Today, I heard of something so called Goldbach's conjecture from my mathematics teacher in the class. This was one of the most interesting things that I have ever heard in mathematics.
This made me curious to study a bit more about conjectures. The definition of conjecture on google says that:
A conjecture is an opinion or conclusion formed on the basis of incomplete information.
Now the question which is stuck in my mind is: What is the use of conjectures in modern mathematics?" Are they used in problem solving as we use theorems/lemma?
If it is the case then how can we use something to solve a problem which is not even known with certainty (Which we can't prove)??
The word "conjecture" is rather fuzzy and doesn't in itself tell you much. It can be used about just about every statement where
Thus, simply being told that "such-and-such is a conjecture" doesn't tell you much useful.
Conjectures play at least two different roles in mathematical research:
They're goals we set ourselves to have something to strive for. Often these are fairly simple statements that give the mathematician the impression that they ought to have a proof or disproof, but where we simply don't have the tools to attack them. So we set out trying to invent such tools!
Goldbach's conjecture falls into this category, as does, for example, the twin prime conjecture or (until it was proved) Fermat's Last Theorem. These are things that really won't have any particularly important consequences, but it is hoped that searching for techniques that can whack them will also be actually useful for less famous but more practical purposes.
Sometimes these get resolved by proving that they cannot be proved from a reasonable set of assumptions (so condition 3 above is not satisfied). This famously happened to the continuum hypothesis, almost a century after it was first conjectured, when Paul Cohen showed that it doesn't follow from the usual axioms of set theory.
They're stepping stones towards what we really want to know. This is a matter of division of labor: A community of researchers want to investigate this-or-that, and a respected and experienced person suggests that it ought to be possible to prove such-and-such and then prove that such-and-such implies this-or-that. If the suggestion is accepted, people can now work independently on proving such-and-such and on proving the step from such-and-such to this-or-that, and the Such-and-Such conjecture is now the point that connects these two efforts.
This can sometimes result in the Such-and-Such Conjecture being famous for its own sake, particularly if the step from such-and-such to this-or-that gets completed, but proving such-and-such itself turns out to be hard. (That is, without uncovering evidence that such-and-such is simply false).
Note that the terminology here is not very consistent. Even though it is now common to speak of this general kind of claims as "conjectures", particular named conjectures need not have "conjecture" in their name. Some are named Hypothesis instead (and this doesn't encode any particular different meaning, but is just a historical accident), and Fermat's Last Theorem spuriously had "theorem" in its name for several centuries before it was actually proved.