Counting elliptic curves with prescribed torsion (Q2398718)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Counting elliptic curves with prescribed torsion
scientific article

    Statements

    Counting elliptic curves with prescribed torsion (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    21 August 2017
    0 references
    Let \(E/\mathbb{Q}\) be an elliptic curve with Weierstrass (minimal) equation \(y^2=x^3+Ax+B\) and let \(E(\mathbb{Q})\simeq\mathbb{Z}^r\oplus E(\mathbb{Q})_{\mathrm{tors}}\) be its subgroup of rational points. A theorem of Mazur shows that \(E(\mathbb{Q})_{\mathrm{tors}}\) has to be one of the following groups: \[ \mathbb{Z}/N\;\text{for}\;1\leqslant N\leqslant 10\;\text{or}\;N=12 \] \[ \mathbb{Z}/2\times\mathbb{Z}/N\;\text{for}\;N=2,4,6,8\,. \] Let \(G\) be any of the groups above and let \(N_G(X)\) be the number of isomorphism classes of elliptic curves \(E\) with (naive) height \(\text{ht}(E):=\max\{|A|^3,B^2\,\}\leqslant X\) and such that \(E(\mathbb{Q})_{\mathrm{tors}}\simeq G\). The paper shows that \(N_G(X)\) is approximately \(X^{1/d(G)}\) (for some explicit \(d(G)\)) and, in particular, that \[ \lim_{X\rightarrow +\infty} \frac{\log N_G(X)}{\log X} =\frac{1}{d(G)}\,. \] The authors introduce families of elliptic curves \(\mathcal{E}_t: y^2=x^3+f(t)x+g(t)\) for \(f(t),g(t)\in\mathbb{Q}(t)\) satisfying a few hypotheses on their degrees and provide lower and upper bounds of type \(c_1X^{\alpha(f,g)}\leqslant N(X) \leqslant c_2X^{\alpha(f,g)}\) for the number \(N(X)\) of isomorphism classes of elliptic curves isomorphic to \(\mathcal{E}_t\) for some specialization \(t\in \mathbb{Q}\). Then, for the groups \(G\) such that \(2G\neq 0\), they show families \(\mathcal{E}_{G,t}: y^2=x^3+f_G(t)x+g_G(t)\) encoding all (isomorphism classes of) elliptic curves \(E\) such that \(E(\mathbb{Q})_{\mathrm{tors}}\supseteq G\). For those families \(\alpha(f_G,g_G)=\frac{1}{d(G)}\) and this, together with the bounds above, leads to the main theorem. The proof for the remaining \(G\) comes from more direct calculations (using the presence of rational 2-torsion points).
    0 references
    torsion subgroup
    0 references
    Mazur's theorem
    0 references
    height
    0 references
    elliptic curves
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references