Cara Mencerdaskan Otak -There is a Japanese mathematician who claims to have overcome ABC Conjecture or a + b = c. His name is Shinichi Mochizuki, a wily math who studies at Princeton University. Really the claim? Some agree Shinichi's claim, some still do not understand.
Who is Shinichi to dare to claim over the unsolved problem?
Quoted from various types of sources, Shinichi was born in Tokyo, March 29, 1969. When he was five years old, he and his family moved to New York City. He then achieved teaching at the Phillips Exeter Academy and graduated in 1985 at the age of 16.
In the same year, Shinichi went to Princeton University and graduated three years later with a salutatorian predicate (the second highest pride predicate after valedictorian). Four years later, or at the age of 23, Shinichi had pocketed a doctorate in mathematics.
Upon reaching his teaching, Shinichi joined the Research Institute for Mathematical Science at Kyoto University, Japan, in 1992, and was promoted to professor in 2002.
Additional news about his mysterious figure, Shinichi is also suspected as the inventor of bitcoin, a virtual currency that is phenomenal. A number of searches on Satoshi Nakamoto who is called the discoverer of bitcoin, point to him. The name of Satoshi is called a pseudonym.
On August 30, 2012, Shinichi uploaded four 500-page writings to the World. In that long article, Shinichi claims to have found the answer to ABC Conjecture.
Shinichi did not send his writing to the journal of mathematics. He was only displaying his writings in the World, without boasting about other mathematicians. Until his best friend in the office, Akio Tamagawa, finds it and sends Shinichi answers to other mathematicians at some campuses, one of them Ivan Fesenko from the University of Nottingham, England.
Ivan immediately downloaded Shinichi's writing and rushed to read it. Her forehead instantly wrinkled. "It's impossible to understand Shinichi's answer," Ivan said of Scientific American. Curious, Ivan sent Shinichi's reply to a number of arithmetic geometry mathematicians, a field that Shinichi cultivated.
Rather their responses are more or less similar to Ivan Fesenko. "Look at Shinichi's answer, you will feel reading a writing from the future or from outer space," Jordan Ellenberg, a mathematician at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA, said. His writings are full of scattered new terms and mathematical tools embodied by Shinichi to support his argument. "He really made his own world," said Moon Duchin, a mathematician from Tuft University, USA.
Baca Juga : Perkembangan Motorik