Examples of Mathematical Papers that Contain a Kind of Research Report











up vote
31
down vote

favorite
7












What are examples of well received mathematical papers in which the author provides detail on how a surprising solution to a problem has been found.



I am especially looking for papers that also document the dead ends of investigation, i.e. ideas that seemed promising but lead nowhere, and where the motivation and inspiration that lead to the right ideas came from.



By "surprising solution" I mean solutions that feel right at first reading and it isn't clear why they haven't been found earlier.










share|cite|improve this question




















  • 3




    Mochizuki has this sort of writing style. His reflections on his research are integrated into his papers and surveys. This is not surprising as the IUT papers are highly self-reflective in their content and nature. But perhaps I'm under-interpreting the question.
    – Samantha Y
    21 hours ago






  • 18




    A long time ago, a referee asked for more information on how we had gone about finding the solution to the problem. We added half a page on that. Then we got a new report saying "the authors carry on like they solved the Riemann Hypothesis".
    – Brendan McKay
    20 hours ago






  • 9




    @BrendanMcKay its too sad that it seems to be imperative in mathematics to keep up the impression mathematicians don't experience emotions when doing research; no wonder that mathematics is judged as dry and the most undesirable thing to do.
    – Manfred Weis
    20 hours ago






  • 3




    Another example: van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.
    – Andrés E. Caicedo
    16 hours ago






  • 3




    I'm surprised JR Stallings' paper "How Not To Prove The Poincaré Conjecture" has not yet been mentioned.
    – Sam Hopkins
    14 hours ago















up vote
31
down vote

favorite
7












What are examples of well received mathematical papers in which the author provides detail on how a surprising solution to a problem has been found.



I am especially looking for papers that also document the dead ends of investigation, i.e. ideas that seemed promising but lead nowhere, and where the motivation and inspiration that lead to the right ideas came from.



By "surprising solution" I mean solutions that feel right at first reading and it isn't clear why they haven't been found earlier.










share|cite|improve this question




















  • 3




    Mochizuki has this sort of writing style. His reflections on his research are integrated into his papers and surveys. This is not surprising as the IUT papers are highly self-reflective in their content and nature. But perhaps I'm under-interpreting the question.
    – Samantha Y
    21 hours ago






  • 18




    A long time ago, a referee asked for more information on how we had gone about finding the solution to the problem. We added half a page on that. Then we got a new report saying "the authors carry on like they solved the Riemann Hypothesis".
    – Brendan McKay
    20 hours ago






  • 9




    @BrendanMcKay its too sad that it seems to be imperative in mathematics to keep up the impression mathematicians don't experience emotions when doing research; no wonder that mathematics is judged as dry and the most undesirable thing to do.
    – Manfred Weis
    20 hours ago






  • 3




    Another example: van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.
    – Andrés E. Caicedo
    16 hours ago






  • 3




    I'm surprised JR Stallings' paper "How Not To Prove The Poincaré Conjecture" has not yet been mentioned.
    – Sam Hopkins
    14 hours ago













up vote
31
down vote

favorite
7









up vote
31
down vote

favorite
7






7





What are examples of well received mathematical papers in which the author provides detail on how a surprising solution to a problem has been found.



I am especially looking for papers that also document the dead ends of investigation, i.e. ideas that seemed promising but lead nowhere, and where the motivation and inspiration that lead to the right ideas came from.



By "surprising solution" I mean solutions that feel right at first reading and it isn't clear why they haven't been found earlier.










share|cite|improve this question















What are examples of well received mathematical papers in which the author provides detail on how a surprising solution to a problem has been found.



I am especially looking for papers that also document the dead ends of investigation, i.e. ideas that seemed promising but lead nowhere, and where the motivation and inspiration that lead to the right ideas came from.



By "surprising solution" I mean solutions that feel right at first reading and it isn't clear why they haven't been found earlier.







mathematical-writing






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








asked 23 hours ago


























community wiki





Manfred Weis









  • 3




    Mochizuki has this sort of writing style. His reflections on his research are integrated into his papers and surveys. This is not surprising as the IUT papers are highly self-reflective in their content and nature. But perhaps I'm under-interpreting the question.
    – Samantha Y
    21 hours ago






  • 18




    A long time ago, a referee asked for more information on how we had gone about finding the solution to the problem. We added half a page on that. Then we got a new report saying "the authors carry on like they solved the Riemann Hypothesis".
    – Brendan McKay
    20 hours ago






  • 9




    @BrendanMcKay its too sad that it seems to be imperative in mathematics to keep up the impression mathematicians don't experience emotions when doing research; no wonder that mathematics is judged as dry and the most undesirable thing to do.
    – Manfred Weis
    20 hours ago






  • 3




    Another example: van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.
    – Andrés E. Caicedo
    16 hours ago






  • 3




    I'm surprised JR Stallings' paper "How Not To Prove The Poincaré Conjecture" has not yet been mentioned.
    – Sam Hopkins
    14 hours ago














  • 3




    Mochizuki has this sort of writing style. His reflections on his research are integrated into his papers and surveys. This is not surprising as the IUT papers are highly self-reflective in their content and nature. But perhaps I'm under-interpreting the question.
    – Samantha Y
    21 hours ago






  • 18




    A long time ago, a referee asked for more information on how we had gone about finding the solution to the problem. We added half a page on that. Then we got a new report saying "the authors carry on like they solved the Riemann Hypothesis".
    – Brendan McKay
    20 hours ago






  • 9




    @BrendanMcKay its too sad that it seems to be imperative in mathematics to keep up the impression mathematicians don't experience emotions when doing research; no wonder that mathematics is judged as dry and the most undesirable thing to do.
    – Manfred Weis
    20 hours ago






  • 3




    Another example: van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.
    – Andrés E. Caicedo
    16 hours ago






  • 3




    I'm surprised JR Stallings' paper "How Not To Prove The Poincaré Conjecture" has not yet been mentioned.
    – Sam Hopkins
    14 hours ago








3




3




Mochizuki has this sort of writing style. His reflections on his research are integrated into his papers and surveys. This is not surprising as the IUT papers are highly self-reflective in their content and nature. But perhaps I'm under-interpreting the question.
– Samantha Y
21 hours ago




Mochizuki has this sort of writing style. His reflections on his research are integrated into his papers and surveys. This is not surprising as the IUT papers are highly self-reflective in their content and nature. But perhaps I'm under-interpreting the question.
– Samantha Y
21 hours ago




18




18




A long time ago, a referee asked for more information on how we had gone about finding the solution to the problem. We added half a page on that. Then we got a new report saying "the authors carry on like they solved the Riemann Hypothesis".
– Brendan McKay
20 hours ago




A long time ago, a referee asked for more information on how we had gone about finding the solution to the problem. We added half a page on that. Then we got a new report saying "the authors carry on like they solved the Riemann Hypothesis".
– Brendan McKay
20 hours ago




9




9




@BrendanMcKay its too sad that it seems to be imperative in mathematics to keep up the impression mathematicians don't experience emotions when doing research; no wonder that mathematics is judged as dry and the most undesirable thing to do.
– Manfred Weis
20 hours ago




@BrendanMcKay its too sad that it seems to be imperative in mathematics to keep up the impression mathematicians don't experience emotions when doing research; no wonder that mathematics is judged as dry and the most undesirable thing to do.
– Manfred Weis
20 hours ago




3




3




Another example: van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.
– Andrés E. Caicedo
16 hours ago




Another example: van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.
– Andrés E. Caicedo
16 hours ago




3




3




I'm surprised JR Stallings' paper "How Not To Prove The Poincaré Conjecture" has not yet been mentioned.
– Sam Hopkins
14 hours ago




I'm surprised JR Stallings' paper "How Not To Prove The Poincaré Conjecture" has not yet been mentioned.
– Sam Hopkins
14 hours ago










7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
21
down vote



accepted










Richard P. Stanley's How the Upper Bound Conjecture was proved ends with two morals:





  1. The shortest path may not be the best.

  2. Even if you don’t arrive at your destination, the journey can still be
    worthwhile.







share|cite|improve this answer



















  • 4




    These kind of papers surely deserve more awareness and should be recommended to novices to mathematical research.
    – Manfred Weis
    22 hours ago






  • 1




    @DavidRicherby Looking at your edit, I should probably mention that the picture is mostly my fault. For a more detailed explanation, see here.
    – Martin Sleziak
    9 hours ago










  • @MartinSleziak Ah. Makes sense, now. I didn't look at the edit history before removing it.
    – David Richerby
    9 hours ago




















up vote
15
down vote













The paper




Rawnsley, John; Schmid, Wilfried; Wolf, Joseph A., Singular unitary representations and indefinite harmonic theory, J. Funct. Anal. 51, 1-114 (1983). ZBL0511.22005.




contains an unusual “Historical Note” (pp. 102–107). E.g.:




For various reasons one expects to get $mu_n$ by... That does not work directly because... In 1975, S & W tried... At that point it became clear that an intrinsic higher $L_2$ cohomology theory was needed... In 1977, R & W looked... They did not see how to... This was the point at which S & W had been stopped... During the following academic year B succeeded in... but the method did not extend past... R & W made some progress in... These results were not published formally because... During the summer of 1979, S & W discussed the apparent disparity and clarified... then carried out a computation... then looked at the case... Thus the original S & W problem was settled... At the end of the summer of 1980, S & W saw that... could be simplified... The present version was completed in... There are two important parallel developments which we understood only after... (etc.)







share|cite|improve this answer






























    up vote
    7
    down vote













    The prime example is Euler's papers. This style is out of fashion in 20th century.
    Polya in Mathematics and Plausible reasoning discusses this question at length and
    even reproduces completely (in English) one of Euler's papers (on partitions).



    Of the 20th century examples I can mention



    MR1555091 Malmquist, J. Sur les fonctions a un nombre fini de branches définies par les équations différentielles du premier ordre. Acta Math. 36 (1913), no. 1, 297–343.






    share|cite|improve this answer






























      up vote
      6
      down vote













      The first example that came to mind was




      MR0270881 (42 #5764) van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.




      There, van der Waerden describes some of the history as well as his proof of his well-known theorem.



      Another example:




      MR2245898 (2007j:05091) Seymour, Paul. How the proof of the strong perfect graph conjecture was found. Gaz. Math. No. 109 (2006), 69–83.




      From Wilson's review in Mathematical Reviews: "In this interesting and revealing paper, Seymour describes in graphic terms their assaults on the problem, the difficulties they came across, and the means they used to overcome these difficulties."






      share|cite|improve this answer






























        up vote
        4
        down vote













        A nice example is the article "The method of undetermined generalization and specialization, illustrated with Fred Galvin's amazing proof of the dinitz Conjecture" by Doron Zeilberger in Amer. Math. Monthly 103, no. 3, 233-239, 1996 (see also here for a freely accessible version).






        share|cite|improve this answer






























          up vote
          3
          down vote













          Another type of example. Textbooks on non-Euclidean geometry may often begin with a chapter on historical failed attempts to prove the Parallel Postulate.






          share|cite|improve this answer






























            up vote
            3
            down vote













            Ryan Williams provides a Casual Tour Around a Circuit Complexity Bound (the bound in question being that NEXP lacks nonuniform polysized ACC circuits) which may fit the bill, although I believe that Williams's goal is to give a motivated exposition rather than a 100% historically accurate account of how he came up with his proof.






            share|cite|improve this answer























              Your Answer





              StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function () {
              return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function () {
              StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix) {
              StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["$", "$"], ["\\(","\\)"]]);
              });
              });
              }, "mathjax-editing");

              StackExchange.ready(function() {
              var channelOptions = {
              tags: "".split(" "),
              id: "504"
              };
              initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

              StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
              // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
              if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
              StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
              createEditor();
              });
              }
              else {
              createEditor();
              }
              });

              function createEditor() {
              StackExchange.prepareEditor({
              heartbeatType: 'answer',
              convertImagesToLinks: true,
              noModals: true,
              showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
              reputationToPostImages: 10,
              bindNavPrevention: true,
              postfix: "",
              imageUploader: {
              brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
              contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
              allowUrls: true
              },
              noCode: true, onDemand: true,
              discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
              ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
              });


              }
              });














               

              draft saved


              draft discarded


















              StackExchange.ready(
              function () {
              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmathoverflow.net%2fquestions%2f315843%2fexamples-of-mathematical-papers-that-contain-a-kind-of-research-report%23new-answer', 'question_page');
              }
              );

              Post as a guest















              Required, but never shown

























              7 Answers
              7






              active

              oldest

              votes








              7 Answers
              7






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes








              up vote
              21
              down vote



              accepted










              Richard P. Stanley's How the Upper Bound Conjecture was proved ends with two morals:





              1. The shortest path may not be the best.

              2. Even if you don’t arrive at your destination, the journey can still be
                worthwhile.







              share|cite|improve this answer



















              • 4




                These kind of papers surely deserve more awareness and should be recommended to novices to mathematical research.
                – Manfred Weis
                22 hours ago






              • 1




                @DavidRicherby Looking at your edit, I should probably mention that the picture is mostly my fault. For a more detailed explanation, see here.
                – Martin Sleziak
                9 hours ago










              • @MartinSleziak Ah. Makes sense, now. I didn't look at the edit history before removing it.
                – David Richerby
                9 hours ago

















              up vote
              21
              down vote



              accepted










              Richard P. Stanley's How the Upper Bound Conjecture was proved ends with two morals:





              1. The shortest path may not be the best.

              2. Even if you don’t arrive at your destination, the journey can still be
                worthwhile.







              share|cite|improve this answer



















              • 4




                These kind of papers surely deserve more awareness and should be recommended to novices to mathematical research.
                – Manfred Weis
                22 hours ago






              • 1




                @DavidRicherby Looking at your edit, I should probably mention that the picture is mostly my fault. For a more detailed explanation, see here.
                – Martin Sleziak
                9 hours ago










              • @MartinSleziak Ah. Makes sense, now. I didn't look at the edit history before removing it.
                – David Richerby
                9 hours ago















              up vote
              21
              down vote



              accepted







              up vote
              21
              down vote



              accepted






              Richard P. Stanley's How the Upper Bound Conjecture was proved ends with two morals:





              1. The shortest path may not be the best.

              2. Even if you don’t arrive at your destination, the journey can still be
                worthwhile.







              share|cite|improve this answer














              Richard P. Stanley's How the Upper Bound Conjecture was proved ends with two morals:





              1. The shortest path may not be the best.

              2. Even if you don’t arrive at your destination, the journey can still be
                worthwhile.








              share|cite|improve this answer














              share|cite|improve this answer



              share|cite|improve this answer








              edited 13 hours ago


























              community wiki





              4 revs, 2 users 87%
              Bjørn Kjos-Hanssen









              • 4




                These kind of papers surely deserve more awareness and should be recommended to novices to mathematical research.
                – Manfred Weis
                22 hours ago






              • 1




                @DavidRicherby Looking at your edit, I should probably mention that the picture is mostly my fault. For a more detailed explanation, see here.
                – Martin Sleziak
                9 hours ago










              • @MartinSleziak Ah. Makes sense, now. I didn't look at the edit history before removing it.
                – David Richerby
                9 hours ago
















              • 4




                These kind of papers surely deserve more awareness and should be recommended to novices to mathematical research.
                – Manfred Weis
                22 hours ago






              • 1




                @DavidRicherby Looking at your edit, I should probably mention that the picture is mostly my fault. For a more detailed explanation, see here.
                – Martin Sleziak
                9 hours ago










              • @MartinSleziak Ah. Makes sense, now. I didn't look at the edit history before removing it.
                – David Richerby
                9 hours ago










              4




              4




              These kind of papers surely deserve more awareness and should be recommended to novices to mathematical research.
              – Manfred Weis
              22 hours ago




              These kind of papers surely deserve more awareness and should be recommended to novices to mathematical research.
              – Manfred Weis
              22 hours ago




              1




              1




              @DavidRicherby Looking at your edit, I should probably mention that the picture is mostly my fault. For a more detailed explanation, see here.
              – Martin Sleziak
              9 hours ago




              @DavidRicherby Looking at your edit, I should probably mention that the picture is mostly my fault. For a more detailed explanation, see here.
              – Martin Sleziak
              9 hours ago












              @MartinSleziak Ah. Makes sense, now. I didn't look at the edit history before removing it.
              – David Richerby
              9 hours ago






              @MartinSleziak Ah. Makes sense, now. I didn't look at the edit history before removing it.
              – David Richerby
              9 hours ago












              up vote
              15
              down vote













              The paper




              Rawnsley, John; Schmid, Wilfried; Wolf, Joseph A., Singular unitary representations and indefinite harmonic theory, J. Funct. Anal. 51, 1-114 (1983). ZBL0511.22005.




              contains an unusual “Historical Note” (pp. 102–107). E.g.:




              For various reasons one expects to get $mu_n$ by... That does not work directly because... In 1975, S & W tried... At that point it became clear that an intrinsic higher $L_2$ cohomology theory was needed... In 1977, R & W looked... They did not see how to... This was the point at which S & W had been stopped... During the following academic year B succeeded in... but the method did not extend past... R & W made some progress in... These results were not published formally because... During the summer of 1979, S & W discussed the apparent disparity and clarified... then carried out a computation... then looked at the case... Thus the original S & W problem was settled... At the end of the summer of 1980, S & W saw that... could be simplified... The present version was completed in... There are two important parallel developments which we understood only after... (etc.)







              share|cite|improve this answer



























                up vote
                15
                down vote













                The paper




                Rawnsley, John; Schmid, Wilfried; Wolf, Joseph A., Singular unitary representations and indefinite harmonic theory, J. Funct. Anal. 51, 1-114 (1983). ZBL0511.22005.




                contains an unusual “Historical Note” (pp. 102–107). E.g.:




                For various reasons one expects to get $mu_n$ by... That does not work directly because... In 1975, S & W tried... At that point it became clear that an intrinsic higher $L_2$ cohomology theory was needed... In 1977, R & W looked... They did not see how to... This was the point at which S & W had been stopped... During the following academic year B succeeded in... but the method did not extend past... R & W made some progress in... These results were not published formally because... During the summer of 1979, S & W discussed the apparent disparity and clarified... then carried out a computation... then looked at the case... Thus the original S & W problem was settled... At the end of the summer of 1980, S & W saw that... could be simplified... The present version was completed in... There are two important parallel developments which we understood only after... (etc.)







                share|cite|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  15
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  15
                  down vote









                  The paper




                  Rawnsley, John; Schmid, Wilfried; Wolf, Joseph A., Singular unitary representations and indefinite harmonic theory, J. Funct. Anal. 51, 1-114 (1983). ZBL0511.22005.




                  contains an unusual “Historical Note” (pp. 102–107). E.g.:




                  For various reasons one expects to get $mu_n$ by... That does not work directly because... In 1975, S & W tried... At that point it became clear that an intrinsic higher $L_2$ cohomology theory was needed... In 1977, R & W looked... They did not see how to... This was the point at which S & W had been stopped... During the following academic year B succeeded in... but the method did not extend past... R & W made some progress in... These results were not published formally because... During the summer of 1979, S & W discussed the apparent disparity and clarified... then carried out a computation... then looked at the case... Thus the original S & W problem was settled... At the end of the summer of 1980, S & W saw that... could be simplified... The present version was completed in... There are two important parallel developments which we understood only after... (etc.)







                  share|cite|improve this answer














                  The paper




                  Rawnsley, John; Schmid, Wilfried; Wolf, Joseph A., Singular unitary representations and indefinite harmonic theory, J. Funct. Anal. 51, 1-114 (1983). ZBL0511.22005.




                  contains an unusual “Historical Note” (pp. 102–107). E.g.:




                  For various reasons one expects to get $mu_n$ by... That does not work directly because... In 1975, S & W tried... At that point it became clear that an intrinsic higher $L_2$ cohomology theory was needed... In 1977, R & W looked... They did not see how to... This was the point at which S & W had been stopped... During the following academic year B succeeded in... but the method did not extend past... R & W made some progress in... These results were not published formally because... During the summer of 1979, S & W discussed the apparent disparity and clarified... then carried out a computation... then looked at the case... Thus the original S & W problem was settled... At the end of the summer of 1980, S & W saw that... could be simplified... The present version was completed in... There are two important parallel developments which we understood only after... (etc.)








                  share|cite|improve this answer














                  share|cite|improve this answer



                  share|cite|improve this answer








                  answered 18 hours ago


























                  community wiki





                  Francois Ziegler























                      up vote
                      7
                      down vote













                      The prime example is Euler's papers. This style is out of fashion in 20th century.
                      Polya in Mathematics and Plausible reasoning discusses this question at length and
                      even reproduces completely (in English) one of Euler's papers (on partitions).



                      Of the 20th century examples I can mention



                      MR1555091 Malmquist, J. Sur les fonctions a un nombre fini de branches définies par les équations différentielles du premier ordre. Acta Math. 36 (1913), no. 1, 297–343.






                      share|cite|improve this answer



























                        up vote
                        7
                        down vote













                        The prime example is Euler's papers. This style is out of fashion in 20th century.
                        Polya in Mathematics and Plausible reasoning discusses this question at length and
                        even reproduces completely (in English) one of Euler's papers (on partitions).



                        Of the 20th century examples I can mention



                        MR1555091 Malmquist, J. Sur les fonctions a un nombre fini de branches définies par les équations différentielles du premier ordre. Acta Math. 36 (1913), no. 1, 297–343.






                        share|cite|improve this answer

























                          up vote
                          7
                          down vote










                          up vote
                          7
                          down vote









                          The prime example is Euler's papers. This style is out of fashion in 20th century.
                          Polya in Mathematics and Plausible reasoning discusses this question at length and
                          even reproduces completely (in English) one of Euler's papers (on partitions).



                          Of the 20th century examples I can mention



                          MR1555091 Malmquist, J. Sur les fonctions a un nombre fini de branches définies par les équations différentielles du premier ordre. Acta Math. 36 (1913), no. 1, 297–343.






                          share|cite|improve this answer














                          The prime example is Euler's papers. This style is out of fashion in 20th century.
                          Polya in Mathematics and Plausible reasoning discusses this question at length and
                          even reproduces completely (in English) one of Euler's papers (on partitions).



                          Of the 20th century examples I can mention



                          MR1555091 Malmquist, J. Sur les fonctions a un nombre fini de branches définies par les équations différentielles du premier ordre. Acta Math. 36 (1913), no. 1, 297–343.







                          share|cite|improve this answer














                          share|cite|improve this answer



                          share|cite|improve this answer








                          edited 14 hours ago


























                          community wiki





                          2 revs, 2 users 92%
                          Alexandre Eremenko























                              up vote
                              6
                              down vote













                              The first example that came to mind was




                              MR0270881 (42 #5764) van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.




                              There, van der Waerden describes some of the history as well as his proof of his well-known theorem.



                              Another example:




                              MR2245898 (2007j:05091) Seymour, Paul. How the proof of the strong perfect graph conjecture was found. Gaz. Math. No. 109 (2006), 69–83.




                              From Wilson's review in Mathematical Reviews: "In this interesting and revealing paper, Seymour describes in graphic terms their assaults on the problem, the difficulties they came across, and the means they used to overcome these difficulties."






                              share|cite|improve this answer



























                                up vote
                                6
                                down vote













                                The first example that came to mind was




                                MR0270881 (42 #5764) van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.




                                There, van der Waerden describes some of the history as well as his proof of his well-known theorem.



                                Another example:




                                MR2245898 (2007j:05091) Seymour, Paul. How the proof of the strong perfect graph conjecture was found. Gaz. Math. No. 109 (2006), 69–83.




                                From Wilson's review in Mathematical Reviews: "In this interesting and revealing paper, Seymour describes in graphic terms their assaults on the problem, the difficulties they came across, and the means they used to overcome these difficulties."






                                share|cite|improve this answer

























                                  up vote
                                  6
                                  down vote










                                  up vote
                                  6
                                  down vote









                                  The first example that came to mind was




                                  MR0270881 (42 #5764) van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.




                                  There, van der Waerden describes some of the history as well as his proof of his well-known theorem.



                                  Another example:




                                  MR2245898 (2007j:05091) Seymour, Paul. How the proof of the strong perfect graph conjecture was found. Gaz. Math. No. 109 (2006), 69–83.




                                  From Wilson's review in Mathematical Reviews: "In this interesting and revealing paper, Seymour describes in graphic terms their assaults on the problem, the difficulties they came across, and the means they used to overcome these difficulties."






                                  share|cite|improve this answer














                                  The first example that came to mind was




                                  MR0270881 (42 #5764) van der Waerden, B. L. How the proof of Baudet's conjecture was found. 1971 Studies in Pure Mathematics (Presented to Richard Rado) pp. 251–260 Academic Press, London.




                                  There, van der Waerden describes some of the history as well as his proof of his well-known theorem.



                                  Another example:




                                  MR2245898 (2007j:05091) Seymour, Paul. How the proof of the strong perfect graph conjecture was found. Gaz. Math. No. 109 (2006), 69–83.




                                  From Wilson's review in Mathematical Reviews: "In this interesting and revealing paper, Seymour describes in graphic terms their assaults on the problem, the difficulties they came across, and the means they used to overcome these difficulties."







                                  share|cite|improve this answer














                                  share|cite|improve this answer



                                  share|cite|improve this answer








                                  answered 15 hours ago


























                                  community wiki





                                  Andrés E. Caicedo























                                      up vote
                                      4
                                      down vote













                                      A nice example is the article "The method of undetermined generalization and specialization, illustrated with Fred Galvin's amazing proof of the dinitz Conjecture" by Doron Zeilberger in Amer. Math. Monthly 103, no. 3, 233-239, 1996 (see also here for a freely accessible version).






                                      share|cite|improve this answer



























                                        up vote
                                        4
                                        down vote













                                        A nice example is the article "The method of undetermined generalization and specialization, illustrated with Fred Galvin's amazing proof of the dinitz Conjecture" by Doron Zeilberger in Amer. Math. Monthly 103, no. 3, 233-239, 1996 (see also here for a freely accessible version).






                                        share|cite|improve this answer

























                                          up vote
                                          4
                                          down vote










                                          up vote
                                          4
                                          down vote









                                          A nice example is the article "The method of undetermined generalization and specialization, illustrated with Fred Galvin's amazing proof of the dinitz Conjecture" by Doron Zeilberger in Amer. Math. Monthly 103, no. 3, 233-239, 1996 (see also here for a freely accessible version).






                                          share|cite|improve this answer














                                          A nice example is the article "The method of undetermined generalization and specialization, illustrated with Fred Galvin's amazing proof of the dinitz Conjecture" by Doron Zeilberger in Amer. Math. Monthly 103, no. 3, 233-239, 1996 (see also here for a freely accessible version).







                                          share|cite|improve this answer














                                          share|cite|improve this answer



                                          share|cite|improve this answer








                                          answered 12 hours ago


























                                          community wiki





                                          Abdelmalek Abdesselam























                                              up vote
                                              3
                                              down vote













                                              Another type of example. Textbooks on non-Euclidean geometry may often begin with a chapter on historical failed attempts to prove the Parallel Postulate.






                                              share|cite|improve this answer



























                                                up vote
                                                3
                                                down vote













                                                Another type of example. Textbooks on non-Euclidean geometry may often begin with a chapter on historical failed attempts to prove the Parallel Postulate.






                                                share|cite|improve this answer

























                                                  up vote
                                                  3
                                                  down vote










                                                  up vote
                                                  3
                                                  down vote









                                                  Another type of example. Textbooks on non-Euclidean geometry may often begin with a chapter on historical failed attempts to prove the Parallel Postulate.






                                                  share|cite|improve this answer














                                                  Another type of example. Textbooks on non-Euclidean geometry may often begin with a chapter on historical failed attempts to prove the Parallel Postulate.







                                                  share|cite|improve this answer














                                                  share|cite|improve this answer



                                                  share|cite|improve this answer








                                                  answered 12 hours ago


























                                                  community wiki





                                                  Gerald Edgar























                                                      up vote
                                                      3
                                                      down vote













                                                      Ryan Williams provides a Casual Tour Around a Circuit Complexity Bound (the bound in question being that NEXP lacks nonuniform polysized ACC circuits) which may fit the bill, although I believe that Williams's goal is to give a motivated exposition rather than a 100% historically accurate account of how he came up with his proof.






                                                      share|cite|improve this answer



























                                                        up vote
                                                        3
                                                        down vote













                                                        Ryan Williams provides a Casual Tour Around a Circuit Complexity Bound (the bound in question being that NEXP lacks nonuniform polysized ACC circuits) which may fit the bill, although I believe that Williams's goal is to give a motivated exposition rather than a 100% historically accurate account of how he came up with his proof.






                                                        share|cite|improve this answer

























                                                          up vote
                                                          3
                                                          down vote










                                                          up vote
                                                          3
                                                          down vote









                                                          Ryan Williams provides a Casual Tour Around a Circuit Complexity Bound (the bound in question being that NEXP lacks nonuniform polysized ACC circuits) which may fit the bill, although I believe that Williams's goal is to give a motivated exposition rather than a 100% historically accurate account of how he came up with his proof.






                                                          share|cite|improve this answer














                                                          Ryan Williams provides a Casual Tour Around a Circuit Complexity Bound (the bound in question being that NEXP lacks nonuniform polysized ACC circuits) which may fit the bill, although I believe that Williams's goal is to give a motivated exposition rather than a 100% historically accurate account of how he came up with his proof.







                                                          share|cite|improve this answer














                                                          share|cite|improve this answer



                                                          share|cite|improve this answer








                                                          answered 12 hours ago


























                                                          community wiki





                                                          Timothy Chow































                                                               

                                                              draft saved


                                                              draft discarded



















































                                                               


                                                              draft saved


                                                              draft discarded














                                                              StackExchange.ready(
                                                              function () {
                                                              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmathoverflow.net%2fquestions%2f315843%2fexamples-of-mathematical-papers-that-contain-a-kind-of-research-report%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                                                              }
                                                              );

                                                              Post as a guest















                                                              Required, but never shown





















































                                                              Required, but never shown














                                                              Required, but never shown












                                                              Required, but never shown







                                                              Required, but never shown

































                                                              Required, but never shown














                                                              Required, but never shown












                                                              Required, but never shown







                                                              Required, but never shown







                                                              Popular posts from this blog

                                                              Costa Masnaga

                                                              Fotorealismo

                                                              Sidney Franklin