Szpiro's conjecture
In number theory, Szpiro's conjecture concerns a relationship between the conductor and the discriminant of an elliptic curve. In a general form, it is equivalent to the well-known abc conjecture. It is named for Lucien Szpiro who formulated it in the 1980s.
The conjecture states that: given ε > 0, there exists a constant C(ε) such that for any elliptic curve E defined over Q with minimal discriminant Δ and conductor f, we have
The modified Szpiro conjecture states that: given ε > 0, there exists a constant C(ε) such that for any elliptic curve E defined over Q with invariants c4, c6 and conductor f (see Tate's algorithm#Notation), we have
References
- Lang, S. (1997), Survey of Diophantine geometry, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, p. 51, ISBN 3-540-61223-8, Zbl 0869.11051
- Szpiro, L. (1981), "Seminaire sur les pinceaux des courbes de genre au moins deux", Astérisque 86 (3): 44–78, Zbl 0463.00009
- Szpiro, L. (1987), "Présentation de la théorie d'Arakelov", Contemp. Math. 67: 279–293, doi:10.1090/conm/067/902599, Zbl 0634.14012
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