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Teaching Mathematics, History, and the History of Mathematics

Teaching Mathematics, History, and the History of Mathematics. Dedicated to the memory of Louise Karlquist (who knew all the QA numbers by heart). And thanks to. The Ohio State University Libraries particularly Danny Dotson Mary Scott. Fermat’s Last Theorem. 1993.

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Teaching Mathematics, History, and the History of Mathematics

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  1. Teaching Mathematics, History, and the History of Mathematics

  2. Dedicated to the memory of Louise Karlquist(who knew all the QA numbers by heart)

  3. And thanks to • The Ohio State University Libraries particularly • Danny Dotson • Mary Scott

  4. Fermat’s Last Theorem

  5. 1993 • Andrew Wiles lectures in Cambridge • “Modular forms, elliptic curves, and Galois representations” • Concluded with Fermat’s last theorem • Xn + Yn = Zn is impossible in positive whole numbers if n > 2 • Flurry of email • Front page New York Times

  6. Found a gap in the proof • Proof withdrawn in December 1993 • Wiles student Richard Taylor contributed • Proof complete by October 1994 • Published April 1995, Annals of Mathematics

  7. Greek Texts of Euclid • J.L. Heiberg – 1883 – 1916 • Sir Thomas L. Heath, Dover • Stamatis, 1974 (in library) • New (cheap) reprint with new translation by Richard Fitzpatrick

  8. OSU’s Euclid, 1570 • The elements of Geometrie of the most auncient Philosopher Euclid of Megara. Faithfully (now first) translated into the Englishe toung by H. Billingsley, Citizen of London. Whereunto are annexed certaine Scholies, Annotations, and Inuentions, of the best Mathematicians both of time past, and in this our age.With a very fruitful Paeface made by M.I. Dee.

  9. Al-Tusi

  10. Plimpton 322

  11. Pythagorean Triples in P-322 • 32 + 42 = 52 • 52 + 122 = 132 • 1192 + 1202 = 1692 • 652 + 722 = 972 • 5412 + 5462 = 7692 • 127092 + 135002 = 185412

  12. Plimpton 322 • Otto Neugebauer: “The Exact Sciences in Antiquity” • R.C. Buck: “Sherlock Holmes in Babylon” • Eleanor Robson: Words and Pictures, New Light on Plimpton 322

  13. Plimpton 322 Bill Casselman on Plimpton 322

  14. Pythagorean Triples • X2 + Y2 = Z2 • X = m2 – n2 • Y = 2mn • Z = m2 + n2

  15. Diophantus of Alexandria 200-284 • Links to the MacTutor history of math site at St. Andrews, Scotland

  16. Bachet’s Diophantus Cover Page

  17. Pierre de Fermat 1601 -1665

  18. Fermat’s Marginal Note

  19. Fermat in the margin • Cubem autem in duos cubos, • aut quadratoquadratum in duos quadratoquadratos, • et generaliter nullum in infinitum ultra quadratum potestatem • in duos eiusdem nominis fas est dividere: • cuius rei demonstrationem mirabilem sane detexi. • Hanc marginis exiguitas no caparet.

  20. Fermat’s Last Theorem • NOVA page from PBS • MacTutor Page • Sophie Germain • Kummer and algebraic number theory • Andrew Wiles, 1993

  21. X4 + Y4≠ Z4 • Fermat really proved this case • The “method of infinite descent”

  22. Leonhard Euler 1707-1783

  23. X3 + Y3≠ Z3 • Euler’s contribution 1770 • Small gap fixed by Gauss

  24. Sophie Germain 1776-1831 • Pen-name letters to Gauss • Sophie Germain primes • p and 2p+ 1 both prime • 3 (and 7); 5 (and 11); 11(and 23) • Case I • Xp + Yp≠ Zp if p does not go into X,Y,Z

  25. Gabriel Lame 1795-1870 • Cyclotomic integers • ζ = cos (2π/p) + I sin(2π/p) • Xp + Yp = (X+Y)(X + ζ Y)…(X+ ζp-1Y) • Arithmetic in the ring Z[ζ] • Unique factorization into primes?? • Nope, too bad.

  26. Ernst Eduard Kummer 1810-1893 • Ideals and ideal numbers • Unique factorization into ideal factors • “class number” measures failure of prime factorization of numbers • Regular Primes • Kummer: criterion for regular primes, FLT for regular primes • 3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,29,31, (not 37), 41, 43,53, 59, 61, (not 67), 71, 73, 79, . . .

  27. So – FLT motivated a lot of algebraic number theory

  28. A Century of Computation • Wolfskehl prize • Flurry of wrong proofs • Regular primes not so hard • Irregular primes tough but possible • Exponent by exponent • Try out new computers! • Dead end?

  29. What next? • “Elliptic Curves” • Arose from integrals trying to measure the length of an ellipse • Not an ellipse! Cubic • Group Structure • Really hot stuff starting in the 50s • Main line algebraic number theory • Andrew Wiles – dissertation at Cambridge

  30. Taniyama – Shimura – Weil • Technical conjecture describing elliptic curves • Frey curve 1984 • TSW implies Fermat • Once again, FLT inspired main line math • Andrew Wiles started working (secretly) on TSW • Seven years in the attic

  31. Andrew Wiles in Cambridge

  32. Back to 1993 • Proof withdrawn in December 1993 • Wiles student Richard Taylor contributed • Proof complete by October 1994 • Published April 1995, Annals of Mathematics • Full force of Taniyama-Shimura-Weil now proved

  33. Maybe a Moral? • Fermat’s Last Theorem easily understood and looks like just a puzzle • Motivated a great deal of mathematics • Rings of Algebraic Integers • Applications of Elliptic Curves • Even more Galois Theory • Mathematics swings from very concrete to the very abstract and back again.

  34. What about Math 504? • Required by State of Ohio for a secondary teaching license • Strongly recommended by the College of Education for admission to the MSAT program • Audience is mostly math majors who aspire to high school teaching • Varying math skills, writing skills, history skills, geography skills, . . . . . . . .

  35. What to emphasize?? • History vs. Heritage? • Grattan-Guinness • Mathematics as a human endeavor? • Historical Approach? • Capstone for a Math major? • Using History to teach Math?

  36. Third Writing Course • Babcock Committee 1988/McHale Report 2006 • Book Review • Biography • Long Paper • Oral Presentation But only ten weeks . . .

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