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The Millennium Problems
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In The Millennium Problems, Keith Devlin aims to communicate the
essence of these seven problems to a broad readership. It is, of course, a
very ambitious goal. The preface makes it clear what Devlin's ground rules
are. First he assumes only "a good high school knowledge of mathematics."
Second, he is writing "not for those who want to tackle one of the
problems, but for readers — mathematician and non-mathematician alike
— who are curious about the current state at the frontiers of
humankind's oldest body of scientific knowledge." He is clear that the
readership drives the level of the book, so that precise statements of the
problems will not always be given. Rather the goal is "to provide the
background to each problem, to describe how it arose, explain what makes it
particularly difficult, and give... some sense of why mathematicians regard
it as important."
After the short preface, the book has an interesting Chapter 0, and then
one chapter for each problem in the above order. These seven chapters are
constructed similarly. Most have a long historical component, generally
including biographical information about the person or persons after whom
the conjecture is named. Each has substantial background mathematical
information, with topics ranging from complex numbers in Chapter 1 and
group theory in Chapter 2 to congruences in Chapter 6 and algebraic
varieties in Chapter 7. Applications are emphasized when possible. A nice
theme in Chapters 2 and 4 is that mathematicians are behind physicists and
engineers and just trying to catch up. Each chapter concludes with a
discussion of the millennium problem itself.
Chapter 5 illustrates how Devlin ties the various units of a chapter into a
coherent narrative. It begins with four pages about the life and work of
Henri Poincaré. It moves on to introduce "rubber sheet geometry" in
terms of how subway maps and refrigerator wiring diagrams are not
geometrically faithful to the physical objects they represent, but
nonetheless clearly capture all relevant information. This unit is
important as it will make readers feel that topology is natural, rather
than weird. Chapter 5 next introduces the concepts of vertices, edges,
faces and finally Euler characteristic in terms of the Königsberg
bridge problem. It introduces non-orientable surfaces and makes the
introduction of an ambient four-space seem natural, since it is necessary
for an embedding of the Klein bottle. It topologically classifies closed
surfaces first crudely in terms of their orientability, and then completely
in terms of networks drawn upon them and the Euler characteristic of these
networks. It gives a very attractive example of two seemingly linked rings
that in fact can be pulled apart. This example shows the reader that not
everything is geometrically obvious, and thus underscores the utility of
algebraic invariants that can rigorously confirm that two objects are
topologically different. It discusses how the ordinary two-sphere is
characterized among all closed surfaces by having the property that any
loop on it can be shrunk continuously to a point. Finally, by way of this
two-dimensional analogy, it discusses the actual three-dimensional
Poincaré conjecture.
The strain imposed by the challenge of communicating all seven millennium
problems to a broad readership naturally shows at times. In the
Navier-Stokes chapter, for example, the background mathematical information
presented is calculus and specifically differentiation. Readers are
instructed that "dy/dx" is to be read "dee-wye by dee-ex." Some seven
pages later, the Navier-Stokes equations themselves are presented. They
are four coupled non-linear partial differential equations in four
independent variables. The exposition is gentle, but readers new to
calculus will only understand at a superficial level. The strain is felt
somewhat more in Chapter 6 and particularly so in Chapter 7. But these
various strains are unavoidable, and I think in general Devlin has done a
very good job giving general readers a feel for the seven millennium
problems.
The Millennium Problems concentrates on the past and present of the
problems, but it's also natural to wonder about their future! Can we
expect to see some prizes handed out within our lifetimes? Devlin raises
this question at the end of the various chapters, but always in a
noncommittal way. His mention of the "twenty-fifth century" in the preface
may incline some readers to be pessimistic. My personal feeling is that
there are good reasons for optimism. I'll take this opportunity to put
down my guess that the torrid pace of mathematical progress in the 21st
century will include the solution of at least two of the millennium
problems before 2020 and at least five before the end of the century. When
solutions to the millennium problems do come, it would be nice if the
general public recognized them for the monumental achievements that they
will be. Books such as Keith Devlin's The Millennium Problems will
help a great deal.
Publication Data:
The
Millennium Problems,
by Keith Devlin.
Basic Books, 2002.
Hardcover, 288pp, $26.00. ISBN 0465017290.
Part of the interesting Chapter 0 appears in slightly reworked form in the
November 2002 installment of Devlins's angle,
The inaccessibility
of modern mathematics.
More information on the millennium problems, including
official statements of the problems, is available at the
Clay Mathematics Institute.
Devlin in his preface refers also to a forthcoming official
CMI book, to which he will be a contributor.
There are several shorter introductions to the seven millennium problems at
a somewhat more advanced level than Devlin's book. One is by Barry Cipra
in a volume reviewed by MAA Online. While
Devlin's book is generally free from errors, and Cipra's book has been
especially well edited, both make the same error with respect to the now
proved higher-dimensional Poincaré conjecture. In dimensions four
and greater, a simply-connected compact manifold can still exhibit great
topological complexity. Only after one assumes that homology groups are
also trivial in degrees one through the dimension minus one is such a
manifold guaranteed to be homeomorphic to a sphere.
David Roberts
is an assistant professor of mathematics at the University of
Minnesota, Morris.
Posted February 10, 2003
Read This! is the MAA
Online book review column. Contributions are welcome; contact the
editor if you'd like to be one of our reviewers. Books for review should be
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reviews information page.
1 The Riemann Hypothesis Number Theory
2 Yang-Mills Existence and Mass Gap Mathematical Physics
3 The P versus NP problem Computer Science
4
Navier-Stokes Existence and Smoothness Mathematical Physics
5 The Poincaré Conjecture Topology
6 The Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture Number Theory
7 The Hodge Conjecture Algebraic Geometry
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