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The Fermat Diary

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The Fermat Diary

As a person who seriously studied abstract mathematics and one whose father was a number theorist before entering nuclear engineering, I have always had an interest in the difficult mathematical problems that today's mathematicians are tackling. It seems to me to be an achievement I never expected in my life time to see the four color problem and Fermat's last theorem both solved. My father died in 1971 and missed out on both. But I am sure he would have been particularly fascinated and interested in what Wiles and others did.

Given my interest and background, I still have to say that the subject of elliptic curves and modular forms is so abstract and specialized that I can't understand the language. The best I can make out of it is that there is this conjecture called the Taniyama-Shimura conjecture that is fairly old,dating back to the 1950s. Its proof implies Fermat's theorem even when specialized to a subset of the modular forms in the conjecture. Yet I know little about elliptic functions and almost nothing about modular forms.



In this little book Mozzochi, who understands what was going on, takes us through the events from the announcement in Cambridge by Wiles that he has attained results on Taniyama-Shimura that is enough to prove Fermat's Last Theorem as a corollary to the correction of the proof and finally a conference that studies and explains the results.



The book is just three chapters. Each represents a significant date. In Chapter 1 "February 10, 1994", Mozzochi discusses the dramatic presentation by Wiles in Cambridge and the events that followed and led to a discovery of a flaw in part of the proof. He also explains the results that led up to Wiles very secretive years of work on the problem.



Wiles is a bright mathematician who had an interest in mathematics at an early age but never seriously attempted to work on Fermat's problem when he embarked on his career as a mathematician. But his work was in the area of modular forms and elliptic functions and when Frey in 1985 proved that the Shimura - Taniyama conjecture implies Fermat's Last Theorem, Wiles knew he was at the right place at the right time to tackle this famous problem.



Wiles' introduction to his paper that appeared in the Annals of Mathemaics is contained in the book as Appendix A. The mathematical development that he describes is not comprehensible to anyone not specializing in this theory but it does show the logical thinking involved and the progression of results.



What is unique about this book is that Mozzochi was at many of the presentations that he describes in the book and he recorded them from an historical perspective through pictures, tape recordings, notes and email. Through email he presents some of the observations of other famous mathematicians who worked with Wiles to help correct the flaw in the proof. This includes Faltings and Taylor.



There are many nice pictures throughout the book showing the places and people involved in the story including a beautiful picture of Fine Hall in the fall of 1995(the Mathematics Department in Princeton where Wiles had his office and held his famous graduate lectures).



February 10, 1994 was the date that Wiles began a graduate class in Taplin Auditorium in Fine Hall where he would present the details of his results to the mathematics community and continue his quest to resolve the gap in the proof. It was at this time that his former student Richard Taylor joined him on his sabbatical from Cambridge in the effort. However, their work was kept quiet and they didn't even acknowledge to the public that Taylor came for that purpose, though many of the mathematicians there suspected it.



Chapter 2 titled "September 19, 1994" goes through the work that was done to close the gap. Wiles original approach was not working and he eventually had to abandon it but through the probing of Taylor he discovered why it was futile and how an earlier line of reasoning could work. This was like a revelation and Mozzochi expresses it best by quoting Wiles.



September 19, 1994 was the date of the revelation. The chapter explains the breakthrough that led to the final paper and the separate article with Taylor that patched the proof. In this chapter Mozzochi gives a nice description of Wiles as a mathematician and a truly "nice" person. He points out that although he was bright, Wiles was not considered the top mathematician in his field. That distinction belonged to Gerd Faltings a brilliant German who was a colleague of Wiles at Princeton. Faltings won the prestigious Fields medal and had revolutionized number theory. Some think that Wiles secretiveness was out of fear that Faltings would solve the problem first. However on April 21st 1995 Wiles delivered a lecture at Yale University where he detailed the proof. Faltings played an important role as the key referee who after reviewing the proof announced its correctness and in July 1995 presented a four page sketch of the proof in the Notices of the American Mathematical Society.



The final chapter "August 9, 1995" covers the conference that began on August 9th at Boston University. This instructional conference for graduate students in mathematics concentrated on Wiles' work and earlier related works.



There are as many pages of pictures as there are text. Mozzochi also presents a list of the famous mathematicians involved in the story as well as a listing of all the photographs. Appendix D with Ram Murty's review of the papers from the instructional conference at Boston University presents some detailed mathematics.



Buy this book if you are interested in Wiles' work from a historical perspective. It gives you a view of the man and the personal drama of trying to correct a proof that had been announced to the world and received tremendous media attention.



However, if you are looking for a deep understanding of the results look for a technical mathematics text. Any serious study of the mathematics would be difficult. As is pointed out by Mozzochi even at a one of Wiles' presentation for so-called laypersons, the room was filled with famous mathematicians including several Field's medalists.



The book achieves its goal. If you want a more detailed account, sketching the mathematical ideas for the layperson, the book by Singh is probably more appropriate.



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