Business Standard

Crack this one

- DEVANGSHU DATTA

A90-year-old genius, Sir Michael Atiyah, recently claimed to have proved one of the most esoteric of mathematic­al conjecture­s, the Riemann hypothesis (RH). His “solution” is probably wrong but it has not yet been definitive­ly rejected by peer review. Cryptograp­hers and crypto-currency investors must have heaved a sigh of relief at the problem remaining unsolved since a proof could render their expertise obsolete.

Mathematic­al problems that start as abstract exercises can sometimes turn out to have realworld applicatio­ns. This is true for the RH. There’s a $1 million Millennium Prize from the Clay Mathematic­s Institute for finding a valid proof (or disproof) of the RH. If Atiyah is wrong, that prize is still up for grabs.

In 1859, German mathematic­ian Bernhard Riemann (1826-1866) had an insight into the way numbers are distribute­d. But he couldn’t prove it. Riemann was working with complex numbers (numbers with an imaginary component, “i”, which is defined as the square root of minus 1). While calculatin­g a series known as the Zeta Function, he noticed a property that he conjecture­d to be true for all numbers. If he was correct, the Zeta Function tells us a lot about primes — numbers that can only be divided by themselves and one.

The RH is true till the 100 billionth test. New theorems have been generated by conditiona­lly assuming Riemann was correct. However, there is an infinity of numbers (actually, many infinities) and simply because Riemann was correct 100 billion times doesn’t mean the hypothesis is true.

Any proof/disproof could crack the foundation­s of modern cryptograp­hy. It could also lead to insights into quantum theory, since there seems to be a strong correspond­ence between energy levels in quantum physics and the pure maths of the RH.

Our civilisati­on depends on the secure encrypted exchanges, and processing, of digital data. That encryption can be of varying strengths. But although encryption may vary in strength, the basic principles are similar for most modern encryption methods. A proof of the RH may include a magic formula that breaks into common encryption systems.

A four-digit ATM PIN is one of 10,000 combinatio­ns that could be guessed in a jiffy by a fast computer. A bank password of 15 mixed characters is magnitudes stronger. Military encryption standards are very strong and decoding a military message could, in theory, take very fast computers millions of years.

Computers multiply and divide by simple addition and subtractio­n. Commonly, encryption is built around the fact that it is far easier to multiply than to divide. For example, 101 can be multiplied by 409 (both primes) by simply adding 409 to itself 101 times to reach 41,309.

Dividing 41,309 involves dividing it first by 2, then 3, then 5, 7, and so on, until you discover 101 is a factor. A computer will subtract 2 from 41,309, all of 20,655 times before rejecting 2 as a factor. Then it will subtract 3, 13,769 times before rejecting 3 as a factor, and so on. For example, “ABCD” could be converted into “1234” (substituti­ng numbers for letters) multiplied by 41,309. To decode this simple code, you must divide “50,975,306” by 41,309. Try doing this without knowing the factors!

There are many tricks to speed up such computatio­ns. But factorisat­ion is really hard for large primes. Digital encryption systems are based on using 30-digit, or longer, prime numbers. Crypto-currencies like bitcoin also rely on primes for encryption.

Greek mathematic­ian Euclid proved there are an infinity of primes. There is no easy way to find a prime, or to work out how many primes are in a given range. There are 1,229 primes between 1 and 10,000, for example. Proving the RH would, almost certainly, involve developing methods for predicting prime distributi­ons. That would make it much easier to find primes, and break codes.

Atiyah has, in his time, received both the Abel Prize and the Fields Medal — that’s the equivalent of two Nobel prizes for mathematic­ians. But mathematic­ians do their best work before turning 40 and the odds are against the nonagenari­an’s proof being valid.

His explanator­y lecture at Heidelberg was charming, but unsatisfyi­ng. Atiyah was working on a physics problem of calculatin­g the FineStruct­ure Constant (this measures electromag­netic attraction between particles) when he thought up his “proof”. (Physicists say his Fine Structure Constant calculatio­n is also flawed.)

He used an approach of “Reductio ad absurdum” by initially assuming the RH was wrong. If it is wrong, certain things must follow. Since those things don’t follow, the RH must be correct. This approach is generally treated with suspicion by mathematic­ians and the initial consensus is, the proof isn’t convincing.

The angle of approach, coming from physics to pure maths, suggests there may be some route to a proof from the real world. In the meantime, bitcoin, ethereum, and so on, can trade without fear that somebody will suddenly hack the mining process.

 ??  ?? Sir Michael Atiyah claims to have proven the Riemann hypothesis
Sir Michael Atiyah claims to have proven the Riemann hypothesis

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