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<record version="7" id="1602">
 <title>Goldbach's conjecture</title>
 <name>GoldbachsConjecture</name>
 <created>2002-01-24 11:25:38</created>
 <modified>2006-11-03 12:22:20</modified>
 <type>Conjecture</type>
 <creator id="3" name="drini"/>
 <author id="6075" name="rspuzio"/>
 <author id="348" name="bbukh"/>
 <author id="3" name="drini"/>
 <author id="124" name="imran"/>
 <classification>
	<category scheme="msc" code="11-00"/>
	<category scheme="msc" code="11P32"/>
 </classification>
 <related>
	<object name="Prime"/>
 </related>
 <preamble></preamble>
 <content>The conjecture states that every even integer $n&gt;2$ is expressible as the sum of two primes.

In 1966 Chen proved that every sufficiently large even number can be expressed as the sum of a prime and a number with at most two prime divisors.

Vinogradov proved that every sufficiently large \emph{odd} number is a sum of three primes. In 1997 it was shown by J.-M. Deshouillers, G. Effinger, H. Te Riele, and D. Zinoviev that, assuming a generalized Riemann hypothesis, every odd number $n&gt;5$ can be represented as sum of three primes.

The conjecture was first proposed in a 1742 letter from Christian Goldbach to Euler and still remains unproved.</content>
</record>
