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corimaith 4 days ago

>Cairo kept reading and thinking. Eventually, she found a way to construct a strange, complicated function out of waves whose frequencies all lay on a curved surface — the type of surface the conjecture required. Usually, when you add these kinds of waves together, they interfere, canceling each other out in some places and reinforcing each other elsewhere.

Rather than speaking about her age or the vague notion of talent, I'd be much more interested in why the rest of the academia was unable to replicate her methods in 40 years or so. From her own admission, it was throwing different ideas and approaches until she saw a disprecancy that ultimately disproved the theorem. There should be many people far more experienced who do have the knowledge to do this, but why did they not? This dosen't look like a intuitive jump, seems more like building a test case that fully stressed the theorem.

thrance 4 days ago | parent [-]

Heh, take a look at her paper [0]. It is much more complex that TFA makes it out to be: once you have the intuition you need to prove it actually disproves the theorem.

Also, it's probably a not very well known conjecture that people wouldn't care too much about. Also also, it was a conjecture: people were probably looking to prove it rather that disprove it, failing and then giving up.

[0] https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.06137