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British mathematician
Andrew Richard Booker (born 1976)[1] is a British mathematician who is currently Professor of Pure Mathematics at the University of Bristol .[2] He is an analytic number theorist known for his work on L-functions of automorphic forms [3] and his contributions to the sums of three cubes problem .[4] [5]
Education [ edit ]
Booker graduated from the University of Virginia in 1998, earning the E.J. McShane Prize as the top undergraduate in mathematics.[6] He completed his doctoral degree at Princeton University in 2003, under the supervision of Peter Sarnak .[7]
Contributions [ edit ]
In the spring of 2019 Booker gained international attention by showing that 33 can be expressed as the sum of three cubes .[4] [8] [9] [10] At that time 33 and 42 were the only numbers less than 100 for which this problem was open. Later that year, in joint work with Andrew Sutherland of MIT , he settled the case of 42,[11] [12] as well as answering a 65-year-old question of Mordell by finding a third representation for 3 as the sum of three cubes.[13] Popular Mechanics cited the result for 42 as one of the top two mathematical breakthroughs of 2019.[5] [14]
Video appearances [ edit ]
Numberphile has produced three YouTube videos related to sums of three cubes in which Andrew Booker is the featured guest:
As of January 2023 these videos had accumulated a total of almost two million views.[15]
Selected publications [ edit ]
References [ edit ]
^ "Booker, Andrew R., 1976-" . viaf.org . Retrieved 13 February 2020 .
^ Professor Andrew Booker , University of Bristol, retrieved 12 February 2020
^ Glimpses of a new (mathematical) world , American Institute of Mathematics , 2008
^ a b Georgiou, Aristos (3 April 2019), "The uncracked problem with 33: Mathematician solves 64-year-old 'Diophantine puzzle' " , Newsweek
^ a b Popular Mechanics honors Ken Ono and Andrew Booker for the top two math breakthroughs in 2019 , University of Virginia, 7 January 2020, retrieved 12 February 2020
^ Undergraduate Awards , University of Virginia, retrieved 12 February 2020
^ Andrew R.Booker , Mathematics Genealogy Project , retrieved 12 February 2020
^ Booker, Andrew R. (2019), "Cracking the problem with 33", Research in Number Theory , 5 (26), arXiv :1903.04284 , doi :10.1007/s40993-019-0162-1 , MR 3983550
^ Pavlus, John (10 March 2019), "Sum-of-Three-Cubes Problem Solved for 'Stubborn' Number 33" , Quanta Magazine
^ Lu, Donna (14 March 2019), "Mathematician cracks centuries-old problem about the number 33" , New Scientist
^ Sum of three cubes for 42 finally solved – using real life planetary computer , University of Bristol, 6 September 2019
^ Miller, Sandi (10 September 2019), "The answer to life, the universe, and everything: Mathematics researcher Drew Sutherland helps solve decades-old sum-of-three-cubes puzzle, with help from "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy." " , MIT News , Massachusetts Institute of Technology
^ Lu, Donna (18 September 2019), "Mathematicians find a completely new way to write the number 3" , New Scientist
^ Linkletter, Dave (27 December 2019), "The 10 Biggest Math Breakthroughs of 2019" , Popular Mechanics
^ Numberphile channel , YouTube, retrieved 14 February 2020
External links [ edit ]
General National libraries Scientific databases