This question stems from the paper "Computably categorical fields via Fermat's Last Theorem," by Russell Miller and Hans Schoutens (available online at http://qcpages.qc.cuny.edu/~rmiller/Fermat.pdf). In this paper, they construct a field $F$ by starting with the field $\mathbb{Q}(x_0, x_1, x_2, . . .)$ of infinite transcendence degree over $\mathbb{Q}$, and then adjoining elements $y_i$ such that $(x_i, y_i)$ is a solution to the polynomial $X_i^{p_i}+Y_i^{p_i}=1$ for some odd prime $p_i$ (see paragraph 2, page 3); they then show that the resulting field has interesting computability-theoretic properties. In particular, they show that this field is computably categorical (i.e., any two computable presentations are computably isomorphic). I have only started reading this paper, but I have two questions, a simple one and a probably not-so-simple one:
Question 1: It is unclear to me exactly how much of Fermat's Last Theorem (FLT) is required for this paper, but certainly we need at least the existence of infinitely many primes $p$ such that $X^p+Y^p=1$ has no nontrivial rational solutions. How difficult is this fact to prove? (And, historically, when was it first known?)
Question 2: How much of FLT is actually required for the paper? I would be very interested if full FLT was required; although, as the authors point out, there has been at least one previous attempt made to prove the same result that apparently did not rely on FLT.
Thank you very much in advance,
Noah S