Pierre de Fermat , born the August 20th 1601 or in 1607, with Beaumont-with-Lomagne, close to Montauban, and dead the January 12th 1665 with Castrate, is a lawyer and mathematician French, called “the prince of the amateurs”.
Its talents of mathematician were exerted with share of its work of magistrate since the great writings which one found of him are annotations in famous texts the such Arithmetica of Diophante and part of his correspondence with the scientists of the 17th century. Its formation as a mathematician is only little known: it seems that he studied works of François Viète which he finds in the library of a friend, Etienne d' Espagnet.
His friends mathematicians (Descartes, Pascal, Roberval, Torricelli, Huygens, Mersenne), he asks to show by the proof the theories which he advances what revives the anger of the others towards him. He disputes in particular with Descartes in 1637. In 1652, the famous plague which devastates France will attack with him but it will face there and will fight it. It is only in 1670 that its theorem is exposed to the public. He comments on, by extending it, Diophante, and restores with an admirable sagacity several lost works of Apollonius ( De Locis planis , plane places, in 1636) and of Euclide. He is at the same time skilful a hellenist and deep a Jurisconsulte. This scientist hid his methods, of which some were lost with him.
It was also interested in physical sciences; one owes him in particular the Principe of Fermat in optics.
The son of Pierre de Fermat publishes, in 1670, an edition of the Arithmetica of Diophante, annotated by his father, then in 1679 a series of articles and a selection of its correspondence under the name of Varia opera mathematica .
In 1839, Guglielmo Libri tries to withdraw a certain number of manuscripts, of which a part only will be recovered.
Charles Henry and Paul Tannery publish, at the beginning of the XXe century, the Œuvres of Fermat in four volumes and a supplement (1922).
He poses at the same time as Blaise Pascal the bases of the probability theory. But its major contribution relates to the Théorie of the numbers and the equations diophantiennes. Author of several theorems or conjectures in this field, it is in the middle of the “modern theory of the numbers”.
It is very known for two “theorems”:
See also: Theorem of Euler , whose this theorem is a particular case.
There do not exist overall strictly positive entireties , , checking the equation when is an entirety such as .
This theorem was shown by the English mathematician Andrew Wiles of the University of Princeton, with the assistance of Richard Taylor. After a first presentation in June 1993, then the discovery of an error and a year of additional work, the proof was finally published in 1995 in Annals off Mathematics .
Pierre de Fermat itself annotated in margin of his specimen of the Arithmetic ones that he had discovered a really remarkable demonstration of it, but lacked place to give it to this place: " I discovered a really remarkable proof that this too narrow margin does not allow me a détailler".
The demonstration evoked by Pierre de Fermat is either distorts, or unknown to date, because the demonstration carried out by Andrew Wiles uses mathematical tools whose Mr. de Fermat could not probably have taking into account knowledge his time.
Fermat is in addition the inventor of a method of demonstration, the infinite Descente. It consists in showing that if a proposal P is true with a row R , it is it with a row Q lower than R . If one leads to a contradiction, one shows whereas P is false. This very astute method was used by Fermat to show its great theorem in the particular case N = 4 .
The way traversed by the light between two points is always that which minimizes run time. See the article Principle of Fermat
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