is is something even many mathematicians can't understand," said Jeffrey Adams, the project's leader and a math professor at the University of Maryland. The problem's proof, announced Monday at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, took the researchers four years to find. It involves about 60 times as much data as the Human Genome Project. When stored in highly compressed form on a computer hard drive, the solution takes up as much space as 45 days of continuous music in MP3 format. "It's like a Mount Everest of mathematical structures they've climbed now," said Brian Conrey, director of the institute. The calculation does not have any obvious practical applications but could help advance theoretical physics and geometry, researchers said Check out the picture of it on the website. :thumbsup: I like the data storage comparison - I know several guys that can top that too.
March 22, 200719 yr i'm curious to see how they figured out how much space the solution would take without actually writing it out anyway, amazing. they have way too much time
March 22, 200719 yr Yeah I don't understand this at all. What is it? A shape? What's the point of it.
March 22, 200719 yr its to map out how it works i am assuming. its like a chart you can refer to when asking paticular questions. (this is what i am gathering) -G
March 22, 200719 yr Gotta love puzzles and having an extra 4 years of your life to find this: The calculation does not have any obvious practical applications but could help advance theoretical physics and geometry, researchers said. find something that "could" be used:D
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