Bogomolov conjecture
In mathematics, the Bogomolov conjecture, named for Fedor Bogomolov, is the following statement:
Let C be an algebraic curve of genus g at least two defined over a number field K, let denote the algebraic closure of K, fix an embedding of C into its Jacobian variety J, and let denote the Néron-Tate height on J associated to an ample symmetric divisor. Then there exists an such that the set
- is finite.
Since if and only if P is a torsion point, the Bogomolov conjecture generalises the Manin-Mumford conjecture. The original Bogomolov conjecture was proved by Emmanuel Ullmo and Shou-Wu Zhang in 1998.[1] Zhang[2] proved the following generalization:
Let A be an abelian variety defined over K, and let be the Néron-Tate height on A associated to an ample symmetric divisor. A subvariety is called a torsion subvariety if it is the translate of an abelian subvariety of A by a torsion point. If X is not a torsion subvariety, then there is an such that the set
- is not Zariski dense in X.
References
- ^ Ullmo, E. (1998), "Positivité et Discrétion des Points Algébriques des Courbes", Annals of Mathematics, 147 (1): 167–179, doi:10.2307/120987, Zbl 0934.14013.
- ^ Zhang, S.-W. (1998), "Equidistribution of small points on abelian varieties", Annals of Mathematics, 147 (1): 159–165, doi:10.2307/120986
- Chambert-Loir, Antoine (2013). "Diophantine geometry and analytic spaces". In Amini, Omid; Baker, Matthew; Faber, Xander (eds.). Tropical and non-Archimedean geometry. Bellairs workshop in number theory, tropical and non-Archimedean geometry, Bellairs Research Institute, Holetown, Barbados, USA, May 6–13, 2011. Contemporary Mathematics. Vol. 605. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. pp. 161–179. ISBN 978-1-4704-1021-6. Zbl 1281.14002.
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