
Graham P. Collins
FORMS OF SPACE
Grigoriy Yakovlevich Perelman proved the Poincare theorem for a variety of three-dimensional and three-dimensional spheres. This theorem remained in the famous list of the most intractable problems in science at the beginning of the century : the "Millennium Prize's Problems" ("Millennium Challenges"). It took almost four years (from the date of the publications by G. Perelman) to the world's biggest "authorities" in mathematics to conceal that the proof was correct …
The TFF developed by I.L. Gerlovin in collaboration with other scientists, is based on a few basic principles as well as some mathematical constructions. One of the main of them says : "space is to be considered as a fiber multi-dimensional space". Each layer (subspace) is linked in a certain way to the other, and their combination corresponds to the principles set forth in the Paradigm of Gerlovin. And the enclosing "zero" space is a geometric structure of our universe - a space corresponding indeed to a 3-dimensional sphere (S3)…
Sergei Poleshchuk
POINCARE' THEOREM IN SIMPLE WORDS
Jules Henri Poincaré (1854-1912) headed the Paris Academy of Sciences and was elected to the scientific academies of 30 countries. His talent was comparable to the one of Leonardo de Vinci, and his interests included physics, mechanics, astronomy, and philosophy. Mathematics all over the world still think that only two people in the history truly knew this science: the German David Gilbert (1862-1943) and Henri Poincaré…
In 1904, the scientist published a paper which contained, inter alia, an assumption, called the Poincaré theorem. The search for the proof of this statement took nearly a century.
V.A. Uspensky
THE THEOREM OF POINCARÉ - PERELMAN SET FORTH BY V.A. USPENSKY