F­ermat`s Last Theorem from the eye of physicist

Today, every student can make a discovery by looking at a school globe or a wooden cube! This theorem was formulated by Pierre de Fermat in the margins of the book Arithmetic by Diophantus of Alexandria in the III century A.D. Thanks to Diophantus, we treat algebraic equations as it is convenient and familiar to us. French mathematician, Pierre de Fermat, wrote in the margin of the book “I have discovered a truly marvellous proof of this, which this margin is too narrow to contain“. Subsequently, descendants denigrated the French mathematician, and believed that he made a lightweight judgment, simply put, bragging and lying. The basis for such an assertion was a hundred-plus-page proof by Andrew Wiles, prepared by him in 1994. Let’s continue the experiment with the cascade of boxes. If a triple of natural numbers a, b, c exists, then in this case we can map every point of space from this interval between the middle ball and the big ball into a small ball. And since this whole construction is symmetric, this means that every sphere that surrounds these spheres can be mapped into many other spheres. The Fermat’s Last theorem states that this is impossible. Why? Because that’s the physics of our Universe! (c)SCM, Marat Avdyev 2023
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