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"Extended" Fermat's last theorem.
Just to satisfy my own curiousity:
FLT states that there are no n\in{\mathbb N} such that
x^n+y^n=z^n
whenever n\geq 3 and x,y,z\in{\mathbb N}.
However, what would happen when I allow n to be non-integer as well? Are there solutions if n\in{\mathbb Q}^+ or n\in{\mathbb R}^+ ? Will one be able to find a set x,y,z\in{\mathbb N} and an n\geq 3 such that this "extended" FLT holds?
Just to satisfy my own curiousity:
FLT states that there are no n\in{\mathbb N} such that
x^n+y^n=z^n
whenever n\geq 3 and x,y,z\in{\mathbb N}.
However, what would happen when I allow n to be non-integer as well? Are there solutions if n\in{\mathbb Q}^+ or n\in{\mathbb R}^+ ? Will one be able to find a set x,y,z\in{\mathbb N} and an n\geq 3 such that this "extended" FLT holds?
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