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Faltings Cracks 60-Year-Old Maths Puzzle
19 Mar
Summary
- German mathematician Gerd Faltings won the prestigious Abel Prize.
- He solved a 60-year-old conjecture using number and geometry links.
- Faltings' work reshaped number theory, settling major conjectures.

German mathematician Gerd Faltings, aged 71, has been honored with this year's Abel Prize, often likened to a Nobel Prize for mathematics. He is celebrated for resolving a conjecture that had remained unsolved for six decades.
Dr. Faltings' significant contribution involved establishing connections between the fields of numbers and geometry. This innovative approach allowed him to prove that a specific class of Diophantine equations possesses a finite number of solutions.
The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters announced Faltings as the recipient on Thursday morning. The prize committee chairman described him as a "towering figure in number theory," whose ideas have profoundly reshaped the discipline.




