After Lu Zhou talked with his teammates, he decided to publish the proof of the Beilinson-Bloch-Kato conjecture in the "Future Mathematics" journal.
While the paper was in the review process, its preprint was uploaded to arXiv.
Even though the Beilinson-Bloch-Kato conjecture wasn't as famous as Riemann's hypothesis or Goldbach's conjecture, being able to connect high-dimensional K-groups with analytical invariants of the elliptic curve E gave it a special meaning in the field of algebraic geometry and number theory.
Algebraic geometry was the branch of mathematics that had the most influential researchers, so this preprint immediately attracted a considerable amount of attention.
Not just because of the Beilinson-Bloch-Kato conjecture itself.
But also because the person who solved this conjecture was Professor Lu, the one who proved Riemann's hypothesis at the International Congress of Mathematicians…
Princeton Institute for Advanced Study.