Anjan chuckled. The Sapta-Dwara — the “Seven Gates” — was a legend among old Indian algebraists: seven impossible equations, each hiding a door to a lost mathematical truth. Most believed it was folklore. But here, in Mapa’s own copy? His hands trembled.
He worked through the night. The equation was quintic, yes, but cleverly constructed. Using Tschirnhaus transformations (Chapter 12, §4), he depressed it. Then he spotted it — a hidden quadratic in ((x + 1/x)) disguised by the coefficients. By dawn, he had reduced it to:
Anjan stepped through.
Page 907. He’d never noticed it before — a thin, almost transparent sheet stuck between the final index and the back cover. On it, in handwriting so small it seemed whispered, was a single equation:
They found Professor Roy the next morning, asleep at his desk, head resting on page 907. The equation was solved. But in the margin, he had written a new one — unsolvable by radicals — and next to it: “The Eighth Gate. Seek page 1024.” Classical Algebra Sk Mapa Pdf 907
But Gate 7 — that was the one. Its inscription matched page 907: “The Forgotten Theorem: Every equation solvable by real radicals corresponds to a geometric construction possible with marked ruler and compass. Prove it, and the library becomes yours.”
Gate 1: “Find all rational roots of (x^4 - 10x^2 + 1 = 0)” — easy, he smiled (Chapter 4, rational root theorem). Anjan chuckled
He found himself in an infinite library, each book a living polynomial. To his left: The Cubic’s Lament , a tome that wept Cardano’s formula. To his right: The Quartic’s Mirror , showing four reflections of the same root. Ahead stood seven gates, each labeled with an unsolved classical problem.