Lonely Runner Conjecture

In number theory, and especially the study of diophantine approximation, the lonely runner conjecture is a conjecture originally due to J. M. Wills in 1967. Applications of the conjecture are widespread in mathematics; they include view obstruction problems and calculating the chromatic number of distance graphs and circulant graphs. The conjecture was given its picturesque name by L. Goddyn in 1998.

Read more about Lonely Runner Conjecture:  The Conjecture, Known Results

Famous quotes containing the words lonely and/or conjecture:

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    Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens] (1835–1910)