The fascinating story of a problem that perplexed mathematicians for nearly 400 yearsIn 1611, Johannes Kepler proposed that the best way to pack spheres as densely as possible was to pile them up in the same way that grocers stack oranges or tomatoes. This proposition, known as Keplers Conjecture, seemed obvious to everyone except mathematicians, who seldom take anyones word for anything. In the tradition ofFermats Enigma, George Szpiro shows how the problem engaged and stymied many men of genius over the centuriesSir Walter Raleigh, astronomer Tycho Brahe, Sir Isaac Newton, mathematicians C. F. Gauss and David Hilbert, and R. Buckminster Fuller, to name a fewuntil Thomas Hales of the University of Michigan submitted what seems to be a definitive proof in 1998. Copyright (C) Muze Inc. 2005. For personal use only. All rights reserved.
|