back to article Finally! A solution to 42 – the Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, The Universe, and Everything

Mathematicians have finally cracked the sum-of-three-cubes problem for the geek-friendly number 42. The puzzle, set more than half a century ago in 1954, challenges you to solve the equation x3 + y3 + z3 = k, where x, y, z are integers and k is an integer from 1 to 100. Some values of k are impossible to solve, and the …

  1. rsole

    I think all this proves is that some mice inserted the number 42 into Douglas Adams' head all those years ago. Now I am wondering when the program will stop running.

    1. Mark 85

      I guess the next "sigh" will be when we hear "so long and thanks for all the fish".

  2. mad_dr
    Pint

    Whenever I read stories like this...

    ... it makes me feel rather thick.

    —-> This. For them.

  3. GrumpenKraut
    Coat

    I just leave this one here: 10^3 + 9^3 = 12^3. Well, almost.

    The one with the unit in the pocket.

    1. A.P. Veening Silver badge

      With those numbers you have the solution in hand for 1.

      1. Glen 1

        Classic Parker Square

    2. Bill Gray

      1729 = 12^3+1^3 = 10^3+9^3, making 1729 the first "taxicab number."

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxicab_number

      From the above :

      The name is derived from a conversation in about 1919 involving mathematicians G. H. Hardy and Srinivasa Ramanujan. As told by Hardy:

      “I remember once going to see him [Ramanujan] when he was lying ill at Putney. I had ridden in taxi-cab No. 1729, and remarked that the number seemed to be rather a dull one, and that I hoped it was not an unfavourable omen. 'No,' he replied, 'it is a very interesting number; it is the smallest number expressible as the sum of two [positive] cubes in two different ways.'"

      Somebody (don't remember who) once said of Ramanujan that it seemed as if every integer was a personal friend of his. So it's not too surprising that Ramanujan noticed this right away.

      Unfortunately, Ramanujan died the next year, so the "favourable omen" bit didn't pan out.

  4. Steve K

    Y^2?

    Am I being daft, but why does the proof show y^2 and not y^3?

    1. GrumpenKraut

      Re: Y^2?

      Just a typo, the value shown on the right really is y^3.

    2. diodesign (Written by Reg staff) Silver badge

      Re: Y^2?

      Just a typo. It's fixed.

      C.

      1. StuntMisanthrope

        Re: Y^2?

        There’s no why in typo. #angleofobservation

  5. Will Godfrey Silver badge
    Coat

    Disturbing

    There don't seem to be any mice round here. Should I be worried?

    P.S. a coat is a poor substitute for a towel!

    1. Muscleguy

      Re: Disturbing

      Autumn is closing in, the mice, currently largely outside will come in and make themselves known to you. I must bait and reset my traps. I only caught three last Autumn.

      Of course white mice are almost all housed with ad libitum food and water and a constant warm climate in labs all over the world. They can also sometimes be found in pet shops.

      Personally despite having spent my working life working on mice I would prefer rats as pets. Rats have more smarts and personality. They can also be trained to be less likely to piss and poo and you.

      It might have something to do with pet rats and lab rats being much less inbred than most of the mice. Because we have a strongly established genetics for mice and not for rats. Which means inbred lines. Outbred mouse mothers will collect the faeces of her and her offspring and push them up into the cage bars wth the sawdust keeping the nest clean. Inbred mothers do not.

      1. GrumpenKraut
        Pint

        Re: Disturbing

        > Outbred mouse mothers will collect the faeces of her and her offspring and push them up into the cage bars wth the sawdust keeping the nest clean. Inbred mothers do not.

        Things I learned from El Reg's commentariat, part 239.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Disturbing

        Pet store rats don't live very long the ones we got reached two years at most and got tumors.

        1. xeroks

          Re: Disturbing

          Try contacting your local rat club: far more reliable and a great source of information on keeping the pesky varmints.

          1. Alien8n

            Re: Disturbing

            SQUEAK

            1. theDeathOfRats

              Re: Disturbing

              SQUEAK?

      3. jmch Silver badge
        Coat

        Re: Disturbing

        "Personally despite having spent my working life working on mice..."

        So you still haven't cottoned on that they're working on you, eh?

        I'll get my towel --->>>

      4. TheRealRoland
        Unhappy

        Re: Disturbing

        Chipmunks over here :-(

      5. renniks

        Re: Disturbing

        It's not as if you can only get Weil's disease from wild rats though, or is it?

        I thought all rats have a constantly leaking bladder so that they leave a trail of piss behind them?

        Mighty spring loaded metal rat traps for the lot of em - let them wear them as hats

    2. Eugene Crosser
      Megaphone

      Re: Disturbing

      > a coat is a poor substitute for a towel!

      I request and demand that our El Reg overlords provide us with a towel icon!

      1. Kane
        Megaphone

        Re: Disturbing

        "I request and demand that our El Reg overlords provide us with a towel icon!"

        Agreed, but I've been pushing for a Pterry icon for the past couple of years, to no avail. Your demands fall on deaf ears I'm afraid.

        1. Will Godfrey Silver badge
          Big Brother

          Re: Disturbing

          I upvoted you as I'm in total agreement, but what I would like to do is downvote the stick-in-the-mud devs who are ignoring our totally reasonable request.

        2. Cederic Silver badge

          Re: Disturbing

          A black fedora could meet that need and provide greater flexibility for other purposes.

          1. Kane
            Go

            Re: Disturbing

            You hearing this, Vultures? It's about time!

          2. Eclectic Man Silver badge
            Coat

            Re: Disturbing

            Ahem, I remember reading an interview with Sir Terry Pratchett, and he stated that his much admired hat was, in fact, a 'Borsalino'.

            (I'll get my (astrakhan) coat.)

    3. BebopWeBop

      Re: Disturbing

      Would a towelling bathrobe suffice as a compromise?

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Mushroom

        Re: Disturbing

        > Would a towelling bathrobe suffice as a compromise?

        Towelling inferno?

    4. AIBailey

      a coat is a poor substitute for a towel!

      Indeed, but if you squint enough, that could be a dressing gown.

  6. Spamfast
    FAIL

    “The computation on each PC runs in the background so the owner can still use their PC for its usual tasks,” Sutherland told The Register.

    Yet another pointless waste of energy keeping the CPU at high clock and the drives spinning just like the distributed Mersenne prime software. And it encourages people to leave their PCs runnng where they previously might have turned them off. These mathematical curiosities are of no theoretical or practical value even within the field of mathematics let alone outside it.

    If you must run something in the background, do something useful like Folding@home. Or turn the computer off, got for a walk and do flora & fauna surveys for the RSPB or whoever. Who knows, you might discover a new species of insect or plant. Wouldn't that be more satisfying than some pointless string of digits?

    1. GrumpenKraut
      WTF?

      Where to start?

      Just one point: the techniques used in such HPC tasks have a tendency to be useful for other tasks. Say, for the computer algebra system you are using.

      OK, another one: the proudly non-applied field of number theory turned (many decades later) out to be the guts of error-correcting codes and cryptography. Useful for computer-y stuff, you know?

      Of course the alternatives like protein folding (and tons others) are exciting as well.

      1. Spamfast
        Stop

        I'm all for pure research and the unexpected spin-offs it generates.

        But mathematicians themselves say that these sorts of brute force searches are pointless. Explain to me how knowing the answer for 42 or finding the largest Mersenne prime advances any field in mathematics. It's all stamp collecting. Real mathematics is done by mathematicians not computers.

        1. werdsmith Silver badge

          Real mathematics is done by mathematicians not computers.

          Mathematicians have generally taken advantage of computers, including back in the old days when computers wer humans.

        2. GrumpenKraut

          > ...these sorts of brute force searches are pointless.

          Number crunching is not mathematics, sure. But brute force computations are useful, for example, for ...

          Finding solutions for Diophantine equations when you don't have stronger theorems, possibly helping you to find theorems (yes, you must prove them).

          Verifying or falsifying conjectures. In discrete mathematics (e.g., number theory, coding theory, combinatorics, ...) this is done all the time.

          Numerically solving problems that are outright impossible to do by hand. Nonlinear differential equations are a good example (think solitons).

          It is routine to use computers to observe properies and make conjectures. A certain Gauss did this all the time.

          Not every mathematician works this way, but a lot of them do. So...

          > Real mathematics is done by mathematicians not computers.

          ...implies that dozens of mathematicians I happen to know are not actually mathematicians. I refuse to to believe that.

          1. Baldrickk

            I'd say that if a mathematician uses a computer (or a calculator for that matter) that the person is still doing the math, the machine is just doing the calculation.

            A computer doing math would, to me, be like one writing their own software.

        3. JetSetJim

          As an individual result it may not really help all that much, but I'd posit that at the very least:

          a) an algorithm was developed to help search the solution space - perhaps a nice undergrad project, possibly even a masters element

          b) existing theorem's/hypotheses are present that help filter out bits of the solution space as a waste of search time - having this result will help validate them or even extend them, even if it can't prove a general case

          c) it may perhaps inspire others to come up with a general purpose proof that these things exist, much like Andrew Wiles' proof of Fermat's theorem - I suspect this is more in line with the end game.

          An example of an instance where the equation holds true isn't proof that the equation is true for all values - the two problems are approached in a very different way, and both pose challenges in implementation, and (for some) are fun to play with.

          Let the maths-bods have some fun, and that includes the ones donating CPU to the project.

        4. JDX Gold badge

          re:Real mathematics is done by mathematicians not computers.

          That's just hopelessly out of date. Many proofs are computer-aided now. Figuring out how to use computers to find proofs that cannot ever be done unaided is a part of modern mathematics.

          Quite old now, but Fermat's last theorem is a good example.

        5. Lee D Silver badge

          Four colour theorem.

          It's about using a tool appropriate to the job to do the boring parts, rather than having the computer hypothesise new theories (which they can't do anyway).

          And Mersenne primes are incredibly important.

          Sorry, but that's just a staggering amount of ignorance you're showing.

          And I'm a mathematician, and a computer science guy.

          1. Charles 9

            "And Mersenne primes are incredibly important."

            I'd be interested to know why they're so important compared to say a non-trivial prime number (one not determinable in any programmatic way), or perhaps a proof that prime numbers have no discrete or algorithmic distribution.

            1. Lee D Silver badge

              Mersenne Primes are forming the basis of some ECC curves because of their special properties, as well as random number generators, not to mention being an integral part of some post-quantum cryptography candidates (e.g. Mersenne-756839).

              Every time you say to a mathematician "Well what's the point of that?", I guarantee you that it's *already* in use somewhere for some purpose that will end up in something you use every day and rely on.

              1. This post has been deleted by its author

              2. Charles 9

                I withdrew my earlier post because it hadn't been made clear that "Mersenne number" (n = 2^p - 1 where p is prime) and "Mersenne prime" (n = 2^p - 1 where p is prime) are actually the same thing (2^p - 1 being prime -> p is also prime). That said, I'll believe their practicality when I see them in action.

      2. doublelayer Silver badge

        Let's really think about this. I don't mind if people want to donate cycles to finding this answer. But why do we care about it? I really like lots of abstract math problems, but they didn't find and execute a new algorithm that can solve these things; they brute forced a bunch of options and found one. If we should need to solve this problem for some reason in the future, and I'm willing to assume we've found one even though I haven't a clue what that would be, does this program give us a new, faster, or organized way of solving for it? From what I've seen, it does not, and we'd have to put more resources into a brute force search. So let's not give it the kind of credit that you've implied. The examples you provide gave us new algorithms, and they turned out to be useful later on. All we got from this are three big numbers.

        Computing resources can be quite cheap in cases like these. If that's the way people choose to use them, then that's fine. But let's not give this more credit than it deserves.

    2. Martin Gregorie

      Yet another pointless waste of energy keeping the CPU at high clock

      Not all BOINC projects are a waste of energy.

      That said, I used to be a supporter back when a PC's clockspeed was fixed, but once my house server, which runs 24/7, had its old hardware replaced with a variable clock speed dual Athlon box and I'd had to listen to the poor thing howling continuously at maxed-out clock speed and full-throttle fans, BOINC got the chop and has never been reinstalled.

      Bottom line: I'm happy to donate unused cycles to worthwhile projects, but these were not unused cycles: they would not have existed if BOINC hadn't stomped the PC's pedal to the metal and held it there.

      1. BebopWeBop

        I think subsidised (by someone else) cycles would be more appropriate.

      2. Long John Brass

        PC's pedal to the metal

        You can tune BOINC to not hammer the CPU quite as hard. I run most of my machines with a 75% CPU cap; They don't run as hot; but still do useful work.

        1. Spamfast
          FAIL

          Re: PC's pedal to the metal

          It's still going to consume resources that it needn't if it were switched off or put into deep sleep until an external event woke it up to do useful work.

          Despite all the protests to the contrary in this thread, finding huge Mersenne primes and sum-of-cubes triples using existing algorithms doesn't achieve anything for mathematics, HPC or cryptography.

          If someone designs/discovers a new, better algorithm that then might be useful elsewhere I agree.

          But that doesn't justify consuming power to run an existing algorithm - that achieves diddley-squat, other than smugness if it happens to be one of 'your' computers that finds a larger/harder solution.

          And quite often its academic BOFHs who install this nonsense on all the computers under their control and it's the students or the taxpayers who end up paying for the juice to power & cool it & the extra spinning-rust wear-and-tear, let alone the environmental damage.

    3. keith_w
      Trollface

      RSPB = Royal Society for the Prevention of Bigness?

      1. Francis Boyle Silver badge

        Nah

        It has to be the Register Society for the Promotion of BOFHness. (Meeting currently in progress over at "Who Me".)

    4. Eclectic Man Silver badge

      Art

      If you object to computers being used for pure, in this case Diophantine, mathematics, what is your position on using resources for art?

      I often find the entries to the Turner Prize to be baffling, and the artists have certainly used lots of resources to make them.

      I do mathematics, and I'm currently researching some diophantine mathematics myself, although my numbers are somewhat larger (2578 decimal digits), but only use squares, not cubes.

  7. Mike 125

    Nice.

    Great work. That would've made Douglas very happy. But it's a travesty that the proof is so simple.

    Hmmm... that's got me thinking... I wonder if anyone's ever tried solving

    a^n + b^n = c^n

    for n greater than 2? Maybe I'll have a go after the cricket.

    1. GrumpenKraut
      Trollface

      Re: Nice.

      Fix a and b, then c = (a^n + b^n)^(1/n).

      Wait, you meant integer solutions? OK, take any n>=3. Then 0^n + 1^n = 1^n.

      Do I win a cookie?

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Headmaster

        Re: Nice.

        Fermat's Last Theorem required a and b (and therefore c) to be positive integers greater than zero, and n to be greater than two.

        I realised some years ago that the general theorem which states that the following has no solution:

        a^n + b^n = c^n

        can be simplified to the following true algorithm:

        (a-1)^n + a^n < (a+1)^n

        for all n greater than two.

        Which I would assume (I'm no mathematician) is easier to prove in a mathematical sense than the original theorem. Which would then also prove Fermat.

        (I like to think this is the simple proof Fermat alluded to in his infamous margin, but I guess we'll never know.)

        1. GrumpenKraut

          Re: Nice.

          (a-1)^n + a^n < (a+1)^n is not correct for fixed n and small enough a. For example, a=7 and n=3 gives (a-1)^n + a^n = 6^3+7^3 = 559 and (a+1)^n = 8^3 =512. As 559 > 512, we have a counter example.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Facepalm

            Re: Nice.

            You see, this is why I'm not a mathematician. :)

            1. Eclectic Man Silver badge

              Re: Nice.

              Now then do not confuse symbolic mathematics with all mathematics. Rational thought is mathematics, so if you do deductions, derivations etc., you are a mathematician. Consider that someone can be illiterate, yet still be a brilliant orator. Would you say that person was 'no good' at English?

        2. Carpet Deal 'em
          Boffin

          Re: Nice.

          It's highly doubtful that Fermat actually had a proof. First, he never wrote about it again for the thirty or so years he lived after the famous scribble(despite posing specific exponent versions as challenges to other mathematicians of the day); second, the actual proof was over a hundred pages and relied on recently invented techniques(which would mean a proof based solely on early/mid 1600s math would probably be well over a thousand pages - a magnitude that would warrant language stronger than "this margin is too narrow to contain").

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: Nice.

            Obligatory XKCD https://xkcd.com/1381/

        3. Michael Wojcik Silver badge

          Re: Nice.

          required a and b (and therefore c) to be positive integers greater than zero

          A good thing, given the drastic shortage of positive integers less than or equal to zero.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Headmaster

      Re: Nice.

      Andrew Wiles solved Fermat's Last Theorem in 1994.

      1. GrumpenKraut
        Angel

        Re: Nice.

        I know. Noticed the troll icon?

      2. find users who cut cat tail

        Re: Nice.

        Actually, Wiles' theorem proves Fermat's old conjecture. But I'm afraid Wiles has zero chance of his name being associated with the theorem in popular media...

      3. Tom 7

        Re: Nice.

        But not properly. Fermat couldn't quite fit his solution in the border of his notebook. Wiles used half the Amazon for his.

        1. GrumpenKraut

          Re: Nice.

          > Fermat couldn't quite fit his solution in the border of his notebook.

          Nobody I ever met believes that Fermat really had a proof.

          Diophantine equations with high exponents tend to be very hard to attack.

          1. brotherelf
            Angel

            Re: Nice.

            > Nobody I ever met believes that Fermat really had a proof.

            I'm not much of a believer in afterlife, but I get a chuckle out of the idea that Fermat's corner of hell, for whatever reasons, is everybody recognizing him, looking at his proof in the margin, and going "you forgot a minus at the beginning there, mate".

  8. Wellyboot Silver badge

    Whatever floats your boat - it's increasing our collective knowledge that counts.

    You never know when one of these interesting unknowns will turn up as a showstopper in a real world problem.

    1. Boris the Cockroach Silver badge

      And thats the real reason we do pure research.

      1. GrumpenKraut

        Let me add another important reason. It's fun.

        1. Not also known as SC
          Pint

          This has got to be the most important reason.

        2. Spamfast
          Pint

          It's fun.

          Some people think pissing in phone booths is fun. Doesn't give them the right to do it.

          I think drinking to excess is sometimes fun. Not sure I can use that as a justification for doing it all the time though. ;-)

      2. Spamfast

        Firm believer in supporting pure research in the hard sciences & mathematics.

        Not a believer in supporting vanity stamp collecting projects that degrade our environment.

        I'd like my near-future descendants to have some dry land to live on.

  9. Tom 7

    Anyone got any idea of how many calculations were done to discover this?

    geek mind needs to know now!

  10. SNAFUology

    Marvin

    What's the probability this i'd turn up and read this, oh dear just dreary old math philosophy.

  11. Andy Landy

    Scientific Progress Goes 'BOINC'

  12. bobjimwhit

    you are all wrong

    if you watch the origional series you will see that 42 was an error

    the real answer to life, the universe and everything is really 56

    1. AIBailey

      Aah, no.

      In Life, The universe and Everything, it is confirmed that 42 is the answer, however it is impossible for the Question and the Answer to both be known in the same Universe as they'll cancel each other out.

    2. Mr Humbug

      If you're referring to Arthur's use of teh scrabble tiles to divine the question (what do you get if you multiply six by nine) then I think you mean 54.

      But the programme that ended with Arthur's result was corrupted by the Golgafrincham B Ark, which is why he produced the wrong question.

      </pedant>

  13. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    42 Comments!

    Fairly awesome that when I looked at this story, there were 42 comments.

    Of course, I have now just stuffed that up.

    1. Sir Runcible Spoon
      Boffin

      Re: 42 Comments!

      No, there are 42 + x comments now.

  14. Geekhillbilly

    OK the soultion is known

    OK the answer is 42.Does anyone know the Ultimate question of Life, the universe and everything? Or do we have to wait for the Vogons to show up?

    1. sum_of_squares
      Boffin

      Re: OK the soultion is known

      "What do you get if you multiply six by nine?"

      1. Umbracorn

        Re: OK the soultion is known

        in base 13, it works out.

        1. Sir Runcible Spoon
          Thumb Up

          Re: OK the soultion is known

          Nicely done, colour me impressed!

          1. Qwelak
            Mushroom

            Re: OK the soultion is known

            You do realise that now the universe will vanish and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable.

            1. jmch Silver badge
              Happy

              Re: OK the soultion is known

              "You do realise that now the universe will vanish and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable."

              I think it already has

  15. MacroRodent

    Checked it

    On Fedora Linux

    $ bc

    bc 1.07.1

    Copyright 1991-1994, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2012-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

    This is free software with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY.

    For details type `warranty'.

    x=-80538738812075974

    y=80435758145817515

    z=12602123297335631

    x^3+y^3+z^3

    42

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    But does he know where is towel is?

    1. Sir Runcible Spoon
      Trollface

      and is he really a frood?

  17. Ian Michael Gumby

    Silly question...

    Does the proof say that x != -y or -z etc?

    just an example : if x = -y then z=k so all numbers have a solution or set of solutions.

    1. GrumpenKraut

      Re: Silly question...

      > if x = -y then z=k

      Nope. if x = -y then z=cube_root(k), which is not an integer.

    2. Charles 9

      Re: Silly question...

      That only works for perfect cubes like 8, 27, or 64 (which are respectively -1, 0, and 1 modulo 9).

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    1337

    x^3+y^3+z^3=317

  19. Kubla Cant

    Towels

    Are the things in the picture supposed to be towels? They look more like prayer shawls.

    I'm sure DA had something more fluffy, without tassels, in mind.

    1. Eclectic Man Silver badge

      Re: Towels

      Kubla Cant > "I'm sure DA had something more fluffy, without tassels, in mind."

      Or ossibly 'Heavily Modified Face Flannels'?

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