A New Approach on Proving Collatz Conjecture

Collatz Conjecture (3x+1 problem) states any natural number x will return to 1 after 3⁎x+1 computation (when x is odd) and x/2 computation (when x is even). In this paper, we propose a new approach for possibly proving Collatz Conjecture (CC). We propose Reduced Collatz Conjecture (RCC)—any natural...

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Main Author: Wei Ren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Mathematics
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6129836
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spelling doaj-bdc37ee854824ffeae98425c77e2ffe32020-11-25T01:22:58ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Mathematics2314-46292314-47852019-01-01201910.1155/2019/61298366129836A New Approach on Proving Collatz ConjectureWei Ren0School of Computer Science, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, ChinaCollatz Conjecture (3x+1 problem) states any natural number x will return to 1 after 3⁎x+1 computation (when x is odd) and x/2 computation (when x is even). In this paper, we propose a new approach for possibly proving Collatz Conjecture (CC). We propose Reduced Collatz Conjecture (RCC)—any natural number x will return to an integer that is less than x. We prove that RCC is equivalent to CC. For proving RCC, we propose exploring laws of Reduced Collatz Dynamics (RCD), i.e., from a starting integer to the first integer less than the starting integer. RCC can also be stated as follows: RCD of any natural number exists. We prove that RCD is the components of original Collatz dynamics (from a starting integer to 1); i.e., RCD is more primitive and presents better properties. We prove that RCD presents unified structure in terms of (3⁎x+1)/2 and x/2, because 3⁎x+1 is always followed by x/2. The number of forthcoming (3⁎x+1)/2 computations can be determined directly by inputting x. We propose an induction method for proving RCC. We also discover that some starting integers present RCD with short lengths no more than 7. Hence, partial natural numbers are proved to guarantee RCC in this paper, e.g., 0 module 2; 1 module 4; 3 module 16; 11 or 23 module 32; 7, 15, or 59 module 128. The future work for proving CC can follow this direction, to prove that RCD of left portion of natural numbers exists.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6129836
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wei Ren
spellingShingle Wei Ren
A New Approach on Proving Collatz Conjecture
Journal of Mathematics
author_facet Wei Ren
author_sort Wei Ren
title A New Approach on Proving Collatz Conjecture
title_short A New Approach on Proving Collatz Conjecture
title_full A New Approach on Proving Collatz Conjecture
title_fullStr A New Approach on Proving Collatz Conjecture
title_full_unstemmed A New Approach on Proving Collatz Conjecture
title_sort new approach on proving collatz conjecture
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Mathematics
issn 2314-4629
2314-4785
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Collatz Conjecture (3x+1 problem) states any natural number x will return to 1 after 3⁎x+1 computation (when x is odd) and x/2 computation (when x is even). In this paper, we propose a new approach for possibly proving Collatz Conjecture (CC). We propose Reduced Collatz Conjecture (RCC)—any natural number x will return to an integer that is less than x. We prove that RCC is equivalent to CC. For proving RCC, we propose exploring laws of Reduced Collatz Dynamics (RCD), i.e., from a starting integer to the first integer less than the starting integer. RCC can also be stated as follows: RCD of any natural number exists. We prove that RCD is the components of original Collatz dynamics (from a starting integer to 1); i.e., RCD is more primitive and presents better properties. We prove that RCD presents unified structure in terms of (3⁎x+1)/2 and x/2, because 3⁎x+1 is always followed by x/2. The number of forthcoming (3⁎x+1)/2 computations can be determined directly by inputting x. We propose an induction method for proving RCC. We also discover that some starting integers present RCD with short lengths no more than 7. Hence, partial natural numbers are proved to guarantee RCC in this paper, e.g., 0 module 2; 1 module 4; 3 module 16; 11 or 23 module 32; 7, 15, or 59 module 128. The future work for proving CC can follow this direction, to prove that RCD of left portion of natural numbers exists.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6129836
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