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Quiz about Million Dollar Math
Quiz about Million Dollar Math

Million Dollar Math Trivia Quiz


There are 7 current problems in mathematics, that if solved, would net you a cool 1 million dollars. An eighth problem was also worth a million dollars but went unsolved. Don't worry, you don't have to solve any of them here, just identify the problems

A multiple-choice quiz by kevinatilusa. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
kevinatilusa
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
68,354
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Very Difficult
Avg Score
4 / 10
Plays
2122
Last 3 plays: PurpleComet (7/10), Guest 73 (2/10), Guest 75 (5/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. Any even number which is at least 4 can be written as the sum of two primes. This is ...? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. The million dollar prize for proving Goldbach's conjecture was offered by the author of a book about which fictional 'Uncle'? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Whether certain 'Hard' problems can be solved in polynomial order time is referred to as ...? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. The namesake mathematician's 'cycles' in projective algebraic varieties are expressible as a sum of standard algebraic cycles. This is ...? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. As of 2012, only one of the so-called "Million Dollar Problems" has been successfully solved. Which hundred-year-old conjecture, stating that any 4-dimensional surface satisfying a certain geometric property must be a sphere, was proven by Grigori Perelman in 2003? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. The Namesake mathematician's Zeta function has zeros only on a certain pair of lines. This is the ...? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Explain the existence of a 'mass gap' in the current namesake quantum theory. Why do particles have finite positive masses while classical waves travel at light speed? This is ...? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Prove the existence of smooth solutions to a certain model of incompressible fluid dynamics. This is ...? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. The number of solutions to a diophantine equation (an equation to be solved only in the integers) is related to the behavior of a certain zeta function. It is the ...? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Which institute is giving out a prize of 1 million dollars for 7 of the solved problems? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Apr 16 2024 : PurpleComet: 7/10
Mar 17 2024 : Guest 73: 2/10
Mar 10 2024 : Guest 75: 5/10

Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Any even number which is at least 4 can be written as the sum of two primes. This is ...?

Answer: Goldbach's Conjecture

The conjecture was originally stated in a 1742 lecture from Goldbach to Euler. It has been verified for numbers up to 100 trillion, but that is not yet a proof. The Russian mathematician Vinogradov has come tantalizing close by proving every (large enough) odd number is the sum of THREE primes.

Unfortunately, you can no longer win a guaranteed million for a proof of this. The publisher of the book below put a time limit on the contest, and that limit expired in 2002.
2. The million dollar prize for proving Goldbach's conjecture was offered by the author of a book about which fictional 'Uncle'?

Answer: Uncle Petros

The book, 'Uncle Petros and Goldbach's Conjecture' was written by Apostolos Doxiadis. The prize was set up as a promotional gimmick for the book (and actually would have cost the publishers much less than $1,000,000 even if the conjecture was solved...they insured the prize through Lloyd's of London).
3. Whether certain 'Hard' problems can be solved in polynomial order time is referred to as ...?

Answer: P vs. NP

The problems in question are referred to as NP complete. Strangely enough, the question as to whether or not certain minesweeper configurations are possible fits in this category.
4. The namesake mathematician's 'cycles' in projective algebraic varieties are expressible as a sum of standard algebraic cycles. This is ...?

Answer: Hodge Conjecture

Even understanding what this problem said would be a pretty big accomplishment.
5. As of 2012, only one of the so-called "Million Dollar Problems" has been successfully solved. Which hundred-year-old conjecture, stating that any 4-dimensional surface satisfying a certain geometric property must be a sphere, was proven by Grigori Perelman in 2003?

Answer: Poincaire conjecture

The geometric property in question is that the surface is "simply connected", meaning that any rubber band placed on the surface can be shrunk to a point while leaving the rubber band on the surface. To visualize this in 3 dimensions, imagine a rubber band placed on a doughnut. If you place it properly, you can move it around the doughnut but not take it off. (In essence, this is because the doughnut has a hole that say, an apple does not). Surprisingly, Perelman chose to reject the million dollars, stating that he felt his work was so closely tied with that of others who studied the problem that accepting the prize for himself would be unfair.
6. The Namesake mathematician's Zeta function has zeros only on a certain pair of lines. This is the ...?

Answer: Riemann hypothesis

Riemann's function is f(s)= the sum from one to infinity of one over (n to the sth power), where the sum converges ... it is defined slightly differently elsewhere. The lines in question are the real numbers and the complex numbers with imaginary part 1 half, and the conjecture has been verified for the first 1.5 billion zeroes.

This is probably the most important unsolved problem in mathematics today. Interesting bit of trivia: The English Mathematician Hardy was an avowed Atheist. Nevertheless, once when there was a great storm, Hardy was forced to cross the sea and was scared for his life. To 'Solve' this problem, he sent a telegram ahead of him claiming 'I have solved the Riemann Hypothesis'. Upon arrival, he said that no, he hadn't actually solved it, but if there WAS a higher power, he was certain that power would not let him die with the false glory of having the world think he had solved the greatest problem in mathematics.
7. Explain the existence of a 'mass gap' in the current namesake quantum theory. Why do particles have finite positive masses while classical waves travel at light speed? This is ...?

Answer: Yang Mills problem

The challenge is to unite the mathematical model with what is actually observed in the lab.
8. Prove the existence of smooth solutions to a certain model of incompressible fluid dynamics. This is ...?

Answer: Navier-Stokes problem

The equations in questions are differential equations describing, for example, the ripples made by a boat in a lake and the air currents when a jet flies.
9. The number of solutions to a diophantine equation (an equation to be solved only in the integers) is related to the behavior of a certain zeta function. It is the ...?

Answer: Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture

Specifically, the conjecture states that if the zeta function is 0, then the number of solutions is infinite. If the function is not zero, the number of solutions is finite.
10. Which institute is giving out a prize of 1 million dollars for 7 of the solved problems?

Answer: Clay Mathematics Institute

More detailed descriptions of the last seven problems, along with conditions for the contest, can be found at www.claymath.org . I would be VERY surprised if any of the problems were solved in the next 10 years (I'm certainly not going to be able to handle any of them!)
Source: Author kevinatilusa

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor CellarDoor before going online.
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