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To me it looks easier to show that the 3x+1 problem is actually not a
problem, than to solve one of Landau's problems.
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I personally think that Landau's four problems are in some way more elegant than the Collatz conjecture. I think this is just my own esthetic sense. In particular I was surprised to learn that whatever techniques were used for the Dirichlet theorem on primes in arithmetic progressions could not be generalized to the setting of the Gaussian integers. Probably anybody who has ever actually been through the proof of the Dirichlet theorem can tell from this admission that I haven't.
The sort of generalization of Dirichlet to Gaussian integers that I'd naïvely expect looks different from the one you naïvely expect :-). I'd expect to see something more like this: suppose you have a Gaussian integer M; there are finitely many residue classes of "Gaussian integers mod M"; there are "about equally many" Gaussian primes in all of those. Note that the sets we're expecting to find Gaussian integers in here are (in the complex plane) 2D lattices rather than 1D ones.
I have no idea whether there is any such generalization; a bit of casual googling didn't turn anything up. One possible obstacle to there being one is that if there is then you'd expect it to apply to other quadratic fields besides Q(i), and for some of those the ring of integers is no longer a principal ideal domain and you're supposed to talk about prime _ideals_ rather than prime _numbers_, and I don't know even how to state an appropriate generalization, never mind how one might try to prove it.
There's a thing called the Chebotarev density theorem that
allegedly has Dirichlet's theorem as a special case (albeit in a
somewhat subtle way that I don't really understand). It doesn't
_look_ to me as if it obviously implies anything like the above
handwavy thing, but again I don't really understand it. Do we have
any actual number theorists here?
I don't think I share your intuition that Collatz is easier than the Landau problems. I think I'm just agnostic on the subject.
I agree that the actual progress on these problems is fascinating and encouraging. The most recent dramatic example was Zhang's breakthrough on bounded gaps between primes (a weakening of the twin prime conjecture), followed by Tao and his gang driving the maximum possible gap size down and down -- not to 2, alas, but to something with 3 digits. I think this shows that real progress can be made by creatively weakening the various conjectures to see what we can prove. David desJardins gives another great example, of primes between consecutive cubes (almost solved) as a weakening of primes between consecutive squares (still almost completely stymied). One wonders if anybody is working on 2.5-th powers.
For what little it's worth, I agree with all that.
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