The question of whether there exist infinitely many twin primes has been one of the great
open questions in
number theory for many years. This is the content of the
twin prime conjecture, which states that there are infinitely many primes such that is also prime. In 1849,
de Polignac made the more general conjecture that for every natural number , there are infinitely many primes such that is also prime. The of
de Polignac's conjecture is the twin prime conjecture. A stronger form of the twin prime conjecture, the
Hardy–Littlewood conjecture, postulates a distribution law for twin primes akin to the
prime number theorem. On 17 April 2013,
Yitang Zhang announced a proof that there exists an
integer that is less than 70 million, where there are infinitely many pairs of primes that differ by . Zhang's paper was accepted in early May 2013.
Terence Tao subsequently proposed a
Polymath Project collaborative effort to improve Zhang's bound. One year after Zhang's announcement, the bound had been reduced to 246, where it remains. These improved bounds were discovered independently by
James Maynard and Terence Tao, using a different approach that was simpler than Zhang's. This second approach also gave bounds for the smallest needed to guarantee that infinitely many intervals of width contain at least primes. Moreover (see also the next section) assuming the
Elliott–Halberstam conjecture and its generalized form, the Polymath Project wiki states that the bound is 12 and 6, respectively. A strengthening of
Goldbach's conjecture, if proved, would also prove there is an infinite number of twin primes, as would the existence of
Siegel zeroes. ==Other theorems weaker than the twin prime conjecture==