A little bit about myself: I'm in my senior year of high school, and I have a passion for majoring in math. Recently, I have written a paper that explores some consequences that result from FLT. My question is that I want to publish it somewhere, but I am not familiar with lists of journals. Because the results are pretty trivial, I assume it is meant for lower-end journals? It would be great if you can suggest me some. Thank you for reading, here is the link to the paper: https://www.scribd.com/document/422435256/On-the-Rationality-and-Transcendentality-of-Solutions-to-the-Equation-x-n-y-n-z-n
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Hummmm..... What is FLT? – David Aug 21 '19 at 14:15
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@David I guess it's Fermat's last theorem, – saulspatz Aug 21 '19 at 14:18
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@David Fermat's Last Theorem. The link tells you that. – poetasis Aug 21 '19 at 14:18
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FLT is Fermat’s last theorem – J. W. Tanner Aug 21 '19 at 14:18
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Nice job, but since the article is already freely available, isn't it already "published"? Can it be publisehd again at a journal? I would definitely cite you if I needed! – David Aug 21 '19 at 14:21
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If you just want it published, why not go with arXiv.org? – G. Chiusole Aug 21 '19 at 14:40
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I want it to be gone under peer-review to see how it goes. About arXiv, I really want to but unfortunately I don't have anyone to endorse me – Binh Ho Aug 21 '19 at 15:36
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First, congratulations. I took a quick look at your paper. I think your characterization as "pretty trivial" is a little too modest, but not much. So you will probably not be able to publish in a widely read high quality journal.
I suggest you try some of the links at this search for publish high school math research
Ethan Bolker
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