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Fermat

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    Fermat

    For one of the questions on my son's number theory assignment, he's invoked Fermat's Last Theorem in the proof. I couldn't have done that when I was at university - it hadn't been proved then!
    Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

    #2
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
    For one of the questions on my son's number theory assignment, he's invoked Fermat's Last Theorem in the proof. I couldn't have done that when I was at university - it hadn't been proved then!
    My son used that in his 5 times table last week at primary school, it's common place now. His faster than light equation got him a smiley face on the class rainbow.
    What happens in General, stays in General.
    You know what they say about assumptions!

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      #3
      Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
      For one of the questions on my son's number theory assignment, he's invoked Fermat's Last Theorem in the proof. I couldn't have done that when I was at university - it hadn't been proved then!
      What was the question, out of interest?

      Seems more likely that a number theory assignment would use Fermat's Little Theorem. Are you sure that wasn't what he was talking about?
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        #4
        Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
        I couldn't have done that when I was at university - it hadn't been proved then!
        Prior to Fermat's Last Theorem being proved, if you did some work that relied on Fermat's Last Theorem being true, you put a note to that effect in your work. That's why it was such a big deal when Fermat's Last Theorem was finally proved: it meant that all the other work out there which relied on it was validated.

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          #5
          Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
          For one of the questions on my son's number theory assignment, he's invoked Fermat's Last Theorem in the proof. I couldn't have done that when I was at university - it hadn't been proved then!

          I'm old
          FTFY
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            #6
            When I was a kid interested in science, black holes were a theory and there was (I think) one suspected one, based on reading Brief History of Time. Now, I know a Phd student who is cataloguing hundreds if not thousands of the things.

            Equally, exponential inflation models were pretty avant garde.
            Originally posted by MaryPoppins
            I'd still not breastfeed a nazi
            Originally posted by vetran
            Urine is quite nourishing

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              #7
              Originally posted by d000hg View Post
              When I was a kid interested in science, black holes were a theory and there was (I think) one suspected one, based on reading Brief History of Time. Now, I know a Phd student who is cataloguing hundreds if not thousands of the things.

              Equally, exponential inflation models were pretty avant garde.
              When I was in the 6th Form a teacher cut out a piece from New Scientist and put it on the notice board, which announced that a charge of 1/3ev had been measured - the first experimental confirmation of the existence of quarks.

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                #8
                Originally posted by d000hg View Post
                When I was a kid interested in science, black holes were a theory and there was (I think) one suspected one, based on reading Brief History of Time. Now, I know a Phd student who is cataloguing hundreds if not thousands of the things.

                Equally, exponential inflation models were pretty avant garde.
                It's a shame that your interest in science didn't lead you to understand it more.
                Everything in science is a theory.
                Induction allows us to make generalisations but we can never be sure they won't be falsified.
                The fact that we can't unify small and large-scale physics tells us that some or all parts of our fundamental understanding are incomplete or wrong.
                Hard Brexit now!
                #prayfornodeal

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
                  When I was in the 6th Form a teacher cut out a piece from New Scientist and put it on the notice board, which announced that a charge of 1/3ev had been measured - the first experimental confirmation of the existence of quarks.
                  FTFY. But I'm surprised, I thought a naked quark charge was not possible to detect.
                  Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
                    What was the question, out of interest?

                    Seems more likely that a number theory assignment would use Fermat's Little Theorem. Are you sure that wasn't what he was talking about?
                    I'll ask him when I get home - but it was definitely
                    x^n + y^n = z^n has no integer solutions for n>2.

                    What was really important about the proof of Fermat's last theorem, is that it was proved as part of wider conjecture (Taniyama–Shimura-Weil conjecture) that had been widely assumed to be true, and unified two disparate parts of mathematics - number theory (elliptic curves) and algebraic geometry (modular forms).

                    The theorem fell out of that proof as a corollary.
                    Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

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