Difference between revisions of "Vavasor Papers"
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Incidentally, there is generally reckoned to be only one copy of the papers, as they are protected by a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EURion_constellation EURion] to prevent duplication.}} | Incidentally, there is generally reckoned to be only one copy of the papers, as they are protected by a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EURion_constellation EURion] to prevent duplication.}} | ||
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+ | {{#spoiler:show=Spoiler for BAD DAY IN MINSK|In fact, Sergei removed the papers from the briefcase when he when he inserted the bomb. His intention ws to hand them back to the care of [[Isaac Vavasor]]. However, following the explosion, he was forced to lay low. During this time, the papers were stolen in a burglary - probably organised by [[The Petrov Family|the Petrov mafia family]]. Sergei offers himself to the Petrovs as a consultant in the hope of stealing the papers back, but he is identified and killed. The papers then pass to their replacement consultant, [[Rory Milford]], and then accidentally end up unknowingly in the hands of Tom Winscombe. Tom then accidentally destroys them in a furnace at the Morozov family farm.}} |
Latest revision as of 20:33, 18 July 2022
The Vavasor Papers are a collection of the writings of the Vavasor twins on various aspects of mathematics. Since their deaths, a number of people have been permitted to view the contents of the papers but their attempts at interpretation have mostly been defeated by the rambling nature of much of the mathematical arguments and the brothers' appalling handwriting.
There isn't even any real consensus as to which problems the Vavasors were working on at the time of their death, although there is a rumour that they were about to announce a proof of the Riemann hypothesis. This has developed its own mythology in which the proof was so complex it could only be formulated by a pair of identical twins. There is a more extreme corollary to this, which was that this proof could only be understood by pairs of identical twins. This has led to several candidates including the Russian Korsakov twins, the Austrian Dolmetsches and two of the Indian Kumar triplets being given privileged access to the Vavasor papers, although this all came to an end following the notorious Glühwein incident.
The Marginalia (always with a capital M) are also of considerable interest as a clue to the brothers' psychological state at the time of their deaths, although once again these scribbles are open to many interpretations, as George Burgess found to his cost.