Editing 2529: Unsolved Math Problems

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In the final panel, Megan is looking at a strange curve that seems to have no consistent pattern. At the bottom it's mostly straight, with a few little wobbles. In the middle it looks like a wild, high-frequency wave that suddenly bursts and then dies down. And the top is a spiral that looks like a question mark or a Western-style {{w|Crosier}}. She wonders if this could even be mathematical.  
 
In the final panel, Megan is looking at a strange curve that seems to have no consistent pattern. At the bottom it's mostly straight, with a few little wobbles. In the middle it looks like a wild, high-frequency wave that suddenly bursts and then dies down. And the top is a spiral that looks like a question mark or a Western-style {{w|Crosier}}. She wonders if this could even be mathematical.  
 
On one hand, considering the weird shapes that come from plotting some mathematical processes (e.g. the {{w|Mandelbrot set}}), it could well be. For example the unsolved {{w|Riemann hypothesis}}, another Millennium Prize problem, concerns the properties of {{w|File:RiemannCriticalLine.svg|a weird and at-first-glance random curve}}.  In number theory, the term "cursed curve" [https://www.quantamagazine.org/mathematicians-crack-the-cursed-curve-20171207/ has been used] to describe the [https://annals.math.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/annals-v173-n1-p13-s.pdf "split Cartan" modular curve] of level 13, which resisted attempts for many years to compute its [https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.4007/annals.2019.189.3.6 set of rational points].
 
On one hand, considering the weird shapes that come from plotting some mathematical processes (e.g. the {{w|Mandelbrot set}}), it could well be. For example the unsolved {{w|Riemann hypothesis}}, another Millennium Prize problem, concerns the properties of {{w|File:RiemannCriticalLine.svg|a weird and at-first-glance random curve}}.  In number theory, the term "cursed curve" [https://www.quantamagazine.org/mathematicians-crack-the-cursed-curve-20171207/ has been used] to describe the [https://annals.math.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/annals-v173-n1-p13-s.pdf "split Cartan" modular curve] of level 13, which resisted attempts for many years to compute its [https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.4007/annals.2019.189.3.6 set of rational points].
On the other hand, the question if could even be mathematical suggests that this may indeed not be a mathematical symbol. The curve looks like the unalome symbol, which is a Buddhist symbol which represents the path taken in life, or the journey to enlightenment. It could be argued that this indeed represents an unsolved problem, although not a mathematical one - which might then be part of the humoristic meaning.
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On the other hand, the question if could even be mathematical suggests that this may indeed not be a mathematical symbol. The curve looks like the unalome symbol, which is a Buddhist symbol which represents the path taken in life, or the journey to enlightenment. It could be argued that thi indeed represents an unsolved problem, although not a mathematical one - which might then be part of the humoristic meaning.
  
 
The title text states that, despite decades of intensive study on the properties of the cursed curve, the best anyone's been able to come up with to explain its strangeness is "it's just like that." This lack of a satisfying explanation is commonplace with advanced math topics. As one famous example, the {{w|monster group}} ([https://youtu.be/mH0oCDa74tE explanation video]) is known to be the largest of a category of objects called {{w|sporadic groups}}. Similarly to the cursed curve in the comic, the monster group has a bizarre and complex structure which has, so far, managed to elude any logical explanation aside from "it's just like that."
 
The title text states that, despite decades of intensive study on the properties of the cursed curve, the best anyone's been able to come up with to explain its strangeness is "it's just like that." This lack of a satisfying explanation is commonplace with advanced math topics. As one famous example, the {{w|monster group}} ([https://youtu.be/mH0oCDa74tE explanation video]) is known to be the largest of a category of objects called {{w|sporadic groups}}. Similarly to the cursed curve in the comic, the monster group has a bizarre and complex structure which has, so far, managed to elude any logical explanation aside from "it's just like that."

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