The hardest problem unsolved is debatable. One of the hardest problems socially unsolved is racism. People of different races and from different cultures struggle to find a solution for accepting each other as equal. One of the hardest problems unsolved in medicine is curing illnesses such as cancer. The world can be complex giving humanity a lot of hard problems to solve but by working together solutions can be found.
I am pretty sure you can make them as hard as you want - if you have a "hard" problem, you can always find one that is even harder. If this is true, then there is no such thing as a "hardest algebra problem".
Immortality.. I supose.
900x10080
That's hard to say.
Anyone can if they work hard at it.
The hardest problem unsolved is debatable. One of the hardest problems socially unsolved is racism. People of different races and from different cultures struggle to find a solution for accepting each other as equal. One of the hardest problems unsolved in medicine is curing illnesses such as cancer. The world can be complex giving humanity a lot of hard problems to solve but by working together solutions can be found.
There is no "hardest" problem. Something that you might find hard might appear easy to someone else and conversely. Also, some of the harder problems do not have solutions yet - if they had been solved then they could not have been so hard!
This one may be confusing its 1.12933E.2394 + 9.1879E98.234 Yet this is hard
The hardest math problem ever Also, according to True Jackson V.P, the answer is 16. I paused the screen showing the problem, and x=16
What is hard for some people may not be hard for others. So there is really no answer to this question.
n+1=n solve for n.
Different people find different problems hard and so it is difficult to answer the question.