Putting math problems in proper order
Mathematics is driven by the quest to solve problems and today the American Institute of Mathematics (AIM) announces a new tool to help attack those questions. Research problems can take decades or centuries to answer, with partial solutions spawning new problems along the way. Keeping track of all the problems is difficult, even for experts. Sometimes the solution needs an idea from another field, and it can take a long time for someone to notice the connection. To help address these challenges AIM has developed the AIM Problem Lists. "Old problems need new ideas and the AIM problem lists open up the world of mathematics to a broader audience," said AIM director Brian Conrey. The problem lists will provide clear statements of problems in the context of related research problems along with expert commentary on possible approaches to a solution. Each problem list provides a snapshot of a specialized area of research.
All versions of the problem lists will be permanently archived through the Harvard IQSS Dataverse Network. "The record of changes to a problem list will provide a moving picture of progress in mathematics research," said Micah Altman, Senior Research Scientist at Harvard's Institute for Quantitative Social Science. These records will allow historians to track developments in a way that previously has not been possible.
The release date for the Problem List tool coincides with the worldwide celebration "RH Day" to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Riemann Hypothesis -- the most important unsolved problem in mathematics. One of the new problem lists concerns problems related to the Riemann Hypothesis.
The RH Day celebration will feature more than 50 lectures at 35 locations in 12 countries.
The problem lists are designed to grow and change indefinitely, while maintaining a continuity among the different versions. Problems are assigned permanent numbers and permanent web addresses, which will be of significant benefit to the research literature and to online scholarly ventures. The problem lists will be open to editing by anyone, but with an approval system and oversight by expert editors that provide a guarantee of scholarly integrity.
Development of the problem list tool was made possible by the National Science Foundation CDI grant "Bibliographic Knowledge Network (BKN)," award number DMS0835851. The software running the problem lists will be released open source. The problem list tool was designed by David Farmer in collaboration with BKN team members Micah Altman and Nitin Borwankar.
Source: American Institute of Mathematics
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- Putting math problems in proper orderfrom PhysorgTue, 17 Nov 2009, 10:42:22 UTC