Biography

(1923

2005)

... I was a ten year old and one day I happened to be looking in my local public library and I found a book on maths and it told a bit about the history of this problem and I, a ten year old, could understand it. From that moment I tried to solve it myself, it was such a challenge, such a beautiful problem, this problem was Fermat's Last Theorem.

1971

1974

I have been very fortunate to have had Andrew as a student. Even as a research student he was a wonderful person to work with, he had very deep ideas then and it was always clear he was a mathematician who would do great things.

... the problem with working on Fermat is that you could spend years getting nothing so when I went to Cambridge my advisor John Coates was working on Iwasawa theory of elliptic curves and I started working with him...

1977

1980

1980

1981

1982

1985

86

... about ten years ago, G Frey suggested and K Ribet proved ( building on ideas of B Mazur and J-P Serre ) that Fermat's Last Theorem follows from the Shimura-Taniyama conjecture that every elliptic curve defined over the rational numbers is modular. Precisely, if a n + b n = c n a^{n} + b^{n} = c^{n} a n + b n = c n is a counterexample to Fermat's Last Theorem, then the elliptic curve y 2 = x ( x − a n ) ( x + b n ) y^{2} = x(x - a^{n})(x + b^{n}) y 2 = x ( x − a n ) ( x + b n ) cannot be modular, thus violating the Shimura-Taniyama conjecture. This result set the stage for Wiles's work.

... after a few years I realised that talking to people casually about Fermat was impossible because it generated too much interest and you cannot focus yourself for years unless you have this kind of undivided concentration which too many spectators would destroy...

... my wife has only known me while I have been working on Fermat. I told her a few days after I got married. I decided that I really only had time for my problem and my family and while I was concentrating very hard then I found with young children that it was the best possible way to relax. When you're talking to young children they're simply not interested in Fermat...

1988

1989

(

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1993

23

1993

... the first seven years I had worked on this problem I loved every minute of it however hard it had been. There had been setbacks, things which had seemed insurmountable but it was a kind of private and very personal battle I was engaged in and then after there was a problem with it, doing mathematics in that kind of rather overexposed way is certainly not my style, I certainly have no wish to repeat it...

19

1994

... suddenly, totally unexpectedly, I had this incredible revelation. It was the most important moment of my working life. Nothing I ever do again ... it was so indescribably beautiful, it was so simple and so elegant, and I just stared in disbelief for twenty minutes, then during the day I walked round the department. I'd keep coming back to my desk to see it was still there - it was still there.

1994

1995

1995

1996

... there's no other problem that will mean the same to me. I had this very rare privilege of being able to pursue in my adult life what had been my childhood dream. I know its a rare privilege but I know if one can do this it's more rewarding than anything one can imagine.

Wiles's work is highly original, a technical tour de force, and a monument to individual perseverance.

1998

2300

1998

10

1999

... for his role in the development of number theory.

9999

2000

2004

2002

2004

... individuals, regardless of race, nationality and religious belief, who have achieved significant breakthrough in academic and scientific research or application, and whose work has resulted in a positive and profound impact on mankind.

2005

... for his proof of Fermat's last theorem.

' father, Maurice Frank Wiles, was the Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Oxford. When Andrew was born Maurice Wiles was Chaplain at Ridley Hall, Cambridge. Andrew's mother was Patricia Mowll.Wiles' interest in Fermat's Last Theorem began at a young age. He said:-In, Wiles entered Merton College, Oxford, graduating with a B.A. in. He then entered Clare College, Cambridge to study for his doctorate. His Ph.D. supervisor at Cambridge was John Coates who said:-Wiles did not work on Fermat's Last Theorem for his doctorate. He said:-FromuntilWiles was a Junior Research fellow at Clare College, Cambridge and also a Benjamin Peirce Assistant Professor at Harvard University. Inhe was awarded his doctorate, then spent a while at the Sonderforschungsbereich Theoretische Mathematik in Bonn. He returned to the United States near the end ofto take up a post at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He was appointed a professor at Princeton the following year and, also during, he spent a while as a visiting professor in Paris.Wiles was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship which enabled him to visit the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifique in Paris and also the École Normale Supérieure in Paris during. Inthe important events which changed the direction of Wiles's research after this period are described:-In fact Wiles abandoned all his other research when he heard what had been proved and, for seven years, he concentrated solely on attempting to prove the Shimura Taniyama conjecture, knowing that a proof of Fermat's Last Theorem then followed. Wiles said:-In fact married life was a rather restricted affair for Wiles who said:-InWiles went to Oxford University where he spent two years as a Royal Society Research Professor. While in Oxford he was elected, in, a Fellow of the Royal Society . Inthe course of his research is described:-Using Mazur's deformation theory of Galois representations, recent results on Serre's conjecture on the modularity of Galois representations, and deep arithmetical properties of Hecke algebras, Wileswith one key step due jointly to Wiles and R Taylor succeeded in proving that all semistable elliptic curves defined over the rational numbers are modular. Although less than the full Shimura Taniyama conjecture, this result does imply that the elliptic curve given above is modular, thereby proving Fermat's Last Theorem.In fact the path to the proof was not as smooth as suggested by this description. InWiles told two other mathematicians that he was close to a proof of Fermat's Last Theorem. He filled what he thought were the remaining few gaps and gave a series of lectures at the Isaac Newton Institute in Cambridge ending onJune. At the end of the final lecture he announced he had a proof of Fermat's Last Theorem. When the results were written up for publication, however, a subtle error was discovered. Wiles said:-Wiles worked hard for about a year, helped in particular by R Taylor referred to above, and bySeptember, having almost given up, he decided to have one last try:-InWiles was appointed Eugene Higgins Professor of Mathematics at Princeton. His paper which proves Fermat's Last Theorem iswhich appeared in thein. FromWiles began to receive many honours for this outstanding piece of work. He was awarded the Schock Prize in Mathematics from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and the Prix Fermat from the Université Paul Sabatier. Inhe received further awards included the Wolf Prize and was elected as a foreign member to the National Academy of Sciences of the United States, receiving its mathematics prize.Wiles said:-Inhis worked is summed up:-In addition to the prizes and awards mentioned above, Wiles has continued to receive many honours for his outstanding work. In, not being eligible for the award of a Fields medal on the grounds that he was over forty years of age, the International Mathematical Union presented him with a silver plaque at the International Congress of Mathematicians held that year in Berlin. He gave an evening lecture at the Congress which attracted an audience of over. In the same year ofhe was awarded the King Faisal Prize and in the following year received the Clay Research Award. He received the award from the Clay Mathematics Institute onMayin Cambridge, Massachusetts:-In the same year he was honoured by having "asteroidWiles" named after him.In, Andrew Wiles became "Sir Andrew Wiles" when he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire by the Queen. He received the Pythagoras Award in Crotone, Italy, inand, in the following year, Wiles received the Shaw Prize. Sir Run Run Shaw, a leader of the Hong Kong media industry, established this Prize in. The first award was made into:-TheShaw Prize for Mathematical Sciences was made to Wiles:-