aster.cloud aster.cloud
  • /
  • Platforms
    • Public Cloud
    • On-Premise
    • Hybrid Cloud
    • Data
  • Architecture
    • Design
    • Solutions
    • Enterprise
  • Engineering
    • Automation
    • Software Engineering
    • Project Management
    • DevOps
  • Programming
    • Learning
  • Tools
  • About
  • /
  • Platforms
    • Public Cloud
    • On-Premise
    • Hybrid Cloud
    • Data
  • Architecture
    • Design
    • Solutions
    • Enterprise
  • Engineering
    • Automation
    • Software Engineering
    • Project Management
    • DevOps
  • Programming
    • Learning
  • Tools
  • About
aster.cloud aster.cloud
  • /
  • Platforms
    • Public Cloud
    • On-Premise
    • Hybrid Cloud
    • Data
  • Architecture
    • Design
    • Solutions
    • Enterprise
  • Engineering
    • Automation
    • Software Engineering
    • Project Management
    • DevOps
  • Programming
    • Learning
  • Tools
  • About
9th-dedekind-number-feature
  • Technology

Dedekind Number, Mathematics, Number Theory, Paderborn University, Real Numbers,

  • aster.cloud
  • July 13, 2023
  • 4 minute read

Making history with 42 digits: Scientists at Paderborn University and KU Leuven have unlocked a decades-old mystery of mathematics with the so-called ninth Dedekind number. Experts worldwide have been searching for the value since 1991. The Paderborn scientists arrived at the exact sequence of numbers with the help of the Noctua supercomputer located there. The results will be presented in September at the International Workshop on Boolean Functions and their Applications (BFA) in Norway.

What started as a master’s thesis project by Lennart Van Hirtum, then a computer science student at KU Leuven and now a research associate at the University of Paderborn, has become a huge success. The scientists join an illustrious group with their work: Earlier numbers in the series were found by mathematician Richard Dedekind himself when he defined the problem in 1897, and later by greats of early computer science such as Randolph Church and Morgan Ward. “For 32 years, the calculation of D(9) was an open challenge, and it was questionable whether it would ever be possible to calculate this number at all,” Van Hirtum says.


Partner with aster.cloud
for your next big idea.
Let us know here.



From our partners:

CITI.IO :: Business. Institutions. Society. Global Political Economy.
CYBERPOGO.COM :: For the Arts, Sciences, and Technology.
DADAHACKS.COM :: Parenting For The Rest Of Us.
ZEDISTA.COM :: Entertainment. Sports. Culture. Escape.
TAKUMAKU.COM :: For The Hearth And Home.
ASTER.CLOUD :: From The Cloud And Beyond.
LIWAIWAI.COM :: Intelligence, Inside and Outside.
GLOBALCLOUDPLATFORMS.COM :: For The World's Computing Needs.
FIREGULAMAN.COM :: For The Fire In The Belly Of The Coder.
ASTERCASTER.COM :: Supra Astra. Beyond The Stars.
BARTDAY.COM :: Prosperity For Everyone.

The previous number in the Dedekind sequence, the 8th Dedekind number, was found in 1991 using a Cray 2, the most powerful supercomputer at the time. “It therefore seemed conceivable to us that it should be possible by now to calculate the 9th number on a large supercomputer,” says Van Hirtum, describing the motivation for the ambitious project, which he initially implemented jointly with the supervisors of his master’s thesis at KU Leuven.

Image-Fotos Forschung Universitaet Paderborn +++ Zeitlich einfache und unbegrenzte Nutzungsrechte der Fotos fuer die Website der Universitaet bzw. der Fakultaeten und fuer hauseigene Print- und Onlinemedien sowie fuer die Oeffentlichkeitsarbeit, z.B. Bildmaterial für Pressemitteilungen etc., der Universitaet. Das Nutzungsrecht beinhaltet das Recht, die Fotos (elektronisch) zu bearbeiten und zum Zwecke der Oeffentlichkeitsarbeit der Universitaet zu vervielfaeltigen, zu verbreiten und zu veroeffentlichen. Bei Verwendung bitte stets Quellenangabe Foto: Universitaet Paderborn/Besim Mazhiqi angeben.
symbolic image (Paderborn University, Besim Mazhiqi)

Grains of sand, chess and supercomputers

The main subject of Dedekind numbers are so-called monotone Boolean functions. Van Hirtum explains, “Basically, you can think of a monotone Boolean function in two, three, and infinite dimensions as a game with an n-dimensional cube. You balance the cube on one corner and then color each of the remaining corners either white or red. There is only one rule: you must never place a white corner above a red one. This creates a kind of vertical red-white intersection. The object of the game is to count how many different cuts there are. Their number is what is defined as the Dedekind number. Even if it doesn’t seem like it, the numbers quickly become gigantic in the process: the 8th Dedekind number already has 23 digits.”

Read More  Report: What It Will Take For CEOs To Fund A Sustainable Transformation

Comparably large – but incomparably easier to calculate – numbers are known from a legend concerning the invention of the game of chess. “According to this legend, the inventor of the chess game asked the king for only a few grains of rice on each square of the chess board as a reward: one grain on the first square, two grains on the second, four on the third, and twice as many on each of the following squares. The king quickly realized that this request was impossible to fulfill, because so much rice does not exist in the whole world. The number of grains of rice on the complete board would have 20 digits – an unimaginable amount, but still less than D(8). When you realize these orders of magnitude, it is obvious that both an efficient computational method and a very fast computer would be needed to find D(9),” Van Hirtum said.

The figure shows all possible cuts for dimensions 0, 1, 2, and 3. The number of these colored 2D, 3D, - N-dimensional cuts that can be formed is what is defined as the Dedekind number.
The figure shows all possible cuts for dimensions 0, 1, 2, and 3. The number of these colored 2D, 3D, – N-dimensional cuts that can be formed is what is defined as the Dedekind number.

Milestone: Years become months

To calculate D(9), the scientists used a technique developed by master’s thesis advisor Patrick De Causmaecker known as the P-coefficient formula. It provides a way to calculate Dedekind numbers not by counting, but by a very large sum. This allows D(8) to be decoded in just eight minutes on a normal laptop. But, “What takes eight minutes for D(8) becomes hundreds of thousands of years for D(9). Even if you used a large supercomputer exclusively for this task, it would still take many years to complete the calculation,” Van Hirtum points out. The main problem is that the number of terms in this formula grows incredibly fast. “In our case, by exploiting symmetries in the formula, we were able to reduce the number of terms to ‘only’ 5.5*10^18 – an enormous amount. By comparison, the number of grains of sand on Earth is about 7.5*10^18, which is nothing to sneeze at, but for a modern supercomputer, 5.5*10^18 operations are quite manageable,” the computer scientist said. The problem: The calculation of these terms on normal processors is slow and also a use of GPUs as currently the fastest hardware accelerator technology for many AI applications is not efficient for this algorithm.

Read More  The Essential Skills Every Machine Learning Engineer Should Learn

The solution: application-specific hardware using highly specialized and parallel arithmetic units – so-called FPGAs (field programmable gate arrays). Van Hirtum developed an initial prototype for the hardware accelerator and began looking for a supercomputer that had the necessary FPGA cards. In the process, he became aware of the Noctua 2 computer at the “Paderborn Center for Parallel Computing (PC2)” at the University of Paderborn, which has one of the world’s most powerful FPGA systems.

Prof. Dr. Christian Plessl, head of PC2, explains: “When Lennart Van Hirtum and Patrick De Causmaeker contacted us, it was immediately clear to us that we wanted to support this moonshot project. Solving hard combinatorial problems with FPGAs is a promising field of application and Noctua 2 is one of the few supercomputers worldwide with which the experiment is feasible at all. The extreme reliability and stability requirements also pose a challenge and test for our infrastructure. The FPGA expert consulting team worked closely with Lennart to adapt and optimize the application for our environment.”

After several years of development, the program ran on the supercomputer for about five months. And then the time had come: on March 8, the scientists found the 9th Dedekind number: 286386577668298411128469151667598498812366.

Source: Paderborn University


For enquiries, product placements, sponsorships, and collaborations, connect with us at [email protected]. We'd love to hear from you!

Our humans need coffee too! Your support is highly appreciated, thank you!

aster.cloud

Related Topics
  • Dedekind Number
  • Mathematics
  • Number Theory
  • Paderborn University
  • Real Numbers
You May Also Like
View Post
  • Gears
  • Technology

Samsung Art Store Brings Art Basel to Homes Worldwide With New Curated Collection

  • June 15, 2026
View Post
  • Technology

The consequences of relying on AI for accurate news

  • June 10, 2026
View Post
  • Gears
  • Technology

WWDC26: Apple unveils next generation of Apple Intelligence, Siri AI, powerful parental controls, and an expansive set of software improvements

  • June 8, 2026
View Post
  • Technology

IBM and Google Cloud Announce Strategic Partnership to Scale AI with Human Expertise and AI‑Powered Delivery

  • June 4, 2026
View Post
  • Technology

Banks race to patch new cyber vulnerabilities, and other cybersecurity news

  • May 25, 2026
pope-leo-xiv-cq5dam-1500.844
View Post
  • Technology

Pope Leo XIV to Publish First Encyclical on Artificial Intelligence and Human Dignity on 25 May

  • May 22, 2026
View Post
  • Technology

Portfolio to Clients, and is Strengthened by Ongoing Project Glasswing Work

  • May 20, 2026
reMarkable Paper Pure
View Post
  • Gears
  • Technology

Everything The reMarkable Paper Pure Actually Does

  • May 14, 2026

Stay Connected!
LATEST
  • 1
    Expectations vs. Reality: The AI We Thought We’d Have in 10 Years
    • June 19, 2026
  • digital-nomad-freelancer-worker-2151205464 2
    One paperwork problem – Get your Digital Nomad Visa employment documents fast from UK, EU or Singapore
    • June 16, 2026
  • 3
    Samsung Art Store Brings Art Basel to Homes Worldwide With New Curated Collection
    • June 15, 2026
  • 4
    You Do Not Need to Invest in the IPO of SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI
    • June 10, 2026
  • 5
    The consequences of relying on AI for accurate news
    • June 10, 2026
  • 6
    Connecting AI agents with unstructured data using Google Cloud Storage MCP Servers
    • June 10, 2026
  • 7
    WWDC26: Apple unveils next generation of Apple Intelligence, Siri AI, powerful parental controls, and an expansive set of software improvements
    • June 8, 2026
  • 8
    IBM and Google Cloud Announce Strategic Partnership to Scale AI with Human Expertise and AI‑Powered Delivery
    • June 4, 2026
  • Data center 9
    Data Sovereignty in Spain. It’s Not Just About the Law, It’s About Efficiency
    • June 3, 2026
  • 10
    Ink vs Pixels. What you miss versus what you are actually missing.
    • June 1, 2026
about
Hello World!

We are aster.cloud. We’re created by programmers for programmers.

Our site aims to provide guides, programming tips, reviews, and interesting materials for tech people and those who want to learn in general.

We would like to hear from you.

If you have any feedback, enquiries, or sponsorship request, kindly reach out to us at:

[email protected]
Most Popular
  • 1
    Banks race to patch new cyber vulnerabilities, and other cybersecurity news
    • May 25, 2026
  • pope-leo-xiv-cq5dam-1500.844 2
    Pope Leo XIV to Publish First Encyclical on Artificial Intelligence and Human Dignity on 25 May
    • May 22, 2026
  • 3
    Portfolio to Clients, and is Strengthened by Ongoing Project Glasswing Work
    • May 20, 2026
  • reMarkable Paper Pure 4
    Everything The reMarkable Paper Pure Actually Does
    • May 14, 2026
  • 5
    Scaling cloud and AI: Microsoft Azure’s commitment to Europe’s digital future
    • May 11, 2026
  • /
  • Technology
  • Tools
  • About
  • Contact Us

Input your search keywords and press Enter.