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User:Roderick MacPhee

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Roderick MacPhee (talk | contribs) at 15:37, 20 April 2023. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

A loser who apparently knows more about Grimm's conjecture, twin prime conjecture, Goldbach's conjecture, Collatz conjecture, Legendre's conjecture, and more.

Collatz Conjecture

Legendre's conjecture

Goldbach's conjecture

Goldbach's conjecture is p+q=2n has solution where p,q are primes. You can also state it, as all composites are the arithmetic mean, of 4 not necessarily distinct semiprimes.

Grimm's Conjecture

Grimm's conjecture is: a set of composite numbers, has a bijective mapping for prime divisors. This only works if the nth prime gap, is less than n.

Twin prime conjecture

The twin prime conjecture is that there infinitely many twin prime pairs (pairs of primes that differ by 2). Because:

and as well as we can say natural numbers not of these forms must exist or twin prime conjecture would be false.