In 1923,
Hardy and
Littlewood showed that, assuming the
generalized Riemann hypothesis, the weak Goldbach then-conjecture is true for all
sufficiently large odd numbers. In 1937,
Ivan Matveevich Vinogradov eliminated the dependency on the generalised Riemann hypothesis and proved directly (see
Vinogradov's theorem) that all
sufficiently large odd numbers can be expressed as the sum of three primes. Vinogradov's original proof, as it used the ineffective
Siegel–Walfisz theorem, did not give a bound for "sufficiently large"; his student K. Borozdkin (1956) derived that e^{e^{16.038}}\approx3^{3^{15}} is large enough. The integer part of this number has 4,008,660 decimal digits, so checking every number under this figure would be completely infeasible. In 1997,
Deshouillers, Effinger,
te Riele and Zinoviev published a result showing that the
generalized Riemann hypothesis implies Goldbach's weak then-conjecture for all numbers. This result combines a general statement valid for numbers greater than 1020 with an extensive computer search of the small cases. Saouter also conducted a computer search covering the same cases at approximately the same time.
Olivier Ramaré in 1995 showed that every even number
n ≥ 4 is in fact the sum of at most six primes, from which it follows that every odd number
n ≥ 5 is the sum of at most seven primes.
Leszek Kaniecki showed every odd integer is a sum of at most five primes, under the
Riemann Hypothesis. In 2012,
Terence Tao proved this without the Riemann Hypothesis; this improves both results. In 2002, Liu Ming-Chit (
University of Hong Kong) and Wang Tian-Ze lowered Borozdkin's threshold to approximately n>e^{3100}\approx 2 \times 10^{1346}. The
exponent is still much too large to admit checking all smaller numbers by computer. (Computer searches have only reached as far as 1018 for the strong Goldbach conjecture, and not much further than that for the weak Goldbach conjecture.) In 2012 and 2013, Peruvian mathematician
Harald Helfgott released a pair of papers improving
major and minor arc estimates to supposedly prove the weak Goldbach conjecture. Here, the major arcs \mathfrak M is the union of intervals \left (a/q-cr_0/qx,a/q+cr_0/qx\right ) around the rationals a/q,q where c is a constant. Minor arcs \mathfrak{m} are defined to be \mathfrak{m}=(\mathbb R/\mathbb Z)\setminus\mathfrak{M}. ==References==