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It worked!
Time it took Jānis Iraids to compute ||n|| for n≤1012, and thus verify ||2a||=2a for 1≤a≤39, presumaby with access to a supercomputer: 3 weeks[0]
Time it took me to verify not only that ||2a||=2a for 1≤a≤40, but that ||2a3k||=2a+3k for a≤40 and a+k≥1 on my laptop: 12 minutes.
Hooray for better algorithms!
Of course, none of what I've written here is verifiable until I've posted the code, but first I want to reorganize it, add some additional features, and ideally actually make it readable...
(I'm also going to hold off on more computations till then, as one thing I'd want to do is add an "indefinite" mode where you can just cut it off at any point, so I don't have to decide beforehand how high to compute up to...)
-Harry
[0]Source: I asked him on Twitter. I didn't ask about the computer used.
Time it took Jānis Iraids to compute ||n|| for n≤1012, and thus verify ||2a||=2a for 1≤a≤39, presumaby with access to a supercomputer: 3 weeks[0]
Time it took me to verify not only that ||2a||=2a for 1≤a≤40, but that ||2a3k||=2a+3k for a≤40 and a+k≥1 on my laptop: 12 minutes.
Hooray for better algorithms!
Of course, none of what I've written here is verifiable until I've posted the code, but first I want to reorganize it, add some additional features, and ideally actually make it readable...
(I'm also going to hold off on more computations till then, as one thing I'd want to do is add an "indefinite" mode where you can just cut it off at any point, so I don't have to decide beforehand how high to compute up to...)
-Harry
[0]Source: I asked him on Twitter. I didn't ask about the computer used.