AKS Primality Test: PRIMES is in P (Agrawal et al. 2002) episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 2, 2025 · 40 MIN

AKS Primality Test: PRIMES is in P (Agrawal et al. 2002)

from Revise and Resubmit - The Mayukh Show · host Mayukh Mukhopadhyay

English Podcast starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast starts at 00:24:21Hindi Podcast starts at 00:32:14🎙️ Welcome to "Revise and Resubmit"! 🎙️This is the show where cutting-edge research gets the mic it deserves 📢, and we break it down with just the right mix of clarity, curiosity, and caffeine ☕💡.Today, we dive into a paper that literally rewrote what we thought was possible in number theory. It's got primes 🔢, proofs 📚, and polynomial time ⏱️. Sounds nerdy? Oh, it is — gloriously so!📄 Title: PRIMES is in P👨‍🔬 Authors: Manindra Agrawal, Neeraj Kayal, Nitin Saxena🏛️ Journal: Annals of Mathematics — not just any journal, but a Scopus Q1 heavyweight with an impact factor of 5.7, ranking 3rd out of 330 in mathematics!🗓️ Published: September 2004, by Princeton University and the Institute for Advanced Study (Originally hosted on IIT Kanpur archives on 2002)This isn’t just a paper; it’s a revolution in primality testing! 🧠The AKS Primality Test is a deterministic, polynomial-time algorithm that finally answers the age-old question:“Can we efficiently and certainly know if a number is prime... without relying on unproven conjectures?”The answer? Oh, it's a YES. And it's elegant. And it’s 🔓 open access—thanks to the authors and publishers for that gift to the world 🙏!✨ The AKS test changed everything — so why hasn’t every cryptographer tattooed it on their arm yet? 💉🔢And how did three computer scientists from IIT Kanpur land one of the most prestigious math prizes — without touching calculus?🔍 Stick around as we unpack this legendary result. And before we dive in, smash that Subscribe button on Spotify 🎧, YouTube's Weekend Researcher 📺, Amazon Prime 🎬, or Apple Podcasts 🍏.Because you never know when the next episode might change what you thought math could do.So here’s our question to kick off today:If prime numbers are the atoms of arithmetic, what happens when we learn how to split them? 💥🔬💭ReferenceAgrawal, M., Kayal, N., & Saxena, N. (2004). PRIMES is in P. Annals of Mathematics, 160(2), 781–793. (Originally hosted on IIT Kanpur archives on 2002)https://doi.org/10.4007/annals.2004.160.781Tao, T. (2009, August 11). The AKS primality test. What’s New. https://terrytao.wordpress.com/2009/08/11/the-aks-primality-test/Numberphile. (2014). Fool-Proof Test for Primes - Numberphile. In YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvMSRWTE2mI‌Youtube channel link ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠Support us on Patreonhttps://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

English Podcast starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast starts at 00:24:21Hindi Podcast starts at 00:32:14🎙️ Welcome to "Revise and Resubmit"! 🎙️This is the show where cutting-edge research gets the mic it deserves 📢, and we break it down with just the right mix of clarity, curiosity, and caffeine ☕💡.Today, we dive into a paper that literally rewrote what we thought was possible in number theory. It's got primes 🔢, proofs 📚, and polynomial time ⏱️. Sounds nerdy? Oh, it is — gloriously so!📄 Title: PRIMES is in P👨‍🔬 Authors: Manindra Agrawal, Neeraj Kayal, Nitin Saxena🏛️ Journal: Annals of Mathematics — not just any journal, but a Scopus Q1 heavyweight with an impact factor of 5.7, ranking 3rd out of 330 in mathematics!🗓️ Published: September 2004, by Princeton University and the Institute for Advanced Study (Originally hosted on IIT Kanpur archives on 2002)This isn’t just a paper; it’s a revolution in primality testing! 🧠The AKS Primality Test is a deterministic, polynomial-time algorithm that finally answers the age-old question:“Can we efficiently and certainly know if a number is prime... without relying on unproven conjectures?”The answer? Oh, it's a YES. And it's elegant. And it’s 🔓 open access—thanks to the authors and publishers for that gift to the world 🙏!✨ The AKS test changed everything — so why hasn’t every cryptographer tattooed it on their arm yet? 💉🔢And how did three computer scientists from IIT Kanpur land one of the most prestigious math prizes — without touching calculus?🔍 Stick around as we unpack this legendary result. And before we dive in, smash that Subscribe button on Spotify 🎧, YouTube's Weekend Researcher 📺, Amazon Prime 🎬, or Apple Podcasts 🍏.Because you never know when the next episode might change what you thought math could do.So here’s our question to kick off today:If prime numbers are the atoms of arithmetic, what happens when we learn how to split them? 💥🔬💭ReferenceAgrawal, M., Kayal, N., & Saxena, N. (2004). PRIMES is in P. Annals of Mathematics, 160(2), 781–793. (Originally hosted on IIT Kanpur archives on 2002)https://doi.org/10.4007/annals.2004.160.781Tao, T. (2009, August 11). The AKS primality test. What’s New. https://terrytao.wordpress.com/2009/08/11/the-aks-primality-test/Numberphile. (2014). Fool-Proof Test for Primes - Numberphile. In YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvMSRWTE2mI‌Youtube channel link ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠Support us on Patreonhttps://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

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AKS Primality Test: PRIMES is in P (Agrawal et al. 2002)

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English Podcast starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast starts at 00:24:21Hindi Podcast starts at 00:32:14🎙️ Welcome to "Revise and Resubmit"! 🎙️This is the show where cutting-edge research gets the mic it deserves 📢, and we break it down with just the...

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