The Riemann Hypothesis is one of mathematics' greatest unsolved mysteries
The Riemann zeta function in the complex plane
The Clay Mathematics Institute offers a $1,000,000 prize for solving the Riemann Hypothesis—one of seven Millennium Prize Problems that represent the most important unsolved problems in mathematics.
But here's the truth: the money is almost irrelevant.
If you prove the Riemann Hypothesis, you will become famous for the entire life of humanity.
On this website, we look for new ideas. Specifically, we look outside the domain of pure mathematics for potential solutions.
If you're a mathematician, you might laugh at the naivety of this effort. Fair enough. But consider this: mathematicians have been trying for 160 years without success.
Sometimes fresh perspectives from physics, computer science, biology, or even complete outsiders can see patterns that experts have become blind to. We synthesize insights from thousands of academic papers, searching for unexpected connections that might crack this problem.
It all started in 1859 when Bernhard Riemann published his famous paper on prime numbers. You can read the original here:
Read Riemann's 1859 Paper (PDF)
The number crunching behind the scenes is expensive. We process academic papers, generate visualizations, and maintain a growing database of research insights. Your membership directly supports this computational infrastructure.
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