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  • [Tony]: I thought we'd have a look at some of the shortest papers

  • that have ever been written.

  • One of the sort of most famous ones was this one here

  • by Lander and Parkin.

  • Which you can literally see, look how short it is!

  • There's virtually nothing there. But the content's really good

  • because it actually disproves a very long-standing conjecture

  • that had held for hundreds of years.

  • [Brady]: So now we're just disproving with an actual example?

  • [Tony]: Exactly, they were just proving the Euler conjecture, and what is the Euler conjecture?

  • Well it's kind of related to Fermat's Last Theorem.

  • Fermat's theorem, what does it say?

  • You've got two numbers, a1 to the k plus a2 to the k equals b to the k.

  • And basically it says there are no integers solutions for k greater than two. Okay, that's Fermat's Last Theorem.

  • Euler's conjecture was a generalization of this.

  • Basically, you just take n of these guys, and again, now you're saying,

  • Euler conjecture would be there are no integer solutions for k greater than n.

  • No integer solutions for k greater than n, so of course,

  • Fermat's Last Theorem is the case of n equals two.

  • This is the general case, right?

  • But this is not true, right? This paper proves it.

  • Basically, in this example, n is four, but k is five.

  • Disproven, there you go.

  • So, in a nutshell, it disproves it.

  • But this doesn't have the record anymore. I don't know if it ever did have the record.

  • It's sort of a classic short paper that achieves quite a lot.

  • The record is, I think, currently held by this paper,

  • by your friend, John Conway, and somebody called Alex Sofer,

  • I think it is, I think that's how you pronounce it.

  • Okay, so they ask a question in the title,

  • so I think that's a bit of a cheat.

  • And then, so they're basically asking about

  • how many equilateral triangles you need to cover an equilateral triangle of a given size.

  • Basically, the paper just says n squared plus two can, and then it has a picture of their solution.

  • So it's kind of got two words in it, right?

  • They had the following question, right?

  • So you take an equilateral triangle

  • and you imagine it's got a length of side n,

  • and then you could ask, well, how many triangles of side one,

  • you know, so unit side triangles, equilateral triangles,

  • do I need to to fill it, to cover it?

  • You know the answer. It turns out to be n squared, it's quite easy to see that.

  • Show you by example.

  • If you've got side two, so we've got side two, we can fill it with four equilateral triangles, like that.

  • So, these have all got side one and four of them fill the equilateral triangle you started with.

  • [BRADY]: Which is two squared. [TONY]: Which is two squared exactly, right?

  • And it generalizes and the answer is n squared for one of side n.

  • Okay, so what these guys want to know is

  • what if we make it a little bit bigger than n?

  • Not n plus one but just a little bit bigger than n, so n plus epsilon.

  • How many do you need then?

  • Okay, so you might think,

  • "I know I'm going to need more than n squared."

  • Because n squared would cover the original one, right?

  • So I'm gonna need more than, so you're going to need at least n squared plus one.

  • So they were asking, well can you do it with n squared plus one?

  • And they didn't actually answer the question.

  • They say actually you need n squared plus two.

  • How do they show that?

  • Well, what you do is you sort of stop it at n minus one.

  • So you draw, consider n minus one there.

  • Okay and then you've got a little bit there of one plus epsilon.

  • So you've got a little of one plus epsilon bit there.

  • Now this thing, this big thing in here,

  • is going to need n minus one squared to fill it. ok ?

  • Now, what they do is they say

  • right, what I need to fill this little bit left over here?

  • Well, the way they do it is you know this has got length n plus epsilon that way.

  • Okay, so you squeeze in.

  • you're not going to cover these edges

  • with n edges of the triangle, right?

  • you're going to need at least n plus one.

  • Okay, so you squeeze in n plus one of them.

  • Like so.

  • [BRADY]: Maybe overlapping.

  • [TONY]: They definitely have to overlap, right?

  • Because this is n plus epsilon, so it's n plus a tiny bit.

  • And you're going to squeeze it n plus one of them, so they're definitely gonna overlap,

  • So you get n plus one of them there.

  • Okay and you fill in the top bits.

  • To fill in the top bits so on and so forth,

  • you need another n,

  • and then you can do it.

  • So how much have you got total now?

  • In total you've got n minus one squared plus n plus n plus one.

  • Okay you work out what that is, this is...

  • n squared minus 2n plus one plus 2n plus one,

  • which is n squared plus two.

  • [BRADY]: The extra bit you need could be less than two, they're just showing it's--

  • [TONY]: Yes, so that's just what I think about it. I don't think they even answered the question.

  • The question is can n squared plus one unit equilateral triangles

  • cover an equilateral triangle of side n plus epsilon?

  • They don't say yes or no, they just say n squaredplus 2 can.

  • Maybe they could have just said "maybe" (laughs).

  • I don't know, they don't answer the question!

  • If you look in other fields there are shorter ones there.

  • I mean, I found some others.

  • There's this one.

  • It's not maths, but in the applied behavior analysis,

  • it's "the unsuccessful self-treatment of a case of writer's block".

  • Of course, there's nothing there.

  • There's another one: comprehensive overview of chemical-free consumer products.

  • This is in a chemistry journal,

  • and there aren't any.

  • Actually, this didn't just didn't appear in the journal.

  • They didn't publish it, but they did include it for amusement purposes.

  • There's plenty of short papers out there.

  • There's also short abstracts.

  • That's another thing you can you can look at.

  • This is one that caught my attention.

  • This is a physics one.

  • Can the apparent superluminal neutrino speeds be explained as a quantum weak measurement?

  • There's a classic thing in, you know, within academia,

  • that if your title has a question mark at the end of it,

  • then the answer is probably not.

  • And indeed their abstract is "Probably not."

  • I would actually say definitely not,

  • because we now know that there are no faster-than-light neutrinos,

  • that that was just a screwed-up experiment.

  • There's an even shorter abstract there.

  • There's another one with a question.

  • Is the sequence of earthquakes in southern California with aftershocks removed Poissonian?

  • So this is a mixture of maths and, I guess, geography.

  • But the answer isn't "probably not", it's "Yes"!

  • So that sort of goes against the usual rules of the game.

  • But this is all just a bit of fun, right?

  • But I think what's more, what would be better is like,

  • it's not so much how short the paper is

  • but, in a way, impact per word.

  • So short paper that achieved a lot.

  • Okay now I, this is clearly open for debate,

  • but i think that the candidate for this

  • is this bad boy by the beautiful mind, John Nash.

  • So this is a very, very short paper,

  • which it starts there and it finishes there.

  • Okay, so it's a page long and this basically started off game theory.

  • This is really one of the main papers underlying economics.

  • He basically ultimately won the Nobel Prize for economics for this paper

  • and other ideas related to it.

  • So I think in terms of impact per word

  • this is probably the winner.

  • John Nash's thesis is famously short as well.

  • I've got a copy of his thesis here.

  • Non-cooperative, of course, it's about game theory, Non-cooperative Games.

  • It's only like 26 pages long. It's like wow, you know what I mean?

  • This thesis won a Nobel Prize and it's 26 pages long.

  • There's a bit of an urban myth.

  • If you do a maths degree, as I did,

  • there's an urban myth that goes around the students

  • is to, there's this part, this PhD thesis

  • that someone did once and it's like a page long

  • and it proved some result from, that hadn't been known for hundreds of years,

  • and it just did it in one page and there you go, bang, PhD thesis came out.

  • I think that is a myth but I would love it if somebody found it out that it wasn't.

  • I've had a little digging around and I don't think it is.

  • I think in terms of short theses, big impact,

  • you'd do well to be good ol' John Nash.

  • [Brady]: This episode has been supported by audible.com,

  • and if you've got some reading to catch up on,

  • an audiobook is a great way to do it.

  • Among Audible's vast collection of titles

  • is the acclaimed book A Beautiful Mind,

  • the biography of John Nash, who we've just been discussing.

  • It's written by Sylvia Nasar.

  • Or if biographies aren't your thing, but you still want something

  • with a bit of a math twist,

  • I also highly recommend The Humans, a novel by Matt Haig,

  • and one of my favorite stories of the last few years.

  • But whatever the sort of thing you like, I can guarantee Audible is going to have it.

  • And you can also get started with a free 30-day trial

  • by going to audible.com/numberphile.

  • They've got a great store, a cool app,

  • really excellent features like Whispersync for voice so you can synchronize your audiobook on Kindle

  • without losing your place.

  • And if you do give that free 30-day trial a go,

  • make sure you use the address audible.com/numberphile

  • just so they know you came from the channel here.

[Tony]: I thought we'd have a look at some of the shortest papers

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