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Related: About this forumAt 17, Hannah Cairo Solved a Major Math Mystery -- Quanta Magazine
https://www.quantamagazine.org/at-17-hannah-cairo-solved-a-major-math-mystery-20250801/Kevin Hartnett
After finding the homeschooling life confining, the teen petitioned her way into a graduate class at Berkeley, where she ended up disproving a 40-year-old conjecture.
ts not that anyone ever said sophisticated math problems cant be solved by teenagers who havent finished high school. But the odds of such a result would have seemed long.
Yet a paper posted on February 10 (opens a new tab) left the math world by turns stunned, delighted and ready to welcome a bold new talent into its midst. Its author was Hannah Cairo (opens a new tab), just 17 at the time. She had solved a 40-year-old mystery about how functions behave, called the Mizohata-Takeuchi conjecture.
We were all shocked, absolutely. I dont remember ever seeing anything like that, said Itamar Oliveira (opens a new tab) of the University of Birmingham, who has spent the past two years trying to prove that the conjecture was true. In her paper, Cairo showed that its false. The result defies mathematicians usual intuitions about what functions can and cannot do.
So does Cairo herself, who found her way to a proof after years of homeschooling in isolation and an unorthodox path through the math world.
. . .

. . .
Yet a paper posted on February 10 (opens a new tab) left the math world by turns stunned, delighted and ready to welcome a bold new talent into its midst. Its author was Hannah Cairo (opens a new tab), just 17 at the time. She had solved a 40-year-old mystery about how functions behave, called the Mizohata-Takeuchi conjecture.
We were all shocked, absolutely. I dont remember ever seeing anything like that, said Itamar Oliveira (opens a new tab) of the University of Birmingham, who has spent the past two years trying to prove that the conjecture was true. In her paper, Cairo showed that its false. The result defies mathematicians usual intuitions about what functions can and cannot do.
So does Cairo herself, who found her way to a proof after years of homeschooling in isolation and an unorthodox path through the math world.
. . .

The math world was taken aback when Cairo announced her counterexample to the Mizohata-Takeuchi conjecture both because it settled a major open problem, and because Cairo was still in high school at the time.
. . .
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At 17, Hannah Cairo Solved a Major Math Mystery -- Quanta Magazine (Original Post)
erronis
Aug 2025
OP
She has been admitted to a doctoral program in math at U Maryland in the fall. No B or M degree. No HS diploma. . . . nt
Bernardo de La Paz
Aug 2025
#1
Bernardo de La Paz
(60,320 posts)1. She has been admitted to a doctoral program in math at U Maryland in the fall. No B or M degree. No HS diploma. . . . nt
NNadir
(37,532 posts)2. That's an inspiring story. Thanks for posting it.
