ok ok found a flaw in it....
This commit is contained in:
parent
d466bb8bdd
commit
ec7d0edb71
@ -89,10 +89,14 @@ this can be re-written as:
|
||||
|
||||
\begin{equation}
|
||||
\label{eqn:primesexpanded1}
|
||||
\prod{cbpf(a,b)}^n \big( \prod{ubpf(a)^n} + \prod{ubpf(b)^n} \big) = c^n \; .
|
||||
\prod{cbpf(a,b)}^n \big( \prod{ubpf(a)^n} + \prod{ubpf(b)^n} \big) = c^n \; ,
|
||||
\end{equation}
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
That is to say the inner bracket on the left hand side is an addition of co-prime numbers,
|
||||
\begin{equation}
|
||||
\label{eqn:primesexpanded2}
|
||||
\prod{ubpf(a)^n} \perp \prod{ubpf(b)^n} \; .
|
||||
\end{equation}
|
||||
|
||||
\section{Properties of numbers viewed as products of bags of prime factors}
|
||||
|
||||
@ -371,6 +375,43 @@ that is larger than any found in $a$ or $b$.
|
||||
If this occurs, the new larger prime will not be present in $c^n$.
|
||||
Thus for whole numbers, where $\prod bpf(c^n)$ contains multiple primes $ a^n + b^n \neq c^n \; where \; n < 2$.
|
||||
|
||||
% \subsection{Another way to look at it}
|
||||
%
|
||||
% Take the highest prime factor in the result $c^n$.
|
||||
% Try to reproduce it using integers with $a^n$ and $b^n$.
|
||||
%
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|
||||
% IS it true that if there are any common factors a^n +b^n = c^n cannot exist
|
||||
% even for n >= 2 ????
|
||||
%
|
||||
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|
||||
|
||||
\subsection{Hole in the theory..... pythagorean squares.... and bollocks}
|
||||
|
||||
Pythagorean squares all contain uncommon prime factors in their addition and create
|
||||
a large prime to the power of 2 as a result.
|
||||
Fermat's last theorem is for powers, the $n$ factor, of greater than 2.
|
||||
Consider where all the cubed prime factors in $a$ and $b$ are uncommon (the is $a$ and $b$ are co-prime).
|
||||
The result of the addition will create a number that is the product of prime
|
||||
numbers; why could some combination not produce a number with $n$ times the power of
|
||||
all its primes.
|
||||
Consider that although the numbers $a$ and $b$ are co-prime, there will
|
||||
be prime numbers `missing' from both $a$ and $b$. If both numbers
|
||||
added are odd, the prime factor 2 has to pop-up.
|
||||
If 2 is a common prime factor but 3 is not that will pop-up and so on.
|
||||
|
||||
But I am stumped here. If all the numbers in $a$ and $b$ are co-prime, i.e $a \perp b$,
|
||||
$a^n + b^n$ could, magically, produce a result where the result $n$ number of the same prime,
|
||||
or even several prime factors, but all to the power of $n$, i.e. $c^n$ where $c$
|
||||
is the prime addition of $a^n + b^n$. I just cannot see why not, so all this has proved nothing. Arrrrghhhhh.
|
||||
Probably good for the soul to look at prime numbers a-lot.....
|
||||
|
||||
Maybe you can take prime triplets say, and try to work back in some general way and show no $a^3 + b^3$ integer solution exists?
|
||||
Or a general way of showing $a^n + b^n \; where \; n > 2$ cannot produce a simple $n$ number of all prime factors shown in the result....
|
||||
That is the last thing........ that is the only way flt can have an exception, where $a \perp b$, AND
|
||||
it produces a $c^n$ where c is an integer.....
|
||||
|
||||
\section{Further work}
|
||||
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user