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The Kepler Conjecture

The Hales-Ferguson Proof

Jeffrey C. Lagarias (Hrsg.)

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Springer New York img Link Publisher

Naturwissenschaften, Medizin, Informatik, Technik / Geometrie

Beschreibung

The Kepler conjecture, one of geometry's oldest unsolved problems, was formulated in 1611 by Johannes Kepler and mentioned by Hilbert in his famous 1900 problem list. The Kepler conjecture states that the densest packing of three-dimensional Euclidean space by equal spheres is attained by the “cannonball" packing. In a landmark result, this was proved by Thomas C. Hales and Samuel P. Ferguson, using an analytic argument completed with extensive use of computers.

This book centers around six papers, presenting the detailed proof of the Kepler conjecture given by Hales and Ferguson, published in 2006 in a special issue of Discrete & Computational Geometry. Further supporting material is also presented: a follow-up paper of Hales et al (2010) revising the proof, and describing progress towards a formal proof of the Kepler conjecture. For historical reasons, this book also includes two early papers of Hales that indicate his original approach to the conjecture.

The editor's two introductory chapters situate the conjecture in a broader historical and mathematical context. These chapters provide a valuable perspective and are a key feature of this work.

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Schlagwörter

discrete geometry, Kepler conjecture, Hilbert problem, formal proof, condensed matter physics, theorem proving, Johannes Kepler, Euclidean geometry, sphere packing, metric geometry