Saturday 23 April 2016

ANOTHER PROBLEM SOLVER EMERGES

Everyone is a problem solver; some people have not just realised it. When you look carefully around you, you will find out that there is a problem you have been created to solve. Just like this professor, you can be the next person to solve a world problem.

A lot of Mathematics Professors have come and gone since this mystery, but Andrew Wiles broke the record. You too can! The reward of being a problem solver can be monetary but far more that, there is a level of joy people derive when they bring solutions to others needs.

Do not be left out, read the article below and imagine the difference you will make when you tap into the seed of greatness in you and create  change.


Professor solves 300-year-old math mystery, wins $700,000

  




Andrew Wiles (University of Oxford)



An Oxford professor is now $700,000 richer for solving a 300-year-old math mystery, the Telegraph reports. In 1994, Andrew Wiles, 62, cracked Fermat's Last Theorem, which was put forth by 17th-century mathematician Pierre de Fermat.
Wiles will be traveling to Oslo, Norway, in May to collect the 2016 Abel Prize (including the honors and the cash) for his proof, which the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters calls an "epochal moment" in the mathematics field.
"Wiles is one of very few mathematicians—if not the only one—whose proof of a theorem has made international headline news," the academy said in an announcement of his numerical feat.
The puzzle had haunted Wiles for years. Times Higher Education notes he had been intrigued by it since he was a boy, leading to seven years of intense study at Princeton before he stumbled upon his eureka moment.
He found the proof he was looking for using a method involving three disparate fields that mean nothing to the layman but everything to braniacs trying to solve this problem: modular forms, elliptical curves, and Galois representations.
"Fermat's equation was my passion from an early age, and solving it gave me an overwhelming sense of fulfillment," he tells the Telegraph. (For the record, the theorem states that there are no whole number solutions to the equation xn + yn= zn when n is greater than 2.) Wiles says he hopes his work will serve as inspiration for up-and-coming numbers aces "to take up mathematics and to work on the many challenges of this beautiful and fascinating subject." (Prime numbers just got a little weirder.)
This article originally appeared on Newser: Prof Solves 300-Year-Old Math Mystery, Wins $700K

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