twin prime conjecture, in number theory, assertion that there are infinitely many twin primes, or pairs of primes that differ by 2. For example, 3 and 5, 5 and 7, 11 and 13, and 17 and 19 are twin primes. As numbers get larger, primes become less frequent and twin primes rarer still.
The first statement of the twin prime conjecture was given in 1846 by French mathematician Alphonse de Polignac, who wrote that any even number can be expressed in infinite ways as the difference between two consecutive primes. When the even number is 2, this is the twin prime conjecture; that is, 2 = 5 − 3 = 7 − 5 = 13 − 11 = …. (Although the conjecture is sometimes called Euclid’s twin prime conjecture, he gave the oldest known proof that there exist an infinite number of primes but did not conjecture that there are an infinite number of twin primes.) Very little progress was made on this conjecture until 1919, when Norwegian mathematician Viggo Brun showed that the sum of the reciprocals of the twin primes converges to a sum, now known as Brun’s constant. (In contrast, the sum of the reciprocals of the primes diverges to infinity.) Brun’s constant was calculated in 1976 as approximately 1.90216054 using the twin primes up to 100 billion. In 1994 American mathematician Thomas Nicely was using a personal computer equipped with the then new Pentium chip from the Intel Corporation when he discovered a flaw in the chip that was producing inconsistent results in his calculations of Brun’s constant. Negative publicity from the mathematics community led Intel to offer free replacement chips that had been modified to correct the problem. In 2010 Nicely gave a value for Brun’s constant of 1.902160583209 ± 0.000000000781 based on all twin primes less than 2 × 1016.
The next big breakthrough occurred in 2003, when American mathematician Daniel Goldston and Turkish mathematician Cem Yildirim published a paper, “Small Gaps Between Primes,” that established the existence of an infinite number of prime pairs within a small difference (16, with certain other assumptions, most notably that of the Elliott-Halberstam conjecture). Although their proof was flawed, they corrected it with Hungarian mathematician János Pintz in 2005. American mathematician Yitang Zhang built on their work to show in 2013 that, without any assumptions, there were an infinite number differing by 70 million. This bound was improved to 246 in 2014, and by assuming either the Elliott-Halberstam conjecture or a generalized form of that conjecture, the difference was 12 and 6, respectively. These techniques may enable progress on the Riemann hypothesis, which is connected to the prime number theorem (a formula that gives an approximation of the number of primes less than any given value). See also Millennium Problem.