I've already had an astonishing number (10 of 29) of people not
turn in a homework. You're digging yourself a hole....
Please use complete sentences. Write well: your writing may be the
first thing a potential employer may know about you, so make a
good impression.
Avoid run-on sentences. Use more semi-colons!
If your solutions were one page long, you certainly didn't do
enough work.
Don't say "I tried lots of things" without telling me what. Be
specific.
Did you read the hints? Kudos to those who said "I checked the
hint, and tried...."
a "~" on your homework just means something wasn't quite right --
it doesn't count against you. I didn't actually take off for your writing
(e.g. spelling, punctuation) this time, but I will as of the third
homework you hand in (Wednesday).
Every natural number greater than 1 is either prime, or it
can be expressed as a product of prime numbers (in one
and only one way -- order of the product aside).
Conclusion: gaps without primes of any size exist
in the natural numbers!
How many primes are there? There are infinitely many -- they just
don't stop! (But how do we know? We prove this
theorem!)
A natural number n may or may not divide natural
number m evenly, but there's always a unique way
of writing the attempt (that is, exactly one way -- no more):
m=qn+r
where 0 ≤ r ≤ n-1.
Obviously, if r=0 then n divides m.
We're going to show that there is a prime number bigger
than any number you can give.
Unanswered questions about prime numbers:
Goldbach Question: Can every even natural number
greater than 2 be written as the sum of two primes?
Twin Prime Question: are there infinitely many
pairs of prime numbers that differ from one another by
two? (3,5; 5,7; 11,13; etc. -- can you find another
pair in the sieve?)
Mathematicians don't know the answers yet!;)
Website maintained by Andy Long.
Comments appreciated.