The ‘Lonely Runner’ Problem Only Appears Simple
koowipublishing.com/Updated: 19/04/2026
Description
The original version of this story appeared in Quanta Magazine.
Picture a bizarre training exercise: A group of runners starts jogging around a circular track, with each runner maintaining a unique, constant pace. Will every runner end up âlonely,â or relatively far from everyone else, at least once, no matter their speeds?
Mathematicians conjecture that the answer is yes.
The âlonely runnerâ problem might seem simple and inconsequential, but it crops up in many guises throughout math. Itâs equivalent to questions in number theory, geometry, graph theory, and moreâabout when itâs possible to get a clear line of sight in a field of obstacles, or where billiard balls might move on a table, or how to organize a network. âIt has so many facets. It touches so many different mathematical fields,â said Matthias Beck of San Francisco State University.
For just two or three runners, the conjectureâs proof is elementary. Mathematicians proved it for four runners in the 1970s, and by 2007, theyâd gotten as far as seven. But for the past two decades, no one has been able to advance any further.
Then last year, Matthieu Rosenfeld, a mathematician at the Laboratory of Computer Science, Robotics, and Microelectronics of Montpellier, settled the conjecture for eight runners. And within a few weeks, a second-year undergraduate at the University of Oxford named Tanupat (Paul) Trakulthongchai built on Rosenfeldâs ideas to prove it for nine and 10 runners.
The sudden progress has renewed interest in the problem. âItâs really a quantum leap,â said Beck, who was not involved in the work. Adding just one runner makes the task of proving the conjecture âexponentially harder,â he said. âGoing from seven runners to now 10 runners is amazing.â
The Starting Dash
At first, the lonely runner problem had nothing to do with running.
Instead, mathematicians were interested in a seemingly unrelated problem: how to use fractions to approximate irrational numbers such as pi, a task that has a vast number of applications. In the 1960s, a graduate student named Jörg M. Wills conjectured that a century-old method for doing so is optimalâthat thereâs no way to improve it.
In 1998, a group of mathematicians rewrote that conjecture in the language of running. Say N runners start from the same spot on a circular track thatâs 1 unit in length, and each runs at a different constant speed. Willsâ conjecture is equivalent to saying that each runner will always end up lonely at some point, no matter what the other runnersâ speeds are. More precisely, each runner will at some point find themselves at a distance of at least 1/N from any other runner.
When Wills saw the lonely runner paper, he emailed one of the authors, Luis Goddyn of Simon Fraser University, to congratulate him on âthis wonderful and poetic name.â (Goddynâs reply: âOh, you are still alive.â)
Mathematicians also showed that the lonely runner problem is equivalent to yet another question. Imagine an infinite sheet of graph paper. In the center of every grid, place a small square. Then start at one of the grid corners and draw a straight line. (The line can point in any direction other than perfectly vertical or horizontal.) How big can the smaller squares get before the line must hit one?
As versions of the lonely runner problem proliferated throughout mathematics, interest in the question grew. Mathematicians proved different cases of the conjecture using completely different techniques. Sometimes they relied on tools from number theory; at other times they turned to geometry or graph theory.
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