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Dear Prof. Jiang,
This message concerns the manuscript
The proof of Fermat's last theorem
by Shan Jiang
submitted to Proceedings of the AMS.
Unfortunately, we cannot accept it for publication. If there are
referee reports attached to this letter, you may find
them of some use in revising the article for resubmission elsewhere.
I believe your argument is incorrect. Specifically, you write
"Because then Z is any integer, that is to say for the indefinite equation X^n+Y^n = Z^n, has X, Y, Z integers solution, the same for the indefinite equation X1^n + Y1^n = B^n, has X1, Y1, B integers solution(X1, Y1 are two integers I set)."
I see no reason whatsoever why X1^n+Y1^n = B^n should have integer solutions for the value of B that came from
your previous argument.
Sincerely,
Lev A. Borisov
Editor of Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society
Dear Prof. Jiang,
This message concerns the manuscript
The proof of the Bill conjecture
by Shan Jiang
submitted to Proceedings of the AMS.
Unfortunately, we cannot accept it for publication. If there are
referee reports attached to this letter, you may find
them of some use in revising the article for resubmission elsewhere.
I don't understand the key point of your argument and I believe that your argument
is incorrect. Specifically, you write:
"Because E,D may be any value, n also may be any value, for the equation (2)
...
the equation (3) is the universal answer to indefinite equation of A^x +B^y = C^z. "
I believe that you are switching from integer solutions to rational solutions, or something
like that, for I see no reason why (3) would be the "universal answer" (whatever that means).
Sincerely,
Lev A. Borisov
Editor of Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society
这是我第一次投稿,这位专家没有接受,我认为是他没有理解到我的证明,也可能是我的英文水平不好。后来我又投了一次稿件,我换了另外一位专家。可是。。 |
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