Andrew Wiles
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- Andrew Wiles should not be confused with André Weil, another famous mathematician who, like Wiles, did important work in the area of elliptic curves.
Career highlight
- Main article: May 1995 (Annals of Mathematics)
In the 1950s and 1960s a connection between elliptic curves and modular forms was conjectured by the Japanese mathematician Shimura based on some ideas that Taniyama posed. In the West it became well known through a paper André Weil wrote, with Weil giving conceptual evidence for it, and was often called Shimura-Taniyama-Weil. It states that every rational elliptic curve is modular. The full conjecture was proven by Christophe Breuil, Brian Conrad, Fred Diamond, and Richard Taylor in 1998 using many of the methods that Andrew Wiles used in his 1995 published papers.
If p is an odd prime and a, b, and c are positive integers such that ap+bp=cp, then a corresponding equation y2 = x(x - ap)(x + bp) defines a hypothetical elliptic curve, called the Frey curve, which must exist if there is a counterexample to Fermat's Last Theorem. Following on work by Yves Hellegouarch who first considered this curve, Frey pointed out that if such a curve existed it had peculiar properties, and suggested in particular that it might not be modular.
A connection between Taniyama-Shimura and Fermat was made by Ken Ribet, following on work by Barry Mazur and Jean-Pierre Serre, with his proof of the epsilon conjecture showing that Frey's idea that the Frey curve could not be modular was correct. In particular, this showed that a proof of the semistable case of the Taniyama-Shimura conjecture would imply Fermat's Last Theorem. Wiles made the decision that he would work exclusively on the Taniyama-Shimura conjecture shortly after he had learned that Ribet had proven the epsilon conjecture in 1986. While many mathematicians thought the Taniyama-Shimura conjecture was inaccessible, Andrew Wiles had the audacity to dream that the conjecture could be proven with twentieth-century techniques.
When Wiles first began studying Taniyama-Shimura, he would casually mention Fermat to people, but he found that doing so created too much interest. He wanted to be able to work on his problem in a concentrated fashion, and if people were expressing too much interest then he would not have been able to focus on his problem. Consequently he let only Nicholas Katz know what he was working on. Wiles did not do any research that was not related to Taniyama-Shimura, though of course he did continue in his teaching duties at Princeton university; continuing to attend seminars, lecture undergraduates, and give tutorials.
Cultural references
Wiles's work on Fermat's Last Theorem was commemorated (in fictional form) in the musical Fermat's Last Tango, written by Joanne Sydney Lessner and Joshua Rosenblum.[link]Wiles and his work on Fermat's last theorem were mentioned in the episode "Facets".
Awards
Wiles has been awarded several major prizes in mathematics:
- Schock Prize (1995)
- Cole Prize (1996) [link]
- National Academy of Sciences Award in Mathematics from the Americian Mathematicial Society (1996) [link]
- Ostrowski Prize (1996) [link][link]
- Royal Medal (1996)
- Wolf Prize (1996)
- Wolfskehl Prize (1997) [link]
- a silver plate from the International Mathematical Union (1998) recognizing his achievements, in place of the Fields Medal, which is restricted to those under 40 (Wiles was born in 1953 and proved the theorem in 1994). [link]
- King Faisal Prize (1998) [link]
- Clay Research Award (1999)
- Named Knight of the British Empire (2000).
- Shaw Prize (2005) [link]
See also
References
- [Andrew Wiles' bibliography]
- John J. O'Connor and Edmund F. Robertson. [] at the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive.
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