Automated teller machine | Liouville's theorem | Aberdeen Proving Ground | Dugway Proving Ground | Chinese remainder theorem | Automated external defibrillator | Tony Hawk's Proving Ground | Shannon–Hartley theorem | Quillen–Suslin theorem | Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem | Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System | Hahn–Banach theorem | Fermat's Last Theorem | Denver International Airport Automated Guideway Transit System | Computer Automated Measurement and Control | Buckingham π theorem | Thue–Siegel–Roth theorem | Szemerédi's theorem | Schottky's theorem | Riemann-Roch theorem | Pythagorean theorem | Nash embedding theorem | Müntz–Szász theorem | Malgrange–Ehrenpreis theorem | Kleene fixed-point theorem | Kakutani fixed-point theorem | Good Automated Manufacturing Practice | Gauss–Bonnet theorem | Doob's martingale convergence theorem | Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions |
Prover9 is an automated theorem prover for First-order and equational logic developed by William McCune.
William McCune proved the conjecture in 1996, using the automated theorem prover EQP.