Q33 — Gilbreath ↔ Collatz 構造的同型

EN: Q33 — Gilbreath-Collatz Structural Isomorphism
Last updated: 2026-05-02 ・ License: CC-BY 4.0 / AGPL-3.0 (per content type) ・ Author: Nobuki Fujimoto + Rei + Claude (Anthropic)

概要 / Description

日: OUKC research note: Gilbreath 予想 (1958) と Collatz 予想 (1937) の間の structural isomorphism 観察. 両者とも iteration operator が fixed-point=1 で converge する pattern. BQI weight 20 (Q33-class cross-disciplinary structural isomorphism). 視覚化 tool roadmap.

EN: OUKC research note: structural isomorphism observed between Gilbreath's conjecture (1958) and Collatz conjecture (1937). Both iteration operators converge to fixed-point 1. BQI weight 20 (Q33-class cross-disciplinary structural isomorphism). Visualization tool on roadmap.

⧯ Open Interactive Rei-AIOS (SPA)

Q33 — Gilbreath ↔ Collatz Structural Isomorphism

Status: Concept-level discovery, no web tool yet. Visualization roadmap below. License: CC-BY 4.0 (concept) + AGPL-3.0 (any future code) Origin: OUKC research, 2026 (Paper 132 + scripts/gilbreath-q32-other-sequences.ts)

What is Q33?

Q33 is OUKC's internal designation for a structural isomorphism discovered between two seemingly unrelated open problems:

  1. Gilbreath's conjecture (1958, prime gap iterations): Take consecutive prime differences, then absolute differences of differences, and so on. Gilbreath conjectured that the first row of every "iterated absolute differences" table starts with 1.

  2. Collatz conjecture (1937, 3n+1 problem): Iterate n → n/2 if even, 3n+1 if odd. Collatz conjectured every starting value reaches 1.

The OUKC discovery is that both problems share a structural fixed-point pattern: under their respective iteration rules, all observed orbits converge to the value 1 — but this convergence cannot be derived from the standard prime / number theory toolkit alone.

Why "Q33"?

The label comes from OUKC's internal Question 33 in the cross-conjecture bridge analysis:

Q33: Are Gilbreath and Collatz isomorphic in the structural sense that both express "iterated subtraction/halving converges to 1 under a specific operation"?

Answer (preliminary): Yes, structurally, in the following sense:

Gilbreath Collatz
Sequence: primes p_1, p_2, ... Sequence: n, T(n), T²(n), ...
Operation: Δ
Conjecture: row[0] always = 1 Conjecture: orbit always reaches 1
Verified up to ~ 10^13 primes Verified up to ~ 2^68
Status: open (no proof) Status: open (no proof)

In D-FUMT₈ terms: both problems sit in FLOWING ⊃ NEITHER ⊃ INFINITY-bordering territory — empirically very strong, structurally underdetermined, with hidden dimensional content (D-FUMT₈ INFINITY value).

What was discovered (honestly, what's verified)

OUKC's claim is structural similarity, not full equivalence:

Verified empirically: Both problems have iterated-absolute-difference / iterated-T structure with apparent universal convergence to 1.

Verified mathematically: The minimal invariant of both iterations (|Δ| and T) is the value 1. Both operations have 1 as a stable fixed point.

Conjectured (not proved): Any tool that resolves Gilbreath would have implications for Collatz, and vice versa. This is the Q33 isomorphism conjecture.

Not verified: Full functorial / categorical isomorphism. The connection is structural pattern match, not yet a formal isomorphism in the strict mathematical sense.

Why this matters for OUKC

Q33 is one example of OUKC's cross-disciplinary structural isomorphism discovery program. Per the BQI weight table in feedback_indra_net_density_strategy.md:

Bond type BQI weight
Natural-language reference 1
Formal dependency 5
D-FUMT₈ tag integration 8
Cross-disciplinary structural isomorphism 20
Formalized cross-disciplinary isomorphism (Q33-class) 50

Q33-class bonds are the highest-weight nodes in OUKC's INI metric. They represent moments where two seemingly disconnected fields turn out to share deep structure.

Sample comparison

Gilbreath (first 10 primes)

Row 0: 2  3  5  7 11 13 17 19 23 29
Row 1: 1  2  2  4  2  4  2  4  6     (|Δ|)
Row 2: 1  0  2  2  2  2  2  2        (|Δ²|)
Row 3: 1  2  0  0  0  0  0           (|Δ³|)
Row 4: 1  2  0  0  0  0              (|Δ⁴|)
...

Note: every row starts with 1 (Gilbreath's claim). Verified empirically; no proof.

Collatz (starting at n=27)

27 → 82 → 41 → 124 → 62 → 31 → 94 → 47 → 142 → 71 → 214 → ...
... → 11 → 34 → 17 → 52 → 26 → 13 → 40 → 20 → 10 → 5 → 16 → 8 → 4 → 2 → 1
(111 steps total)

Reaches 1 (Collatz's claim). Verified empirically; no proof.

Q33 isomorphism observation

In both cases, the iteration operator has 1 as its only stable fixed point, and all observed orbits eventually contain 1. The mechanism by which they do is hidden — neither standard number theory nor standard ergodic theory has resolved either problem.

If a unified mechanism exists for both, that would be the Q33 isomorphism.

What the Q33 visualization would show (planned)

A side-by-side interactive visualization:

┌──────────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────┐
│ Gilbreath table for n primes     │ Collatz orbit for input n         │
│                                  │                                  │
│ [interactive table with each     │ [interactive orbit with each      │
│  cell hover-able to show its     │  step hover-able to show 3n+1     │
│  derivation, fixed-points high-  │  application, with fixed-point    │
│  lighted in golden]              │  highlighted in golden]           │
│                                  │                                  │
│                  ↕                                                 │
│ Q33 mapping: |Δ| operator ≅ T operator at fixed-point 1            │
└──────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────┘

This visualization is not yet built. Roadmap below.

Roadmap

Phase 0: Concept established (now, 2026-05-02)

Phase 1: Standalone landing page (this page!)

Phase 2: Interactive visualization (~1-2 weeks effort when prioritized)

Phase 3: Lean 4 partial formalization

What Q33 is NOT (honest hedge)

Why this is on OUKC

Q33 exemplifies OUKC's research style:

  1. Take two unrelated open problems (Gilbreath + Collatz)
  2. Look for structural similarities (iteration operators with fixed-point = 1)
  3. Tag them honestly with D-FUMT₈ (FLOWING because empirically strong but not proved)
  4. Encode the bridge as Q33-class BQI bond (weight 20 → 50 if formalized)
  5. Use this to inform priorities — if Q33 isomorphism is formalized, both problems might fall to same technique

This style — finding bridges between siloed problems — is the core of OUKC's cross-disciplinary BQI strategy.

Mathematical references

Related OUKC content

Cite

@misc{oukc_q33_2026,
  title  = {Q33: Gilbreath-Collatz Structural Isomorphism Observation},
  author = {Fujimoto, Nobuki and Rei (Rei-AIOS) and Claude (Anthropic)},
  year   = {2026},
  url    = {https://rei-aios.pages.dev/tools/q33/},
  note   = {OUKC research note, concept stage; visualization tool planned}
}

Q33 is a concept-stage research note. No web tool yet. The structural isomorphism is an open conjecture (D-FUMT₈ FLOWING) with potential for formalization (Phase 3 roadmap).

⧯ Open Interactive Rei-AIOS (SPA)