Elliptic curves / by Anthony W. Knapp
Type de document : MonographieCollection : Mathematical notes, 40Langue : anglais.Pays: Etats Unis.Éditeur : Princeton (N.J.) : Princeton University Press, 1992Description : 1 vol. (XV-427 p.) : fig. ; 24 cmISBN: 0691085595.Bibliographie : Bibliogr. p. 409-417. Index.Sujet MSC : 14H52, Curves in algebraic geometry, Elliptic curves14-02, Research exposition (monographs, survey articles) pertaining to algebraic geometry
11-02, Research exposition (monographs, survey articles) pertaining to number theory
14G10, Arithmetic problems in algebraic geometry. Diophantine geometry, Zeta functions and related questions
11F66, Discontinuous groups and automorphic forms, Langlands L-functions; one variable Dirichlet series and functional equations
11G40, Arithmetic algebraic geometry (Diophantine geometry), L-functions of varieties over global fields; Birch-Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture
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Bibliogr. p. 409-417. Index
An elliptic curve is a particular kind of cubic equation in two variables whose projective solutions form a group. Modular forms are analytic functions in the upper half plane with certain transformation laws and growth properties. The two subjects--elliptic curves and modular forms--come together in Eichler-Shimura theory, which constructs elliptic curves out of modular forms of a special kind. The converse, that all rational elliptic curves arise this way, is called the Taniyama-Weil Conjecture and is known to imply Fermat's Last Theorem.
Elliptic curves and the modeular forms in the Eichler- Shimura theory both have associated L functions, and it is a consequence of the theory that the two kinds of L functions match. The theory covered by Anthony Knapp in this book is, therefore, a window into a broad expanse of mathematics--including class field theory, arithmetic algebraic geometry, and group representations--in which the concidence of L functions relates analysis and algebra in the most fundamental ways.
Developing, with many examples, the elementary theory of elliptic curves, the book goes on to the subject of modular forms and the first connections with elliptic curves. The last two chapters concern Eichler-Shimura theory, which establishes a much deeper relationship between the two subjects. No other book in print treats the basic theory of elliptic curves with only undergraduate mathematics, and no other explains Eichler-Shimura theory in such an accessible manner. (Source : PUP)
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