It was Zheng Jian and Jiu Xinghong who were unaware of what was currently on Wang Ye's mind.
If they had known what Wang Ye was thinking, they would have definitely searched everywhere to find where he had thrown those draft papers, even if it meant digging three feet into the ground to retrieve them.
Once Zheng Jian got the draft papers, he immediately went to the thirty-ninth problem, the proof of Riemann's hypothesis, and started reading it.
With that look,
Zheng Jian became deeply engrossed.
Zheng Jian found that the process Wang Ye used to prove Riemann's hypothesis was very simple and clear.
From the first glimpse, Zheng Jian had a feeling of sudden enlightenment.
The more he read,
the more Zheng Jian felt his thoughts expanding.
Even as he followed Wang Ye's thought process and continued reading, Zheng Jian felt that proving Riemann's hypothesis was a very simple matter, nothing more than that.
And Jiu Xinghong and their group
looking at Wang Ye's manuscript,