Collatz conjectureThe Collatz conjecture is a conjecture (an idea which many people think is likely) in mathematics. It is named after Lothar Collatz. He first proposed it in 1937, which was 2 years after getting his doctorate.[1] It is about what happens when something is done repeatedly (over and over) starting at some positive integer n:[1][2]
The conjecture states that if n is positive, n will always reach one and get stuck in the 4,2,1 loop as shown below. The problem is verified for all numbers below by brute force.[3][4] Here is an example sequence:[5]
DebateMany mathematicians argue over if it is really true. Numbers in the quadrillions have been tested but it has still remained true. Specifically, mathematicians have shown that a loop besides the 4,2,1 loop must be at least 186,000,000,000 (186 billion) numbers long.[4] However, this is still very less compared to another conjecture that had been proved false in 1978. There are two outcomes where it is false: a number keeps growing towards infinity, or an extremely large number forms its own loop. References
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