Proving Question (1 Viewer)

hunterbear

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Prove that there are no integers a, b and c that satisfy the equation

a3+b3=7c3+3
 

hunterbear

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So... Is there any other way? I just find that modular arithmetic generally confuses me :s
 

SpiralFlex

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So... Is there any other way? I just find that modular arithmetic generally confuses me :s
Where did you get this question? I can only see anyway I select to argue this question is always through modular arithmetic (and perhaps divisibility)
 

hunterbear

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I found this in some old book for some competition at where I go tutoring.
 

braintic

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I'm just wondering:

Are you all laughing because you think the guy is serious?

Or are you laughing because you realised his name (Andrew Wiles) is the name of the person who finally proved Fermat's Last Theorem about 20 years ago.
 

RealiseNothing

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I'm just wondering:

Are you all laughing because you think the guy is serious?

Or are you laughing because you realised his name (Andrew Wiles) is the name of the person who finally proved Fermat's Last Theorem about 20 years ago.
the latter, hence why the guy above said "7 years later"
 

HSC2014

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Mhm :) Andrew Wiles went into solitude for 6 years to work on the conjecture before releasing a proof that had an error in it, requiring an additional year to correct. (or something like that)
 

SpiralFlex

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No. Which was why it was posted in the extracurricular topics.
 

seanieg89

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It's a shame. I think elementary number theory would be an excellent thing to teach high school students.
 

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