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Elliptic curves, modular forms, and their L-functions

✍ Scribed by Lozano-Robledo A.


Publisher
AMS
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Leaves
186
Series
Student Mathematical Library - Ias/Park City Mathematical Subseries
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Many problems in number theory have simple statements, but their solutions require a deep understanding of algebra, algebraic geometry, complex analysis, group representations, or a combination of all four. The original simply stated problem can be obscured in the depth of the theory developed to understand it. This book is an introduction to some of these problems, and an overview of the theories used nowadays to attack them, presented so that the number theory is always at the forefront of the discussion. Lozano-Robledo gives an introductory survey of elliptic curves, modular forms, and $L$-functions. His main goal is to provide the reader with the big picture of the surprising connections among these three families of mathematical objects and their meaning for number theory. As a case in point, Lozano-Robledo explains the modularity theorem and its famous consequence, Fermat's Last Theorem. He also discusses the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture and other modern conjectures. The book begins with some motivating problems and includes numerous concrete examples throughout the text, often involving actual numbers, such as 3, 4, 5, $\frac{3344161}{747348}$, and $\frac{2244035177043369699245575130906674863160948472041} {8912332268928859588025535178967163570016480830}$. The theories of elliptic curves, modular forms, and $L$-functions are too vast to be covered in a single volume, and their proofs are outside the scope of the undergraduate curriculum. However, the primary objects of study, the statements of the main theorems, and their corollaries are within the grasp of advanced undergraduates. This book concentrates on motivating the definitions, explaining the statements of the theorems and conjectures, making connections, and providing lots of examples, rather than dwelling on the hard proofs. The book succeeds if, after reading the text, students feel compelled to study elliptic curves and modular forms in all their glory.

✦ Table of Contents


Preface......Page 8
1.1. Elliptic Curves......Page 12
1.2. Modular Forms......Page 18
1.3. L-functions......Page 22
1.4. Exercises......Page 25
2.1. Why elliptic curves?......Page 28
2.2. Definition......Page 31
2.3. The group structure on E(Q)......Page 34
2.4. The torsion subgroup......Page 42
2.5. Elliptic curves over finite fields......Page 45
2.6. The rank and the free part of E(Q)......Page 52
2.7. Linear independence of rational points......Page 56
2.8. Descent and the weak Mordell-Weil theorem......Page 59
2.9. Homogeneous spaces......Page 69
2.10. Selmer and Sha......Page 76
2.11. Exercises......Page 78
3.1. Elliptic curves over C......Page 86
3.2. Functions on lattices and elliptic functions......Page 90
3.3. Elliptic curves and the upper-half plane......Page 93
3.4. The modular curve X(1)......Page 96
3.5. Congruence subgroups......Page 98
3.6. Modular curves......Page 99
3.7. Exercises......Page 102
4.1. Modular forms for the modular group......Page 106
4.2. Modular forms for congruence subgroups......Page 111
4.3. The Petersson inner product......Page 115
4.4. Hecke operators acting on cusp forms......Page 117
4.5. Exercises......Page 123
5.1. The L-function of an elliptic curve......Page 128
5.2. The Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture......Page 132
5.3. The L-function of a modular (cusp) form......Page 140
5.4. The Taniyama-Shimura-Weil conjecture......Page 141
5.5. Fermat's last theorem......Page 145
5.6. Exercises......Page 146
Appendix A. PARI/GP and SAGE......Page 150
A.1. Elliptic Curves......Page 151
A.2. Modular Forms......Page 156
A.3. L-functions......Page 158
A.4. Other SAGE commands......Page 160
Appendix B. The complex exponential function......Page 162
C.1. The projective line......Page 164
C.2. The projective plane......Page 166
C.4. Curves in the projective plane......Page 167
C.5. Singular and smooth curves......Page 169
Appendix D. The p-adic numbers......Page 172
D.1. Hensel's Lemma......Page 174
D.2. exercises......Page 175
Bibliography......Page 178
Index......Page 180


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