English
 
Help Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT

Released

Journal Article

Elliptische Kurven: Fortschritte und Anwendungen. (Elliptic curves: Progress and applications).

MPS-Authors
/persons/resource/persons236497

Zagier,  Don
Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, Max Planck Society;

External Resource
No external resources are shared
Fulltext (restricted access)
There are currently no full texts shared for your IP range.
Fulltext (public)
There are no public fulltexts stored in PuRe
Supplementary Material (public)
There is no public supplementary material available
Citation

Zagier, D. (1990). Elliptische Kurven: Fortschritte und Anwendungen. (Elliptic curves: Progress and applications). Jahresbericht der Deutschen Mathematiker-Vereinigung (DMV), 92(2), 58-76.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0004-3934-2
Abstract
The author reports the recent progress on the structure of the natural group consisting of the rational points of an elliptic curve y\\sp 2=x\\sp 3+ax+b, with a,b integers such that 4a\\sp 3+27b\\sp 2\\ne 0. This group was proved to be finitely generated by Mordell in 1922, and is called the Mordell-Weil group; the problem is to determine the structure of its torsion subgroup and the value of the rank r. The first problem is completely solved, due to the deep results of B. Mazur (1977) showing that there are exactly 15 possibilities for this group. Much less is known for the possible values of r; it is conjectured that it can be arbitrarily large, but up to now one has not found cases in which rgt;14. The main conjecture was formulated around 1960 by Birch and Swinnerton- Dyer; they considered the L-function attached to the elliptic curve, conjectured that L is defined and holomorphic for s=1, and considered the first term C\\sb 0(s-1)\\spr' of its Taylor series; then their main conjecture is that r=r', and C\\sb 0 is equal to C(r)\\vert \\textRussianSh\\vert, where C(r) is explicitly known is a function of r, and Russian Sh is the Tate-Shafarevich group associated to the curve. \\par Progress on this conjecture started in 1977 and is due to the works of Coates-Wiles (1977), Greenberg (1983), Gross-Zagier (1983), Rubin (1987) and Kolyvagin (1987). It only concerns modular elliptic curves, i.e. those which can be parametrized by modular functions relative to a subgroup Γ\\sb 0(N) of SL(2,\\bbfZ), the group of matrices \\pmatrix Aamp;B \\\\ Camp;D \\endpmatrix with C\\equiv 0 (mod N). For these curves, L is an entire function and satisfies a functional equation L(2- s)=Λ(s)L(z), where Λ(s) is explicitly known (and depends on N); a conjecture of Taniyama and Weil is that all elliptic curves are modular. At present, the most far-reaching results for these curves are the fact that if r'=1, then r≥ 1 (Gross-Zagier), and if r'=0 then r=0 and the Tate-Shafarevich group Russian Sh is finite (Kolyvagin); but the first example of a curve with Russian Sh finite had been given slightly earlier by Rubin. \\par A remarkable fact is that from theorems on elliptic curves many results may be deduced for problems in number theory which seem remote from the Mordell-Weil group. For instance Satgé has proved in 1986 that each integer\\quad n such that n/2 is prime and n\\equiv 4 (mod 9) is the sum x\\sp 3+y\\sp 3 with x, y rational. Another application is an effective lower bound for the number h(d) of classes in the imaginary quadratic field \\bbfQ(\\sqrtd) for dlt;0. But the most surprising is the connection with the Fermat problem, discovered by Frey: if the Taniyama-Weil conjecture is true, then there are no solutions of A\\sp n+B\\sp n=C\\sp n in integers \\ne 0 for ngt;2; this is due to the fact that the assumption of existence of that solution would show that the elliptic curve y\\sp 2=x(x-A\\sp n)(x-C\\sp n), considered by Hellegouarch, would not be modular, as was proved by K. Ribet.