Is there a good database of unsolved problems in mathematics?
Asked
Active
Viewed 893 times
3
-
11yes, here. http://math.stackexchange.com/unanswered yours is one of them currently. – Asinomás Jul 08 '15 at 15:59
-
1https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unsolved_problems_in_mathematics, but I wouldn't call it a good database, in fact, the article has multiple issues. – wythagoras Jul 08 '15 at 16:02
-
This is one of may sources: http://unsolveddatabase.org/about – NoChance Jul 08 '15 at 16:06
-
Digga, dein Ernst? There are only TWO problems ... ROFL – asdfusername Jul 08 '15 at 16:12
2 Answers
1
Yes, there are plenty. Here are some from my bookmarks that I could find easily.
http://www.openproblemgarden.org
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unsolved_problems_in_mathematics
Tomarinator
- 1,596
- 2
- 11
- 23
-
Both of these sites are not good. Openproblemgarden is not complete in the sense that there are important open problems that the list does not contain. The second is interesting but I am searching for a more comprehensive site. However, thanks ;-D – asdfusername Jul 08 '15 at 16:08
-
Well if you know of those 'important' open problems already, why would you need a resource with those on it? – anak Jul 08 '15 at 16:21
-
I don't really know those important problems. But I know that there are some of them that aren't in the list. I feel it. – asdfusername Jul 09 '15 at 11:34
1
The site called scilag (https://www.scilag.net/) is another more recent one too.
"SciLag is a free web-based platform for facilitating dynamic organisation of scientific problems at a research level. It represents an online service for scientists for sharing their knowledge about the forefront of research. The current version is set up for the Mathematical community only to test and refine the concept in action."
Thomas Kojar
- 3,596