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- <text id=93TT2004>
- <title>
- July 05, 1993: Fini to Fermat's Last Theorem
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 05, 1993 Hitting Back At Terrorists
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MATHEMATICS, Page 47
- Fini to Fermat's Last Theorem
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>History's most celebrated math problem is solved at last
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL D. LEMONICK--With reporting by David Bjerklie/New York
- </p>
- <p> The mathematicians who gathered in a Cambridge University lecture
- room last Monday had no idea that they were about to witness
- history. They had come to hear Andrew Wiles, an English colleague
- based at Princeton University, give three one-hour lectures
- on "Modular Forms, Elliptic Curves and Galois Representations,"
- an abstract topic even by the rarefied standards of higher math.
- By the end of the first hour, though, they knew something was
- up. Recalls Nigel Boston, a visiting mathematician at Cambridge's
- Isaac Newton Institute: "We realized where he could be heading.
- People were giving each other wide-eyed looks." By the end of
- the third hour, the room was packed with excited number theorists.
- Wiles finished up his talk and wrote a simple equation on the
- blackboard, a mathematical afterthought that logically followed
- from all that he had been saying--and the audience burst into
- wild applause.
- </p>
- <p> Wiles had unraveled the greatest unsolved mystery of mathematics.
- Known as Fermat's Last Theorem, it has baffled number experts
- for more than 350 years. A handful of solutions have appeared
- over the centuries--the latest in 1988--and then been retracted
- upon discovery of a flaw. But, says University of California,
- Berkeley, mathematician Kenneth Ribet, "Wiles has a first-rate
- reputation in the subject. He is careful, and he is methodical;
- he does very, very good work...and he presented beautiful
- arguments." Within an hour, electronic mail hailing the achievement
- began streaking across the globe to universities and research
- centers.
- </p>
- <p> What makes the theorem so tantalizing is that for all its fiendish
- difficulty to prove, it is almost absurdly simple to state.
- The ancient Greeks knew that the equation x (squared) + y (squared)
- = z (squared) could be correct if x, y and z were replaced by
- certain integers--that is, ordinary nonfractional numbers.
- For example, 3 (squared) + 4 (squared) (that is, 9 + 16) equals
- 25, which is 5 (squared). Substituting 5, 12 and 13 for x, y
- and z works too, and so do other combinations.
- </p>
- <p> In 1637 or so, a French lawyer, poet, classicist and mathematician
- named Pierre de Fermat declared that such solutions exist only
- for squares. Raise the exponent to any number higher than 2--change the equation to x 7 + y 7 = z 7, for example, or x
- 12 + y 12 = z 12--said Fermat, and no combination of integers
- will work. "I have found a truly wonderful proof," wrote Fermat
- in the margin of a book, "which this margin is too small to
- contain." He lived until 1665 but never did write it down--evidence, many believe, that he hadn't proved the proposition
- after all.
- </p>
- <p> Fermat had a sufficiently august reputation, though--he laid
- the foundation for probability theory and analytic geometry
- theory--that his tantalizing claim lured generations of mathematicians
- into attacking the problem. They failed, but in the process,
- says University of Illinois mathematician Lee Rubel, they "generated
- an awful lot of extremely important and powerful mathematics--it has been a seed for major developments." In fact, the
- mathematical fallout from Fermat's theorem has turned out to
- be more significant than the original theorem itself. For decades,
- Fermat's Last Theorem has been a kind of backwater in math,
- its significance more symbolic than real. It would most probably
- be solved in the course of addressing some broader problem.
- </p>
- <p> That is just the way a Japanese mathematician, Yoichi Miyaoka,
- seemed to have cracked the theorem in 1988: he apparently (but
- wrongly) showed that there was a link between Fermat's Last
- Theorem and a proven proposition in a field known as differential
- geometry.
- </p>
- <p> Wiles' solution comes at the theorem in a different way. What
- he actually proved was an important part of another math puzzle,
- known in the trade as the Taniyama Conjecture, which deals with
- the equations that describe mathematical objects known as elliptic
- curves. Just six years ago, Berkeley's Ribet demonstrated that
- proving this conjecture was tantamount to proving Fermat's Last
- Theorem. "What is amazing about Wiles' proof," says Boston,
- "is that while it built on previous attempts, Andrew realized
- how to put all these complicated pieces together."
- </p>
- <p> There is always a chance that Wiles, too, has made a mistake.
- His proof runs more than 200 pages, and he could pre sent only
- the highlights in the Cambridge lecture. The final test will
- come in a few months, when Wiles circulates a complete, written
- version of the proof to others for careful checking. That will
- not be easy. Says Ribet: "Wiles' arguments are based on the
- most advanced, most elaborate mathematics that exist in this
- field. The number of mathematicians who can really fully understand
- the arguments would fit into a conference room."
- </p>
- <p> Wiles' proof is historic, but the subfields of mathematics generated
- along the way by people working to solve Fermat's theorem are
- full of perplexing problems, and so are other areas of math.
- A proof of Fermat's famous theorem by no means brings any line
- of inquiry to an end. Still bedeviling mathematicians are the
- Poincare Conjecture, the Riemann Hypothesis, Goldbach's Conjecture,
- Kepler's sphere-packing problem and dozens of others. There
- are, in short, enough mind-bending challenges to keep mathematicians
- busy for at least the next 350 years.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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