Mathematician Gerd Faltings has been awarded the 2026 Abel Prize, often called the Nobel of mathematics, for his 1983 proof of the Mordell conjecture. The proof, proposed in 1922, resolved a 60-year mystery about solutions to certain equations. Faltings also received the Fields Medal in 1986 for the same achievement.
Gerd Faltings, based at the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in Germany, proved the Mordell conjecture in 1983. This longstanding problem, posed by Louis Mordell in 1922, concerns Diophantine equations and whether they have finitely many rational solutions when plotted as surfaces with more than one hole, like those beyond a donut shape in complex numbers. His work bridged geometry and arithmetic, establishing arithmetic geometry as a key field in modern mathematics. The proof spanned just 18 pages and surprised peers for its ingenuity. Akshay Venkatesh at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton described it as “very short, it’s like a miracle,” noting how it “intricately skips between different techniques and different intuitions.” He added, “One of the impressive things about his argument is that it covers so much, and the pieces have to fit together.” Faltings expressed humility upon hearing of the award, saying he felt “honoured” but emphasized its limits: “I solved [the Mordell conjecture], but in the end it doesn’t allow us to cure cancer or Alzheimer’s, it’s just extending our knowledge of things.” He attributed his approach to embracing uncertainty: “Sometimes I get ahead of people who try to prove everything right away, but sometimes I also go astray.” Faltings' tools influenced p-adic Hodge theory, Andrew Wiles’ proof of Fermat’s Last Theorem, and Shinichi Mochizuki’s work on the abc conjecture. He prioritizes enjoyment in research: “My idea has been, I shouldn’t look at what may make me famous and rich, but I try to find things which I like.”