| Fermat went even
further, believing that if the power of the equation is
increased further, then these equations would also have no
solutions:
x3 + y3 =
z3
x4 + y4 =
z4
x5 + y5 =
z5
x6 + y6 =
z6 .
:
The mathematical short-hand for
this family of insoluble equations is:
xn + yn = zn ,
where n is any number greater than 2.
According to Fermat, none of these
equations could be solved, and he noted this in the margin of
his Arithmetica. To back up his theorem he had developed an
argument or mathematical proof, and following the first
marginal note he scribbled the most tantalising comment in the
history of mathematics:
"Cubem autem in duos
cubos, aut quadratoquadratum in duos quadratoquadratos, et
generaliter nullam in infinitum ultra quadratum potestatem in
duos eiusdem nominis fas est
dividere...
.....Cuius rei
demonstrationem mirabilem sane detexi hanc marginis exguitas
non caperet."
or to put it another
way..
"It is impossible for a
cube to be written as a sum of two cubes, or a fouth power to
be written as the sum of two forth powers, or, in general, for
any number which is a power greater than the second to be
written as the sum of two like
powers...
....I have a truly
marvellous demonstration of this proposition which this margin
is too narrow to contain."
Fermat believed he could prove
his theorem, but he never committed his proof to paper. It is
believed that the creation and proof of the Last Theorem
happened in about 1637, but it was not until after Fermat’s
death in 1665 that his marginal note came to light. His son,
Clément-Samuel, discovered the casual jotting along with many
others, all hinting at theorems, but at best giving only a
glimpse of the underlying proof. Then in 1670 he published
Diophantus’ Arithmetica Containing Observations by P. de
Fermat, which contained Diophantus’ original text
interspersed by Fermat’s notes.
Now the race was on to rediscover
Fermat’s proof. Trial and error showed that Fermat’s Last
Theorem seemed to be true, because nobody could find three
whole number solutions. But nobody could be sure that no such
solutions existed. Mathematicians would only be happy if they
could find a solid proof, a reasoned argument, something that
would unequivocally show that the theorem was true.
Fermat’s Last Theorem became the
most notorious problem in mathematics. The more that
mathematicians tried, the more they failed, and the more
desirable a solution became. The Last Theorem was a source of
frustration, but it also had a lighter side. In the 1980s a
piece of graffiti appeared on New York’s Eighth Street subway
station.
xn
+ yn = zn ,
no solutions.
I
have discovered a truly marvellous proof of
this, but
I can’t write it down because my train is
coming. |