It used to be said that the Riemann Conjecture; which considers the distribution of primes; was not yet answered. Maybe it was claimed that if he returned in 500 years his first question would be "Has the Riemann Conjecture yet been solved?"
But some wise head will have a more modern answer.
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Fermat's Last Theorem
take the square root of both sides.
To solve would be to rewrite the equation in terms of the variable in the equation. For example, solve: 3x-2=7. You would solve for the variable x; e.g. 3x=9 and x=3. To evaluate, you would be given an equation with a variable or variables. You would need to be given a value for the variable(s) to substitute into the equation. For example evaluate the equation for x=3; equation is x2+1. Substitute 3 in for x; or 32+1=10. To simplify, reduce the equation to its simplest form. This will involve operations such as: factoring, adding, subtracting, dividing, canceling terms, and so forth. For example simplify the equation: 3x3/9x2. The 3/9 is simplified to 1/3 and x3/x2 is simplified to x. So the original equation simplified is: 1/3 times x or (1/3)x or x/3.Which is the right answer for most of you who does not know.
You need an equation or an inequality to solve. Unfortunately, limitations of the browser used by Answers.com means that we cannot see most symbols. It is therefore impossible to give a proper answer to your question. Please resubmit your question spelling out the symbols as "plus", "minus", "times", "equals", "squared".Furthermore, even if it were an equation, since there are two unknowns, it might not have a solution.
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