Welcome to roadstat.com on July 6 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Faltings' theorem

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  (Redirected from Mordell's conjecture)
Jump to: navigation, search

In number theory, the Mordell conjecture stated a basic result regarding the rational number solutions to Diophantine equations. It was eventually proved by Gerd Faltings in 1983, about six decades after the conjecture was made; it is now known as Faltings' theorem.

Contents

[edit] Background

Suppose we are given an algebraic curve C defined over the rational numbers (that is, C is defined by polynomials with rational coefficients), and suppose further that C is non-singular (in this case that condition isn't a real restriction). How many rational points (points with rational coefficients) are on C?

The answer depends upon the genus g of the curve. As is common in number theory, there are three cases: g = 0, g = 1, and g greater than 1. The g = 0 case has been understood for a long time; Mordell solved the g = 1 case, and conjectured the result for the g greater than 1 case.

[edit] Statement of results

The complete result is this:

Let C be a non-singular algebraic curve over the rationals of genus g. Then the number of rational points on C may be determined as follows:

[edit] Proofs

Faltings' original proof used the known reduction to a case of the Tate conjecture, and a number of tools from algebraic geometry, including the theory of Néron models. Different proofs have been found by Vojta and Bombieri, applying rather different methods.

[edit] Consequences

Faltings's 1983 paper had as consequences a number of statements which had previously been conjectured:

  • The Mordell conjecture that a curve of genus greater than 1 over a number field has only finitely many rational points;
  • The Shafarevich conjecture that there are only finitely many isomorphism classes of curves of genus greater than zero over a fixed number field with good reduction outside a given finite set of places;
  • The Isogeny theorem that abelian varieties with isomorphic Tate modules are isogenous.

The reduction of the Mordell conjecture to the Shafarevich conjecture was due to A. N. Parshin in 1970.[1]

[edit] Generalizations

Because of the Mordell-Weil theorem, Faltings' theorem can be reformulated as a statement about the intersection of a curve C with a finitely generated subgroup Γ of an abelian variety A. Generalizing by replacing C by an arbitrary subvariety of A and Γ by an arbitrary finite-rank subgroup of A leads to the Mordell-Lang conjecture, which has been proved.

Another higher-dimensional generalization of Faltings' theorem is the Bombieri-Lang conjecture that if X is a pseudo-canonical variety (i.e., variety of general type) over a number field k, then X(k) is not Zariski dense in X. Even more general conjectures have been put forth by Paul Vojta.

[edit] References

  • Cornell, Gary; Silverman, Joseph H. (1986). Arithmetic geometry. New York: Springer. ISBN 0387963111.  → Contains an English translation of Faltings (1983)
  • Faltings, Gerd (1983). "Endlichkeitssätze für abelsche Varietäten über Zahlkörpern". Inventiones Mathematicae 73 (3): 349–366. doi:10.1007/BF01388432. 
  • Hindry, Marc; Silverman, Joseph H. (2000). Diophantine geometry. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. 201. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-98981-1.  → Gives Vojta's proof of Falting's Theorem.
  • S. Lang (1997). Survey of Diophantine geometry. Springer-Verlag. pp. 101–122. ISBN 3-540-61223-8. 
  • Bombieri, Enrico (1990). "The Mordell conjecture revisited". Ann. Scuola Norm. Sup. Pisa Cl. Sci. 17 (4): 615–640. 

[edit] Notes

Personal tools

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs