Solving Fermat-type equations via modular ℚ-curves over polyquadratic fields
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3647065
DOI10.1515/CRELLE.2009.064zbMath1250.11033arXivmath/0611663OpenAlexW2105483796MaRDI QIDQ3647065
Jorge Jiménez-Urroz, Luis V. Dieulefait
Publication date: 27 November 2009
Published in: Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik (Crelles Journal) (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/math/0611663
Arithmetic aspects of modular and Shimura varieties (11G18) Higher degree equations; Fermat's equation (11D41)
Related Items (12)
Generalized Fermat equations: A miscellany ⋮ ℚ-Curves, Hecke characters and some Diophantine equations ⋮ Asymptotic Fermat for signature \((4, 2, p)\) over number fields ⋮ On the equation x2 + dy6 = zp for square-free 1 ≤ d ≤ 20 ⋮ \(\mathbb{Q}\)-curves, Hecke characters, and some Diophantine equations. II ⋮ Klein forms and the generalized superelliptic equation ⋮ Modular forms with large coefficient fields via congruences ⋮ On the equations a2−2b6=cp and a2−2=cp ⋮ On the generalized Fermat equation $a^2+3b^6=c^n$ ⋮ On a class of Lebesgue-Ljunggren-Nagell type equations ⋮ On the sum of fourth powers in arithmetic progression ⋮ The Fermat-type equations $x^5 + y^5 = 2z^p$ or $3z^p$ solved through $\mathbb {Q}$-curves
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- On the modular representations of degree two of \(\text{Gal}({\overline {\mathbb Q}}/{\mathbb Q})\)
- Twists of modular forms and endomorphisms of abelian varieties
- On the modularity of \(\mathbb Q\)-curves
- Modular elliptic curves and Fermat's Last Theorem
- Ring-theoretic properties of certain Hecke algebras
- On the modularity of supersingular elliptic curves over certain totally real number fields
- On the modularity of elliptic curves over 𝐐: Wild 3-adic exercises
- Q-Curves and Abelian Varieties of GL2 -Type
- On the Error Term in Duke's Estimate for the Average Special Value of L-Functions
- Corrigendum to "Galois representations attached to Q-curves and the generalized Fermat equation A 4 + B 2 = C p"
- Solving diophantine equations x4+ y4= q zp
- Galois representations attached to Q-curves and the generalized Fermat equation A 4 + B 2 = C p
- On the Equations zm = F (x, y ) and Axp + Byq = Czr
- On the arithmetic of abelian varieties
- Embedding problems over abelian groups and an application to elliptic curves
This page was built for publication: Solving Fermat-type equations via modular ℚ-curves over polyquadratic fields