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Interesting Theoretical Math Problems
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Topic: Interesting Theoretical Math Problems (Read 2853 times)
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ruler501
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Interesting Theoretical Math Problems
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on:
March 22, 2014, 11:54:33 pm »
What are some really interesting math problems you know of?
One I worked on the other day and neither of my math professors had a quick answer to was: Construct 3 disjoint open sets in R with the same boundary, if it is not possible prove why.
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answer
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The intuitive answer that it is not possible because you can't have three disjoint open sets that share a boundary point(this is false at least in R).
The correct proof from this is a proof that in R if a set A is a subset of another closed set B and they share a boundary then the closure of A equals B. With this you can prove that the closure of the first set is equal to both of the other sets. Therefore the other two sets are equal. Two disjoint sets cannot be equal so they cannot exist.
I know this isn't formal, I do have a formal proof, but formatting really doesn't go well on the forums here.
Anyone else have interesting theoretical problems like this?
EDIT: I'm more interested in topics in topology and analysis(recently I've been looking at the cantor like middle-m sets).
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Last Edit: March 23, 2014, 02:33:05 pm by ruler501
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willrandship
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Re: Interesting math questions
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Reply #1 on:
March 23, 2014, 12:08:52 am »
Check these out.
https://projecteuler.net/
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ruler501
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Re: Interesting math questions
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March 23, 2014, 12:14:16 am »
willrandship I've looked at those but they are mostly number theory or discrete math problems and I'm more interested in topology and analysis.
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I currently don't do much, but I am a developer for a game you should totally try out called AssaultCube Reloaded download here
https://assaultcuber.codeplex.com/
-----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
Version: 3.1
GCM/CS/M/S d- s++: a---- C++ UL++ P+ L++ E---- W++ N o? K- w-- o? !M V?
PS+ PE+ Y+ PGP++ t 5? X R tv-- b+++ DI+ D+ G++ e- h! !r y
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