g-conjecture - Numberphile

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июн 2024
  • Discussing h-vectors and the g-conjecture. Featuring June Huh from the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University.
    More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓
    A little extra bit from this interview: • g-conjecture (extra fo...
    Shapes in higher dimensions: • Perfect Shapes in High...
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Комментарии • 995

  • @erwinlee6885
    @erwinlee6885 Год назад +563

    Congratulations for being awarded the 2022 Fields Medal!

    • @AhmedAli-op6ng
      @AhmedAli-op6ng Год назад +26

      Damn before your comment i did not know he got that award but i was just amazed at how easily he is explaining that problem.

    • @Triantalex
      @Triantalex 7 месяцев назад +3

      thx..

  • @3blue1brown
    @3blue1brown 6 лет назад +1817

    Really nicely explained (and edited). The modified Pascal's triangle framing is a really fun way to make these topological patterns feel like they pop out of numerical playfulness.

    • @hydraslair4723
      @hydraslair4723 6 лет назад +35

      The remarkable substance that holds together basic number theory, graph theory and geometry is always so enjoyable to explore.

    • @noahshomeforstrangeandeduc4431
      @noahshomeforstrangeandeduc4431 6 лет назад +25

      3Blue1Brown I believe I may have stumbled upon a new area of math I call complex graph theory.
      It deals with operations on the graphs of functions.

    • @fr0iler578
      @fr0iler578 6 лет назад +3

      Noah'sKnowledgeCenter Explain more

    • @cameronspalding9792
      @cameronspalding9792 5 лет назад +1

      3 Blue 1 Brown

    • @bb2fiddler
      @bb2fiddler 5 лет назад

      Hi :D

  • @KurtSchwind
    @KurtSchwind 6 лет назад +905

    Best handwriting in all of Numberphile. June Huh has remarkable penmanship.

    • @totaltotalmonkey
      @totaltotalmonkey 6 лет назад +31

      He resolved the Heron-Rota-Welsh conjecture on the log-concavity of the characteristic polynomial of matroids.

    • @Bluedragon2513
      @Bluedragon2513 6 лет назад +9

      huh..i was gonna make the same joke so asians could be on the same level

    • @TeslaNick2
      @TeslaNick2 6 лет назад +17

      I love his precise voice too.

    • @conure512
      @conure512 6 лет назад +8

      Great penmanship, amazing at substraction... Gotta love this guy

    • @bumpinugly4985
      @bumpinugly4985 6 лет назад +2

      Kurt Schwind because he learned it as an adult and sees it formally!!

  • @Neuxramus48
    @Neuxramus48 6 лет назад +343

    the way he writes the letter "f" is so satisfying

  • @FredrikMeyer
    @FredrikMeyer 6 лет назад +260

    A few years ago I attended a summer school where June Huh was one of the lecturers. It was amazing. He’s the kind of idealistic mathematician who always sees the big picture.

  • @yoonjeongsoo9378
    @yoonjeongsoo9378 Год назад +17

    I'm here after June Huh's Fields Medal announcement!!! CONGRATS!!!

  • @Xepscern
    @Xepscern 6 лет назад +1014

    Those F's are fancy as hell

    • @collinsigbiks9701
      @collinsigbiks9701 6 лет назад

      Xepscern they're the queen's.

    • @dlee645
      @dlee645 6 лет назад +54

      He has exceptionally neat handwriting.

    • @Gakulon
      @Gakulon 6 лет назад +2

      Xepscern Function f's are awesome

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 6 лет назад +31

      𝑓₃-𝑓₂+𝑓₁-1=0
      𝐼 𝓁𝑜𝓋𝑒 𝓈𝓊𝓅𝑒𝓇 𝓈𝑒𝒸𝓇𝑒𝓉 𝓂𝒶𝓇𝓀𝓊𝓅 𝒸𝑜𝒹𝑒𝓈. XD

    • @godsnotdead6973
      @godsnotdead6973 6 лет назад +12

      I wonder if it has to do with the complexity of the characters in Korean? Maybe that translates into English penmanship with extra "flourish?"

  • @kyutoreru
    @kyutoreru 4 года назад +170

    The "unproven" g-conjecture was proven in a paper published in December 2018, just 6 months after this video was posted.

  • @CraigHarrison
    @CraigHarrison 6 лет назад +128

    "Pick my favourite triangulated sphere in the 17th dimension..."
    There's just so many, I can never choose just one!

    • @heimdall1973
      @heimdall1973 5 лет назад +5

      I'd go for the one of which the vertices are all such points where one coordinate is +/-1 and others are 0. Edges are between each pair of points that differ in exactly 2 coordinates. The simplices of this triangulation are all such sets of vertices that no two are opposite (meaning that they have the same nonzero coordinate, one 1 and the other one -1).

  • @GuanoLad
    @GuanoLad 6 лет назад +195

    This is the best penmanship I've ever seen on a Numberphile brown paper.

    • @apollonmegara8220
      @apollonmegara8220 6 лет назад +3

      Same lol

    • @eoghan.5003
      @eoghan.5003 4 года назад +6

      Yes, except for his 8s, which he draws with two circles. And his 7s, which he does not cross.

    • @waldiniman
      @waldiniman 4 года назад +4

      Eoghan Connolly sheesh cut the guy a break 😂

  • @taopaille-paille4992
    @taopaille-paille4992 Год назад +38

    The greatest congratulations to June Huh for having been a recipient of the Medal Field this year

  • @rohitg1529
    @rohitg1529 Год назад +21

    As of 2022, June Huh has been awarded a Fields Medal. Just amazing!

  • @dkranda
    @dkranda 6 лет назад +94

    June Huh has a beautifully patient cadence to his presentation style.

    • @ZeedijkMike
      @ZeedijkMike 6 лет назад +7

      Just seeing him write is a pleasure.

  • @Mutual_Information
    @Mutual_Information Год назад +24

    It’s nice knowing that, as of this filming, June Huh had a bright, bright future. Congratulations on the Fields Metal!

  • @clbgrmn
    @clbgrmn 6 лет назад +45

    Dang, more videos with Dr. Huh. This was one of my favorites. He's obviously passionate about this math, and is very articulate.

  • @OlbaidFractalium
    @OlbaidFractalium 6 лет назад +1032

    Mathematicians are enormously imaginative.

    • @ahmetmertdogan
      @ahmetmertdogan 6 лет назад +57

      Olbaid Fractalium Mathematic is about imagination.

    • @exod4
      @exod4 6 лет назад +12

      They need to be

    • @jaguarfacedman1365
      @jaguarfacedman1365 6 лет назад +4

      what is your profile image?

    • @mashmax98
      @mashmax98 6 лет назад +3

      You can replace all Imagination by definition

    • @OlbaidFractalium
      @OlbaidFractalium 6 лет назад +3

      JaguarFacedMan It is a fractal art of Mandelbrot Set I made. I love the Mandelbrot Set!

  • @jesusthroughmary
    @jesusthroughmary 6 лет назад +210

    This is a very inconvenient time of day for me to watch a 20-minute math video, but I got the notification, so here we are.

    • @tyler-xf2kz
      @tyler-xf2kz 6 лет назад +5

      I feel your pain

    • @collinsigbiks9701
      @collinsigbiks9701 6 лет назад

      Didn't know that it was 20 mins

    • @jesusthroughmary
      @jesusthroughmary 6 лет назад

      22, actually

    • @peterd5843
      @peterd5843 6 лет назад +5

      you can make it 11 minutes if you watch it sped up 2x

    • @cptn_n3m012
      @cptn_n3m012 4 года назад

      @@peterd5843 yeah but we actually try ti understand so that wouldnt help

  • @mmmusa2576
    @mmmusa2576 Год назад +16

    Here after June won his Fields Medal. What an amazing mathematician!

  • @user-sayok
    @user-sayok Год назад +21

    교수님 축하드립니다. 찾다 보니 이 영상까지 보게 되네요. ㅎㅎㅎ

  • @iycgtptyarvg
    @iycgtptyarvg 6 лет назад +16

    I love his calm demeanor. What a great guy. Please do more videos with him.

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 Год назад +11

    who's here again after June Huh has won the 2022 Fields medal?

  • @standowner6979
    @standowner6979 Год назад +60

    I watched this video years ago and I never would have thought that he would have won the Fields Medal.
    Congratulations!!

  • @yoshiminakajima8109
    @yoshiminakajima8109 Год назад +4

    4 years later this guy won a Fields medal!! Congratulations Mr Huh!!!

  • @baehyunsol3349
    @baehyunsol3349 Год назад +14

    필즈상 축하드려요!

  • @Simoneister
    @Simoneister 6 лет назад +700

    "A 1 dimensional triangle is a straight line"
    Cool cool

    • @steliostoulis1875
      @steliostoulis1875 6 лет назад +19

      Simoneister it's true

    • @clickaccept
      @clickaccept 6 лет назад +93

      No, its not. A one-dimensional simplex is a straight line. A two dimensional simplex is a triangle. One could say something like "the analogue of a triangle in one dimension is a line" but that is less precise in my view, as triangles could be members of other families of objects which are not lines in one dimension.

    • @pierrestober3423
      @pierrestober3423 6 лет назад +10

      the name triangle implies three vertices

    • @clickaccept
      @clickaccept 6 лет назад +3

      TootTootMcbumbersnazzle an infinite number.
      (i) point
      (ii) line
      (iii) Any union of points and lines.
      The first two are connected. If we restrict to connected geometric objects, then the counterexample to OP would be a sequence of geometric objects that is a point in one dimension, and a triangle in two dimensions. I leave it to you to imagine such an example.

    • @JorgetePanete
      @JorgetePanete 6 лет назад +1

      clickaccept it's*

  • @pedror598
    @pedror598 6 лет назад +368

    We should rename maths. I suggest calling it "Euler"

    • @peterdriscoll4070
      @peterdriscoll4070 3 года назад +19

      Gauss would be miffed.

    • @moonlightcocktail
      @moonlightcocktail 3 года назад +7

      Maybe just the studying real/imaginary parts/calculus/number theory.
      Calculus should probably be called Newton, while Geometry can be called Euclid (in a way it already is)

    • @RickJaeger
      @RickJaeger 3 года назад +15

      "what do you work in?"
      "oh, you know, the Euclid-Euler-Gauss-Newton-Descartes-Hilbert-Riemann-Ramanujan-Nash-Penrose field of study"
      "Ah Yes."

    • @drenz1523
      @drenz1523 3 года назад +6

      @@RickJaeger "Oh so you work at maths? Name all mathematicians."
      JK Pls no.

    • @XenophonSoulis
      @XenophonSoulis Год назад

      @@peterdriscoll4070 Nah, Euler has probably made an "Euler's Gauss" or something like that that we can use.

  • @hindigente
    @hindigente 6 лет назад +10

    Great introduction to h-vectors and the g-conjecture by June Huh.
    You can tell he was careful to provide several examples so it would be accessible to most people.

  • @InviDoll
    @InviDoll 6 лет назад +50

    Yeees. Great video. Great mathematician. More from him, please!

  • @arpitbharti6245
    @arpitbharti6245 Год назад +7

    He just won the Fields Medal!!! 🥇🏅

  • @skeletonrowdie1768
    @skeletonrowdie1768 6 лет назад +692

    icosahedron?
    You mean a pentagonal gyroelongated bipiramid?

    • @fanq_
      @fanq_ 6 лет назад +100

      Skeleton Rowdie you listened to Michael talk about that last night, huh

    • @skeletonrowdie1768
      @skeletonrowdie1768 6 лет назад +35

      yes my man.

    • @cosmo1413
      @cosmo1413 6 лет назад +68

      What about a snub disphenoid?

    • @jimmoriarty3381
      @jimmoriarty3381 6 лет назад +39

      vsauce, michael here

    • @Gakulon
      @Gakulon 6 лет назад +35

      Skeleton Rowdie I've seen the vid, but it will always be known as a d20 to me

  • @samuelromero1763
    @samuelromero1763 3 года назад +5

    His explanation of 4D shapes has helped me understand them better that any of the popular animations that you may see online.

  • @sindhurtej9638
    @sindhurtej9638 3 года назад +15

    "We should start with Euler's formula"
    Do you have any idea how little that narrows it down?

  • @moneyluser5711
    @moneyluser5711 6 лет назад +6

    I love this guy. His explanations are so perfectly clear and direct.

  • @MrJ3
    @MrJ3 6 лет назад +492

    *SUBSTRACT*

    • @SoundsOfTheWildYT
      @SoundsOfTheWildYT 6 лет назад +67

      I CAME TO COMMENT THIS. IT’S SO CUTE.

    • @TyTheRegularMan
      @TyTheRegularMan 6 лет назад +29

      SMETRY

    • @Mystery_Biscuits
      @Mystery_Biscuits 6 лет назад +9

      (from extra footage) *HYPOTHEETHIS*

    • @stephenhicks826
      @stephenhicks826 6 лет назад +9

      absolutely mesmerising word; loved this presentation!

    • @nymalous3428
      @nymalous3428 6 лет назад +26

      I'm pleased that this comment line is positive in nature. He was quite clear in speaking what seems to be a second language. I've had college professors who couldn't speak clearly in their native language, and I've known people who speak English as a second language who struggle quite hard. I know my own grasp of other languages is tenuous at best. Nevertheless, I did notice his interesting pronunciations.

  • @LucasPreti
    @LucasPreti 6 лет назад +319

    I liked him

  • @obliqueObloquy
    @obliqueObloquy 6 лет назад +5

    Fantastic explanation of Euler's Formula. Thinking about it as the alternating sum of the 0, 1, and 2 dimensional faces of a 3d shape really helped me understand it much better than I ever have before.

  • @abhinandanmalhotra8519
    @abhinandanmalhotra8519 Год назад +5

    This man is so smart, he deserves the Fields Medal !

  • @marcnorderland9400
    @marcnorderland9400 Год назад +3

    There are so many Fields medalists that have been featured on Numberphile, it's quite boggling.

  • @NicoNico30000
    @NicoNico30000 3 года назад +2

    June Huh is actually amazing

  • @chaoslab
    @chaoslab 6 лет назад +11

    This is one of my favorite Numberphile videos. Always telling people that math is actually fun and to check this channel out.

  • @NotHPotter
    @NotHPotter 6 лет назад +32

    Almost halfway through the video: "And this is our starting point." Oh, ok. This on a Monday. Lol.

  • @TheJackal25
    @TheJackal25 6 лет назад

    This guy is excellent, I sometimes find these videos hard to follow but his explanation is so clear!

  • @jamesdavis2027
    @jamesdavis2027 6 лет назад +1

    Please get this guy on more, he is a wonderful explainer, with great handwriting to boot!

  • @codycast
    @codycast 6 лет назад +3

    Dude. Forget everything else. Can we focus on the fact that dude has PERFECT “f”s? That was amazing.

  • @samcooke343
    @samcooke343 6 лет назад +11

    If anyone's interested, Michael from Vsauce did a great video on strictly-convex deltahedrons yesterday. It's a brilliant companion to this one.

  • @ChrisHendrickson
    @ChrisHendrickson 2 года назад +2

    A chunk in this video just helped me understand something I had been struggling with in modern GPU code. Thanks so much for your videos!

  • @Prasen1729
    @Prasen1729 3 года назад

    This guys is my another numberphile favourite, such an articulated, well explained and inspiring. You can love math because of the way it is presented it to you.

  • @MrFedX
    @MrFedX 6 лет назад +3

    June Huh is awesome! I want to see more of him.

  • @skeletonrowdie1768
    @skeletonrowdie1768 6 лет назад +20

    this man is awesome!! he is so passionate and so clear :D

  • @calle1967
    @calle1967 10 месяцев назад +1

    Perfect explanation. Goes inexorably to the point, you have no chances other than nod and agree.

  • @sergevalet
    @sergevalet 2 года назад

    oh my, he's so excited about the thing but so humble about it, I just love him. and the way he writes 8, come on
    I want more of him, please!

  • @c00ltrent
    @c00ltrent 6 лет назад +3

    Learned about Euler's formula in my math history class this previous semester. Didn't expect to see it used so soon.

  • @Anorve
    @Anorve Год назад +6

    congratulations!

  • @MarvelousMarvinB
    @MarvelousMarvinB 2 года назад

    This is my new favorite channel. I can't get enough!!!

  • @Phymacss
    @Phymacss Год назад +1

    The absolute best math channel to ever exist.❤

  • @Goldendroid
    @Goldendroid 6 лет назад +4

    I noticed that with some of the shapes you get parts of Pascal's triangle when you play the subtraction triangle game with them. That's pretty cool.

  • @WildStar2002
    @WildStar2002 5 лет назад +8

    I have never been able to understand why the Euler characteristic must flip-flop between 2 and 0. The explanation in this video is very complicated - but all you have to do is include the figure itself to get the same result: pentagon f0(5)-f1(5)+f2(1) = 1, icosahedron f0(12)-f1(30)+f2(20)-f3(1) = 1, 6-orthoplex f0(12)-f1(60)+f2(160)-f3(240)+f4(192)-f5(64)+f6(1) = 1. A pentagon contains 5 vertices, 5 edges, *and 1 pentagon*. An icosahedron is made up of 12 vertices, 30 edges, 20 triangles, *and 1 icosahedron*.

    • @iteo2977
      @iteo2977 5 лет назад +5

      well ... it's obvious from the betti numbers. An n-sphere has betti numbers 1,0,0,0,...,0,1 (indexes 0 to n), and, since the Euler characteristic is the alternating sum of the betti numbers, you get (-1)^0 x 1+(-1)^n x 1, which is exactly 0 or 2 depending on the parity.

  • @buzzlikeyear
    @buzzlikeyear 6 лет назад +1

    What an incredibly likable guy.

  • @UnathiGX
    @UnathiGX 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'm high as faq watching this and it is the most beautiful explanations ever. The thinking behind this is transcendental. I guess.

  • @icanfast
    @icanfast 6 лет назад +4

    This is level of content I like to see!

  • @fabricioguido8202
    @fabricioguido8202 6 лет назад +4

    Love this guy's handwriting.

  • @telegramsam11
    @telegramsam11 6 лет назад

    We need this guy again. Great mathematical insight, even better calligraphy.

  • @jewfroDZak
    @jewfroDZak 2 года назад

    This guy's handwriting is unbelievable. Watching his hand movements while writing formulas is hypnotizing.

  • @IsGoing
    @IsGoing Год назад +5

    Congrats on his fields medal

  • @tangpiseth8416
    @tangpiseth8416 Год назад +3

    He was awarded the Fields Medal 3 days ago!!

  • @therealmarkrian
    @therealmarkrian 6 лет назад +1

    Really enjoyed hearing from June Huh!

  • @modolief
    @modolief 6 лет назад

    Excellent editing job and production values as usual, thanks!!!

  • @conure512
    @conure512 6 лет назад +101

    I can't believe this was never mentioned, but I just noticed that there's a way (much easier than the pascal triangle thing) to get to 1 every single time.
    The pattern is defined as follows: count the amount of objects with dimension "x" inside the solid, and take the alternating sum as x increases to d-1, where "d" is the highest dimension that the solid lives in. All you gotta do to get 1 every time (rather than oscillating between 0 and 2) is increase x to d, not d-1. Here's an example, using a 3D simplex (tetrahedron, d=3):
    Vertices (x=0): 4
    Edges (x=1): 6
    Faces (x=2): 4
    Solids (x=3): 1, because the tetrahedron contains (and is) a single 3D solid.
    4-6+4-1=1.
    Here's the same example with a 4D simplex (d=4):
    Vertices: 5
    Edges: 10
    2D Faces: 10
    3D Faces: 5
    4D Solids: 1 (again, the entire simplex).
    5-10+10-5+1 still equals 1.
    As you can see, this works with all of these solids in all dimensions, assuming the oscillation between 0 and 2 in the original pattern continues indefinitely. The alternating sum happens to work out such that whenever a 2 is reached the 1 is subtracted, and whenever a 0 is reached the 1 gets added- it always ends at 1.
    Side note: I totally realize that leaving out the final 1 was kinda needed for the purpose of the pascal triangle bit, I just thought that what I found was super interesting.
    (btw I typed this entire comment on a crappy phone keyboard)
    TL;DR What this video forgot to do was factor in the entirety of the solid along with its edges and faces, and if it did that, the pattern would be a clean string of 1s rather than an oscillation between 0 and 2.

    • @tomreid2096
      @tomreid2096 6 лет назад +3

      Nice work buddy

    • @phscience797
      @phscience797 6 лет назад +24

      This exactly what he explained about the last number in the row being a one.

    • @rifdifirebolt
      @rifdifirebolt 6 лет назад +7

      Parrot-hD I don't understand this but I read it anyway

    • @osrros02
      @osrros02 6 лет назад

      yes! did the same observation and don't get why to leave it out, better watch it again.

    • @HexRey
      @HexRey 6 лет назад +12

      Not only that, but if you consider the null set an element and begin the alternating sum with it, you will always end up with 0. For example, an octahedron would yield 1-6+12-8+1=0. In odd dimensions the two 1s are both positive, adding 2, while in even dimensions the 1s are opposite signs, canceling each other out.

  • @Boopers
    @Boopers 6 лет назад +14

    I guess you can also see it in the way that eulers formula is missing the sphere itself and that's where the 1 comes from.

    • @MathAndComputers
      @MathAndComputers 6 лет назад +7

      Nice. That's a much simpler way of thinking about it. It's not a simplex, but it works. I wonder how much more general certain parts are, 'cause Euler's formula works not just for triangulated spheres, but any connected graph on a sphere.

    • @markvp71
      @markvp71 6 лет назад +1

      And you can then also use it for connected "spheres", e.g. two triangles that share an edge: 4 - 5 + 2 = 1, or two tetrahedra that share a triangle: 5 - 9 + 7 - 2 = 1. But it becomes more complicated if there are holes, making the whole topologically equivalent to a torus. In general it depends on the genus of the whole structure.

  • @cubechessmanasmr3331
    @cubechessmanasmr3331 5 лет назад

    Clearly in my top 5 numberphile videos ever, along with Riemann hypothesis, Glitch Primes and cyclops numbers, All the numbers, and transcendental numbers

  • @radorado666
    @radorado666 6 лет назад

    Amazing explanation, very clear, articulate and easy to understand.

  • @Reydriel
    @Reydriel 6 лет назад +29

    This guy writes his 7's like the katakana ワ/ク, which is a great idea I wish I'd known earlier.

    • @HasekuraIsuna
      @HasekuraIsuna 6 лет назад +9

      Reydriel In Japan (where you'd think this would be avoided because the similarities) this is common practice.
      (`・ω・´)

    • @smickles
      @smickles 6 лет назад

      It used to be common in the U.S. too. I suspect it became uncommon as handwriting lessons became lax and then uncommon as well

    • @jamma246
      @jamma246 6 лет назад +3

      My experience in mathematics is that the majority position (at least in the countries I've worked) is to write a 7 with a line through the middle (a bit like a backwards f). I quite like this because it clearly distinguishes it from '1'.

  • @BryanCarthell
    @BryanCarthell 6 лет назад +13

    I noticed that 1 3 3 1 was a line on Pascal’s Triangle (a+b)^3. So is 1 4 6 4 1 (a+b)^4.
    Then I thought about the 1 9 9 1 one and thought that perhaps it’s because that was the next level up in complication (octahedron -> icosahedron)
    And the tetrahedron was 1111 and is the simplest, so if the “complexity” was given a number like
    tetrahedron: n=0
    octahedron: n=1
    icosahedron: n=2
    then the h number would be
    1^n 3^n 3^n 1^n.
    I predict that the next level up in complexity would be 1 27 27 1.
    The same seems to be true for the 4-dimensional objects except it’s the next level down on Pascal’s Triangle
    1^n 4^n 6^n 4^n 1^n.
    I’m sure the real mathematicians already know about this, though it wasn’t stated in the video.

    • @heimdall1973
      @heimdall1973 5 лет назад

      2D sphere (of a 3D ball) can be triangulated so that the h-vector is (1,n,n,1) for your chosen n >= 1. So (1,1,1,1), (1,2,2,1), (1,3,3,1), ...
      3D sphere can be triangulated so that the h-vector is (1,n,m,n,1) for your chosen m and n such that 1

    • @ParamThePianist
      @ParamThePianist Год назад +1

      Yes, even I noticed that. The h numbers of the simplest sphere in a dimention are the binomial coefficients, which we can also see in the pascals' triangle as you mentioned. It is even true for the next dimention, where h numbers come as 1 5 10 10 5 1 which are the binomial coefficients of (a+b)^5.

  • @Walczyk
    @Walczyk 3 года назад

    June Huh is so well spoken, brilliant mind!

  • @esinge3377
    @esinge3377 6 лет назад

    I was just reading about June last week, amazing.

  • @henridelagardere264
    @henridelagardere264 6 лет назад +3

    Somehow I feel like Grasshopper absorbing the lectures of Master Po.
    Master *HUH* talking about the *H* -factor and *palindromic* sequences.

  • @unoriginalusernameno999
    @unoriginalusernameno999 6 лет назад +13

    I thought it was Terence Tao in the thumbnail.

  • @jarnokylander490
    @jarnokylander490 6 лет назад

    The best description for higher dimensions!

  • @veramentegina
    @veramentegina 5 лет назад

    such fun to play with mathematics.. thank you so much for the video. Love Dr. Huh

  • @noxus7462
    @noxus7462 5 лет назад +62

    It’s been proven today!

    • @crazyspider17
      @crazyspider17 5 лет назад +1

      really?

    • @everlast282
      @everlast282 5 лет назад

      crazyspider17 no

    • @MartinME3
      @MartinME3 4 года назад +2

      Karim happens to collaborate with Huh on previous work. Interesting!

  • @senhalil
    @senhalil 6 лет назад +71

    I love the channel and videos and I have a small remark. The sound effects of the video (the ones used for counting) are too loud compared to the volume of the voice. This problem is apparent on other numberphile videos as well but this is one of the most obvious ones. It is hard to watch the video on the phone.. with love. Cheers

  • @bumpinugly4985
    @bumpinugly4985 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks, your video inspired a breakthrough!!!!! Best feeling ever!!!

  • @happy_labs
    @happy_labs 6 лет назад

    You can feel how much this guy loves maths. Great vid

  • @KonkyPlonky
    @KonkyPlonky 6 лет назад +10

    Once again Euler did find a pattern

  • @antobabel23
    @antobabel23 5 лет назад +19

    Anyone else here cause they saw that it's now been proven and they want to understand?

  • @rbnn
    @rbnn 6 лет назад

    This was an impressively clear and interesting presentation

  • @Will-thon
    @Will-thon 4 года назад

    What a fantastic speaker. Very enjoyable video

  • @davidmorrison7742
    @davidmorrison7742 Год назад +4

    Fields Medal FTW!

  • @heathrichardson4242
    @heathrichardson4242 6 лет назад +57

    Powers of 11..... 11^3=1331, 11^4=14641.... it’s hidden in Pascal’s triangle too

    • @sam2026
      @sam2026 6 лет назад +3

      Cool, didn't know that

    • @ivanm1961
      @ivanm1961 6 лет назад +11

      It doesn't go any higher than 11^4 tho

    • @hughbo123
      @hughbo123 6 лет назад +22

      Ivan Myachykov that’s because the coefficients go above 10. For example one row in Pascal’s triangle reads 1 5 10 10 5 1. You’ll find that it works in that 11^5 = (1x1) + (5x10) + (10x100) + (10x1000) + (5x10,000) + (1x100,000). It’s also because the numbers in pascals triangles show up in any binomial expansion (a+b)^n.

    • @ivanm1961
      @ivanm1961 6 лет назад +12

      Ohhh, of course. If it was done in a higher base, like base-16, you would see it.

    • @NoNameAtAll2
      @NoNameAtAll2 6 лет назад +1

      Ivan Myachykov
      Why not base-256?

  • @celewign
    @celewign 6 лет назад

    I like this guy. He has a knack for explaining things

  • @jeffreycloete852
    @jeffreycloete852 6 лет назад

    Very beautifully explained!

  • @steliostoulis1875
    @steliostoulis1875 6 лет назад +129

    Did I hear the word... *conjecture* ?

    • @steliostoulis1875
      @steliostoulis1875 6 лет назад +3

      Yes, I did.

    • @H34L5
      @H34L5 6 лет назад +29

      No it was substract

    • @MathAndComputers
      @MathAndComputers 6 лет назад +6

      Challenge accepted?

    • @conure512
      @conure512 6 лет назад +6

      time to spend 4 hours on the computer trying to solve it but getting nowhere
      life of a math nerd

  • @pkmnster681
    @pkmnster681 6 лет назад +4

    That f is FANCYYY!!

  • @tendo16860
    @tendo16860 5 лет назад

    This attracted me because it looked like a network mesh. I think the basis of the g-conjecture may be a generalization of a recurrence relation, which seems to be able to be constructed using a function that depends on recursion to instantiate itself in the lower dimensions.

  • @arjunraja8143
    @arjunraja8143 Год назад +2

    Back here when I realised you won the Fields Medal! Congratulations

  • @pmcate2
    @pmcate2 5 лет назад +4

    No longer an open problem!

  • @bencardwell5545
    @bencardwell5545 Год назад +4

    Congratulations to June Huh for being awarded the Fields Medal!!

  • @spudmurphy1
    @spudmurphy1 6 лет назад

    He is so neat with that sharpie!! 10/10 would watch his penmanship again

  • @rajarshichatterjee3281
    @rajarshichatterjee3281 Год назад +1

    Congratulations for the fields medal , 2022 !

  • @tungtobak
    @tungtobak 6 лет назад +48

    Decagon infinity opens the door
    Decagon infinity opens the door
    Wait for answer to open the door
    Decagon infinity - ah!