this post was submitted on 26 Jun 2025
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There have been a number of Scientific discoveries that seemed to be purely scientific curiosities that later turned out to be incredibly useful. Hertz famously commented about the discovery of radio waves: “I do not think that the wireless waves I have discovered will have any practical application.”

Are there examples like this in math as well? What is the most interesting "pure math" discovery that proved to be useful in solving a real-world problem?

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[–] Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world 48 points 19 hours ago (2 children)

I work with a guy who is a math whiz and loves to talk. Yesterday while I was invoicing clients, he was telling me how origami is much more effective for solving geometry than a compass and a straight edge.

I'll ask him this question.

[–] Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world 29 points 19 hours ago (2 children)

My disclaimer: I don't know what any of this means, but it might give you a direction to start your research.

First thing he came up with is Number Theory, and how they've been working on that for centuries, but they never would have imagined that it would be the basis of modern encryption. Multiplying a HUGE prime number with any other numbers is incredibly easy, but factoring the result into those same numbers is near impossible (within reasonable time constraints.)

He said something about knot theory and bacterial proteins, but it was too far above my head to even try to relay how that's relevant.

[–] Reverendender@sh.itjust.works 24 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

Tell him I would like to subscribe to his blog

[–] Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world 18 points 16 hours ago

The following aren't necessarily answers to your question, but he also mentioned these, and they are way too funny to not share:

The Hairy Ball theorem

Cox Ring

Tits Alternative

Wiener Measure

The Cox-Zucker machine (although this was in the 70s and it's rumored that Cox did most of the work and chose his partner ONLY for the name. 😂)

[–] JackbyDev@programming.dev 2 points 35 minutes ago (1 children)

I am pretty sure that the first thing you mentioned (multiplying being easy and factoring being hard) is the basis of public key cryptography which is how HTTPS works.

[–] Feathercrown@lemmy.world 1 points 11 minutes ago

Somewhat related fun fact: One of the most concrete applications for quantum computers so far is breaking some encryption algorithms.

[–] frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zone 13 points 18 hours ago

Origami can be used as a basis for geometry:

http://origametry.net/omfiles/geoconst.html

IIRC, you can do things that are impossible in standard Euclidean construction, such as squaring the circle. It also has more axioms than Euclidean construction, so maybe it's not a completely fair comparison.