The most famous and intriguing problems in mathematics tend to be the ones that share two features. First they have been around for a really long time - which means that many people have tried to solve them and failed - and second they must be easy to explain. Curiously, they often lead to controversy - have they been solved or not? I want to describe two mathematical chestnuts that, on balance, mathematicians agree are solved. But...
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Pierre de Fermat |
The first problem is known as Fermat's Last Theorem. Pierre de Fermat was a brilliant self-taught seventeenth century mathematician who solved a variety of deep number theory problems in his spare time for his own amusement the way you or I might attack an 'extreme' Sudoku. The most famous of these is his so-called Last Theorem. He explained his ideas and mathematics by writing them up in notebooks. After his death these notebooks proved a treasure trove to mathematicians. In one of them he wrote a theorem in the margin and commented: "I have a truly remarkable proof of this theorem, but it is too long to fit here". Mathematicians worked on it flat out for the next 358 years. The consensus is that, despite being a great genius, he actually didn't have a correct proof. (But maybe that's not true after all, because Lisbeth Salander solves it in her head - while being shot at - in The Girl who Played with Fire, so maybe Fermat managed it too!)
Here is the problem:There are many triples of positive whole numbers x,y,z so that the equation x2 + y2 = z2 is true. For example x=3, y=4, z=5. Or x=5, y=12, z=13. Fermat’s last theorem says that this cannot be done for any higher order equation. That means x3 + y3 = z3 has no solutions using positive whole numbers. Neither does the equation where we use the power 4 or 5 or... In general xn + yn = zn has no solution in whole numbers for ANY whole number n greater than 2.
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Andrew Wiles |

Here's the problem:
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Kenneth Appel & Wolfganh Haken |
If you want to color a map in such a way that no two countries with a common border have the same color, then you only need four different colors. The problem was posed in 1852. Ten minutes playing around will convince you that this is so reasonable, it's obviously true. It took mathematicians until 1976 to come up with a proof, and even then...
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Four colors is enough for the US |
Of course the problem has no practical interest. Every real map is colored to distinguish the countries using plenty of colors. After all there is no shortage of them! And no one has ever come across a map requiring more than four colors anyway. In fact proving that five colors is enough is easy - usually included in undergraduate mathematics graph theory courses. But four?
Well, the proof was curious. The authors reduced the problem to a large number of different cases which required checking. A very large number. A number so large that it could only be checked by computer. They wrote the program, ran it, and the results were that all the cases checked correctly. So what's the problem? Well, a recent article in the Chronicle of Higher education suggests that only 20% of scientific programs are completely correct. So if you're checking millions of cases...well.
The proof has been replicated in other ways since then. But do we know if the original proof was correct? Maybe. Maybe not.
Michael - Thursday.