About Math Millennium
Math Millennium is a platform dedicated to exploring the seven Millennium Prize Problems — a set of fundamental unsolved problems in mathematics, each carrying a $1,000,000 prize from the Clay Mathematics Institute.
We present mathematical theories and computational experiments with a focus on transparency, reproducibility, and honest assessment of results. Every experiment includes clear disclaimers, downloadable data, and parameter controls for independent verification.
If I were to awaken after having slept for a thousand years, my first question would be: Has the Riemann Hypothesis been proven?
— David Hilbert
The Problems
In May 2000, the Clay Mathematics Institute announced the Millennium Prize Problems: seven classical questions that have resisted solution for many years. A correct solution to any of these problems results in a $1,000,000 prize. As of today, only one — the Poincaré Conjecture — has been solved, by Grigori Perelman in 2003.
Our Approach
We combine editorial content with interactive computational experiments. Theories presented on this site are clearly labeled — they may be toy models, heuristic explorations, or rigorous analyses. We always distinguish between what the data suggests and what has been proven.
Ecosystem
Math Millennium is a project within the SKYNET Ecosystem, alongside platforms for AI research, communications, and decentralized services.