Revision as of 21:20, 15 February 2007 by imported>David Lehavi
An elliptic curve over a field
is a one dimensional Abelian variety over
. Alternatively it is a smooth algebraic curve of genus one together with marked point - the identity element.
Curves of genus 1 as smooth plane cubics
If
is a homogenous cubic polynomial in three variables, such that at no point
all the three derivatives of f are simultaneously zero, then the Null set
is a smooth curve of genus 1. Smoothness follows from the condition on derivatives, and the genus can be computed in various ways; e.g.:
- Let
be the class of line in the Picard group
, then
is rationally equivalent to
. Then by the adjunction formula we have
.
- By the genus degree formula for plane curves we see that
![{\displaystyle genus(E)=(3-1)(3-2)/2=1}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/cca801ceb9f1bff879e74d333a9e203e7cd75b3b)
- If we choose a point
and a line
such that
, we may project
to
by sending a point
to the intersection point
(if
take the line
instead of the line
). This is a double cover of a line
with four ramification points. Hence by the Riemann-Hurwitz formula
On the other hand, if
is a smooth algebraic curve of genus 1, and
are points on
, then
we by the Riemann-Roch formula we have
Hence the complete linear system
is two dimensional, and the map from
to the dual linear system is an embedding.
The group operation on a pointed smooth plane cubic
Let
be as above, and
point on
. If
and
are two points on
we set
where if
we take the line
instead, and the intersection is to be understood with multiplicities. The addition on he elliptic curve
is defined as
. Both the commutativity and the existence of inverse follow from the definition. The proof of the associativity of this operation is more delicate.