Mordell–Weil group explained
defined over a number field
. It is an arithmetic invariant of the Abelian variety. It is simply the group of
-points of
, so
is the Mordell–Weil group
[1] [2] pg 207. The main structure theorem about this group is the
Mordell–Weil theorem which shows this group is in fact a finitely-generated abelian group. Moreover, there are many conjectures related to this group, such as the
Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture which relates the rank of
to the zero of the associated
L-function at a special point.
Examples
Constructing explicit examples of the Mordell–Weil group of an abelian variety is a non-trivial process which is not always guaranteed to be successful, so we instead specialize to the case of a specific elliptic curve
. Let
be defined by the
Weierstrass equation
over the rational numbers. It has discriminant
(and this polynomial can be used to define a global model
). It can be found
[3]
through the following procedure. First, we find some obvious torsion points by plugging in some numbers, which are
In addition, after trying some smaller pairs of integers, we find
is a point which is not obviously torsion. One useful result for finding the torsion part of
is that the torsion of prime to
, for
having good reduction to
, denoted
injects into
, so
E(Q)tors,p\hookrightarrowE(Fp)
We check at two primes
and calculate the cardinality of the sets
\begin{align}
\#E(F5)&=8=23\\
\#E(F7)&=12=22 ⋅ 3\end{align}
note that because both primes
only contain a factor of
, we have found all the torsion points. In addition, we know the point
has infinite order because otherwise there would be a prime factor shared by both cardinalities, so the rank is at least
. Now, computing the rank is a more arduous process consisting of calculating the group
where
r=\operatorname{rank}(E(Q))
using some long exact sequences from homological algebra and the Kummer map.
Theorems concerning special cases
There are many theorems in the literature about the structure of the Mordell–Weil groups of abelian varieties of specific dimension, over specific fields, or having some other special property.
Abelian varieties over the rational function field k(t)
and an abelian variety
defined over a fixed field
, we denote the
the twist of
(the pullback of
to the function field
) by a 1-cocyle
b\inZ1(\operatorname{Gal}(k(C)/k(t)),Aut(A))
for
Galois cohomology of the field extension associated to the covering map
. Note
G=\operatorname{Gal}(k(C)/k(t)\congZ/2
which follows from the map being hyperelliptic. More explicitly, this 1-cocyle is given as a map of groups
G x G\to\operatorname{Aut}(A)
which using universal properties is the same as giving two maps
, hence we can write it as a map
where
is the inclusion map and
is sent to negative
. This can be used to define the twisted abelian variety
defined over
using general theory of algebraic geometry
[4] pg 5. In particular, from universal properties of this construction,
is an abelian variety over
which is isomorphic to
after base-change to
.
Theorem
For the setup given above,[5] there is an isomorphism of abelian groups
Ab(k(t))\cong\operatorname{Hom}k(J(C),A) ⊕ A2(k)
where
is the Jacobian of the curve
, and
is the 2-torsion subgroup of
.
See also
References
- Tate. John T.. 1974-09-01. The arithmetic of elliptic curves. Inventiones Mathematicae. en. 23. 3. 179–206. 10.1007/BF01389745. 1974InMat..23..179T . 120008651 . 1432-1297.
- Book: Silverman, Joseph H., 1955–. The arithmetic of elliptic curves. 2009. Springer-Verlag. 978-0-387-09494-6. 2nd. New York. 405546184.
- Web site: Booher. Jeremy. The Mordell–Weil theorem for elliptic curves. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20210127183440/https://www.math.arizona.edu/~jeremybooher/expos/mordellweil.pdf. 27 Jan 2021.
- Book: Weil, André, 1906-1998.. Adeles and algebraic groups. 1982. Birkhäuser. 978-1-4684-9156-2. Boston. 1.3. 681203844.
- Hazama. Fumio. 1992. The Mordell–Weil group of certain abelian varieties defined over the rational function field. Tohoku Mathematical Journal. EN. 44. 3. 335–344. 10.2748/tmj/1178227300. 0040-8735. free.
Further examples and cases