ELLIPTIC CURVE
In mathematics, an 'elliptic curve' is a smooth, projective algebraic curve of genus one, on which there is a specified point ''O''. An elliptic curve is in fact an abelian variety—that is, it has a multiplication defined algebraically with respect to which it is an abelian group—and ''O'' serves as the identity element. Often the curve itself, without ''O'' specified, is called an elliptic curve.
Any elliptic curve can be written as a plane algebraic curve defined by an equation of the form
:
which is non-singular; that is, its graph has no cusps or self-intersections. (When the characteristic of the coefficient field is equal to 2 or 3, the above equation is not quite general enough to comprise all non-singular cubic curves; see below for a more precise definition.) The point ''O'' is actually the "point at infinity" in the projective plane.
If ''y''2 = ''P''(''x''), where ''P'' is any polynomial of degree three in ''x'' with no repeated roots, then we obtain a nonsingular plane curve of genus one, which is thus also an elliptic curve. If ''P'' has degree four this equation again describes a plane curve of genus one; however, it is singular, and therefore is only birationally equivalent to an elliptic curve. Even more generally, an algebraic curve of genus one, for example from the intersection of two three-dimensional quadric surfaces, is called an elliptic curve.
Using the theory of elliptic functions, it can be shown that elliptic curves defined over the complex numbers correspond to embeddings of the torus into the complex projective plane. The torus is also an abelian group, and in fact this correspondence is also a group isomorphism.
Elliptic curves are especially important in number theory, and constitute a major area of current research; for example, they were used in the proof, by Andrew Wiles (assisted by Richard Taylor), of Fermat's last theorem. They also find applications in cryptography (see the article elliptic curve cryptography) and integer factorization.
An elliptic curve is '''not''' the same as an ellipse: see elliptic integral for the origin of the term.
Although the formal definition of an elliptic curve is fairly technical and requires some background in algebraic geometry, it is possible to describe some features of elliptic curves over the real numbers using only high school algebra and geometry.
In this context, an elliptic curve is a plane curve defined by an equation of the form
:
where ''a'' and ''b'' are real numbers. This type of equation is called a Weierstrass equation.
For example, the following graphs illustrate the elliptic curves given by the equations and
The definition of elliptic curve also requires that the curve be non-singular. Geometrically, this means that the graph has no cusps or self-intersections. Algebraically, this involves calculating the discriminant
:
The curve is non-singular if the discriminant is not equal to zero. (Although the factor −16 seems irrelevant here, it turns out to be convenient in more advanced study of elliptic curves.)
The graph of a non-singular curve has ''two'' components if its discriminant is positive, and ''one'' component if it is negative. For example, in the graphs shown above, the discriminant in the first case is 64, and in the second case is −368.
By adding a "point at infinity", we obtain the projective version of this curve. If ''P'' and ''Q'' are two points on the curve, then we can uniquely describe a third point which is the intersection of the curve with the line through ''P'' and ''Q''. If the line is tangent to the curve at a point, then that point is counted twice; and if the line is parallel to the ''y''-axis, we define the third point as the point "at infinity". Exactly one of these conditions then holds for any pair of points on an elliptic curve.
It is then possible to introduce a group operation, "+", on the curve with the following properties: we consider the point at infinity to be 0, the identity of the group; and if a straight line intersects the curve at the points ''P'', ''Q'' and ''R'', then we require that ''P'' + ''Q'' + ''R'' = 0 in the group. One can check that this turns the curve into an abelian group, and thus into an abelian variety. It can be shown that the set of ''K''-rational points (including the point at infinity) forms a subgroup of this group. If the curve is denoted by ''E'', then this subgroup is often written as ''E''(''K'').
The above group can be described algebraically as well as geometrically. Given the curve ''y''2 = ''x''3 − ''px'' − ''q'' over the field ''K'' (whose characteristic we assume to be neither 2 nor 3), and points ''P'' = (''x''''P'', ''y''''P'') and ''Q'' = (''x''''Q'', ''y''''Q'') on the curve, assume first that ''x''''P'' ≠''x''''Q''. Let ''s'' = (''y''''P'' − ''y''''Q'')/(''x''''P'' − ''x''''Q''); since ''K'' is a field, ''s'' is well-defined. Then we can define ''R'' = ''P'' + ''Q'' = (''x''''R'', ''- y''''R'') by
:
:
If ''x''''P'' = ''x''''Q'', then there are two options: if ''y''''P'' = −''y''''Q'', then the sum is defined as 0; thus, the inverse of each point on the curve is found by reflecting it across the ''x''-axis. If ''y''''P'' = ''y''''Q'' ≠0, then ''R'' = ''P'' + ''P'' = 2''P'' = (''x''''R'', ''- y''''R'') is given by
:
:
:
If ''y''''P'' = ''y''''Q'' = 0, then ''P'' + ''P'' = 0.
The formulation of elliptic curves as the embedding of a torus in the complex projective plane follows naturally from a curious property of Weierstrass's elliptic functions. These functions and their first derivative are related by the formula
:
Here, and are constants; is the Weierstrass elliptic function and its derivative. It should be clear that this relation is in the form of an elliptic curve (over the complex numbers). The Weierstrass functions are doubly-periodic; that is, they are periodic with respect to a lattice Λ; in essence, the Weierstrass functions are naturally defined on a torus . This torus may be embedded in the complex projective plane by means of the map
:
This map is a group isomorphism, carrying the natural group structure of the torus into the projective plane. It is also an isomorphism of Riemann surfaces, and so topologically, a given elliptic curve looks like a torus. If the lattice Λ is related to a lattice ''c''Λ by multiplication by a non-zero complex number ''c'', then the corresponding curves are isomorphic. Isomorphism classes of elliptic curves are specified by the j-invariant.
The isomorphism classes can be understood in a simpler way as well. The constants and , called the modular invariants, are uniquely determined by the lattice, that is, by the structure of the torus. However, the complex numbers are the splitting field for polynomials, and so the elliptic curve may be written as
:
One finds that
:
and
:
so that the modular discriminant is
:
Here, λ is sometimes called the modular lambda function.
Note that the uniformization theorem states that every compact Riemann surface of genus one can be represented as a torus.
Elliptic curves can be defined over any field ''K''; the formal definition of an elliptic curve is a non-singular projective algebraic curve over ''K'' with genus 1 with a given point defined over ''K''.
If the characteristic of ''K'' is neither 2 nor 3, then every elliptic curve over ''K'' can be written in the form
:
where ''p'' and ''q'' are elements of ''K'' such that the right hand side polynomial ''x''3 − ''px'' − ''q'' does not have any double roots. If the characteristic is 2 or 3, then more terms need to be kept: in characteristic 3, the most general equation is of the form
:
for arbitrary constants such that the polynomial on the right-hand side has distinct roots (the notation is chosen for historical reasons). In characteristic 2, even this much is not possible, and the most general equation is
:
provided that the variety it defines is nonsingular. If characteristic were not an obstruction, each equation would reduce to the previous ones by a suitable change of variables.
One typically takes the curve to be the set of all points (''x'',''y'') which satisfy the above equation and such that both ''x'' and ''y'' are elements of the algebraic closure of ''K''. Points of the curve whose coordinates both belong to ''K'' are called '''K''-rational points'.
Let ''E'' and ''D'' be elliptic curves over a field ''k''. An ''isogeny'' between ''E'' and ''D'' is a finite morphism of varieties that preserves basepoints. (see also Abelian varieties up to isogeny).
The two curves are called ''isogenous'' if there is an isogeny between them. This is an equivalence relation, symmetry being due to the existence of the dual isogeny. Every isogeny is an algebraic homomorphism and thus induces homomorphisms of the groups of the elliptic curves for -valued points.
The Mordell-Weil theorem states that if the underlying field ''K'' is the field of rational numbers (or more generally a number field), then the group of ''K''-rational points is finitely generated. This means that the group can be expressed as the direct sum of a free abelian group and a finite torsion subgroup. While it is relatively easy to determine the torsion subgroup of ''E''(''K''), no general algorithm is known to compute the rank of the free subgroup. A formula for this rank is given by the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture.
The recent proof of Fermat's last theorem proceeded by proving a special case of the deep Taniyama-Shimura conjecture relating elliptic curves over the rationals to modular forms; this conjecture has since been completely proved.
While the precise number of rational points of an elliptic curve ''E'' over a finite field 'F'''p'' is in general rather difficult to compute, Hasse's theorem on elliptic curves tells us
:
This fact can be understood and proven with the
help of some general theory; see local zeta function, Étale cohomology. The number of points on a specific curve can be computed with Schoof's algorithm.
For further developments see arithmetic of abelian varieties.
Elliptic curves over finite fields are used in some cryptographic applications as well as for integer factorization. Typically, the general idea in these applications is that a known algorithm which makes use of certain finite groups is rewritten to use the groups of rational points of elliptic curves. For more see also:
★ Elliptic curve cryptography
★ Elliptic Curve DSA
★ Lenstra elliptic curve factorization
★ Elliptic curve primality proving
Serge Lang, in the introduction to the book cited below, stated that "It is possible to write endlessly on elliptic curves. (This is not a threat.)" The following short list is thus at best a guide to the vast expository literature available on the theoretical, algorithmic, and cryptographic aspects of elliptic curves.
★ Elliptic Curves in Cryptography, I. Blake, , , Cambridge Univ. Press, 2000, ISBN 0-521-65374-6
★ Prime Numbers: A Computational Perspective, Richard Crandall, , , Springer, 2001, ISBN 0-387-94777-9
★ Algorithms for Modular Elliptic Curves, John Cremona, , , Cambridge Univ. Press, 1992,
★ Elliptic Curves, Dale Husemöller, , , Springer, 2004,
★ A Classical Introduction to Modern Number Theory, Kenneth Ireland, , , Springer, 1990,
★ Elliptic Curves, Anthony Knapp, , , Math Notes 40, Princeton Univ. Press, 1992,
★ Introduction to Elliptic Curves and Modular Forms, Neal Koblitz, , , Springer, 1984,
★ A Course in Number Theory and Cryptography, Neal Koblitz, , , Springer, 1994, ISBN 0-387-94293-9
★ Elliptic Curves: Diophantine Analysis, Serge Lang, , , Springer, 1978,
★ The Arithmetic of Elliptic Curves, Joseph H. Silverman, , , Springer, 1986,
★ Advanced Topics in the Arithmetic of Elliptic Curves, Joseph H. Silverman, , , Springer, 1994,
★ Rational Points on Elliptic Curves, Joseph H. Silverman, , , Springer, 1992,
★ Elliptic Curves: Number Theory and Cryptography, Lawrence Washington, , , Chapman & Hall/CRC, 2003, ISBN 1-58488-365-0
★ The Mathematical Atlas: 14H52 Elliptic Curves
★
Any elliptic curve can be written as a plane algebraic curve defined by an equation of the form
:
which is non-singular; that is, its graph has no cusps or self-intersections. (When the characteristic of the coefficient field is equal to 2 or 3, the above equation is not quite general enough to comprise all non-singular cubic curves; see below for a more precise definition.) The point ''O'' is actually the "point at infinity" in the projective plane.
If ''y''2 = ''P''(''x''), where ''P'' is any polynomial of degree three in ''x'' with no repeated roots, then we obtain a nonsingular plane curve of genus one, which is thus also an elliptic curve. If ''P'' has degree four this equation again describes a plane curve of genus one; however, it is singular, and therefore is only birationally equivalent to an elliptic curve. Even more generally, an algebraic curve of genus one, for example from the intersection of two three-dimensional quadric surfaces, is called an elliptic curve.
Using the theory of elliptic functions, it can be shown that elliptic curves defined over the complex numbers correspond to embeddings of the torus into the complex projective plane. The torus is also an abelian group, and in fact this correspondence is also a group isomorphism.
Elliptic curves are especially important in number theory, and constitute a major area of current research; for example, they were used in the proof, by Andrew Wiles (assisted by Richard Taylor), of Fermat's last theorem. They also find applications in cryptography (see the article elliptic curve cryptography) and integer factorization.
An elliptic curve is '''not''' the same as an ellipse: see elliptic integral for the origin of the term.
Elliptic curves over the real numbers
Although the formal definition of an elliptic curve is fairly technical and requires some background in algebraic geometry, it is possible to describe some features of elliptic curves over the real numbers using only high school algebra and geometry.
In this context, an elliptic curve is a plane curve defined by an equation of the form
:
where ''a'' and ''b'' are real numbers. This type of equation is called a Weierstrass equation.
For example, the following graphs illustrate the elliptic curves given by the equations and
The definition of elliptic curve also requires that the curve be non-singular. Geometrically, this means that the graph has no cusps or self-intersections. Algebraically, this involves calculating the discriminant
:
The curve is non-singular if the discriminant is not equal to zero. (Although the factor −16 seems irrelevant here, it turns out to be convenient in more advanced study of elliptic curves.)
The graph of a non-singular curve has ''two'' components if its discriminant is positive, and ''one'' component if it is negative. For example, in the graphs shown above, the discriminant in the first case is 64, and in the second case is −368.
The group law
By adding a "point at infinity", we obtain the projective version of this curve. If ''P'' and ''Q'' are two points on the curve, then we can uniquely describe a third point which is the intersection of the curve with the line through ''P'' and ''Q''. If the line is tangent to the curve at a point, then that point is counted twice; and if the line is parallel to the ''y''-axis, we define the third point as the point "at infinity". Exactly one of these conditions then holds for any pair of points on an elliptic curve.
It is then possible to introduce a group operation, "+", on the curve with the following properties: we consider the point at infinity to be 0, the identity of the group; and if a straight line intersects the curve at the points ''P'', ''Q'' and ''R'', then we require that ''P'' + ''Q'' + ''R'' = 0 in the group. One can check that this turns the curve into an abelian group, and thus into an abelian variety. It can be shown that the set of ''K''-rational points (including the point at infinity) forms a subgroup of this group. If the curve is denoted by ''E'', then this subgroup is often written as ''E''(''K'').
The above group can be described algebraically as well as geometrically. Given the curve ''y''2 = ''x''3 − ''px'' − ''q'' over the field ''K'' (whose characteristic we assume to be neither 2 nor 3), and points ''P'' = (''x''''P'', ''y''''P'') and ''Q'' = (''x''''Q'', ''y''''Q'') on the curve, assume first that ''x''''P'' ≠''x''''Q''. Let ''s'' = (''y''''P'' − ''y''''Q'')/(''x''''P'' − ''x''''Q''); since ''K'' is a field, ''s'' is well-defined. Then we can define ''R'' = ''P'' + ''Q'' = (''x''''R'', ''- y''''R'') by
:
:
If ''x''''P'' = ''x''''Q'', then there are two options: if ''y''''P'' = −''y''''Q'', then the sum is defined as 0; thus, the inverse of each point on the curve is found by reflecting it across the ''x''-axis. If ''y''''P'' = ''y''''Q'' ≠0, then ''R'' = ''P'' + ''P'' = 2''P'' = (''x''''R'', ''- y''''R'') is given by
:
:
:
If ''y''''P'' = ''y''''Q'' = 0, then ''P'' + ''P'' = 0.
Elliptic curves over the complex numbers
The formulation of elliptic curves as the embedding of a torus in the complex projective plane follows naturally from a curious property of Weierstrass's elliptic functions. These functions and their first derivative are related by the formula
:
Here, and are constants; is the Weierstrass elliptic function and its derivative. It should be clear that this relation is in the form of an elliptic curve (over the complex numbers). The Weierstrass functions are doubly-periodic; that is, they are periodic with respect to a lattice Λ; in essence, the Weierstrass functions are naturally defined on a torus . This torus may be embedded in the complex projective plane by means of the map
:
This map is a group isomorphism, carrying the natural group structure of the torus into the projective plane. It is also an isomorphism of Riemann surfaces, and so topologically, a given elliptic curve looks like a torus. If the lattice Λ is related to a lattice ''c''Λ by multiplication by a non-zero complex number ''c'', then the corresponding curves are isomorphic. Isomorphism classes of elliptic curves are specified by the j-invariant.
The isomorphism classes can be understood in a simpler way as well. The constants and , called the modular invariants, are uniquely determined by the lattice, that is, by the structure of the torus. However, the complex numbers are the splitting field for polynomials, and so the elliptic curve may be written as
:
One finds that
:
and
:
so that the modular discriminant is
:
Here, λ is sometimes called the modular lambda function.
Note that the uniformization theorem states that every compact Riemann surface of genus one can be represented as a torus.
Elliptic curves over a general field
Elliptic curves can be defined over any field ''K''; the formal definition of an elliptic curve is a non-singular projective algebraic curve over ''K'' with genus 1 with a given point defined over ''K''.
If the characteristic of ''K'' is neither 2 nor 3, then every elliptic curve over ''K'' can be written in the form
:
where ''p'' and ''q'' are elements of ''K'' such that the right hand side polynomial ''x''3 − ''px'' − ''q'' does not have any double roots. If the characteristic is 2 or 3, then more terms need to be kept: in characteristic 3, the most general equation is of the form
:
for arbitrary constants such that the polynomial on the right-hand side has distinct roots (the notation is chosen for historical reasons). In characteristic 2, even this much is not possible, and the most general equation is
:
provided that the variety it defines is nonsingular. If characteristic were not an obstruction, each equation would reduce to the previous ones by a suitable change of variables.
One typically takes the curve to be the set of all points (''x'',''y'') which satisfy the above equation and such that both ''x'' and ''y'' are elements of the algebraic closure of ''K''. Points of the curve whose coordinates both belong to ''K'' are called '''K''-rational points'.
Isogeny
Let ''E'' and ''D'' be elliptic curves over a field ''k''. An ''isogeny'' between ''E'' and ''D'' is a finite morphism of varieties that preserves basepoints. (see also Abelian varieties up to isogeny).
The two curves are called ''isogenous'' if there is an isogeny between them. This is an equivalence relation, symmetry being due to the existence of the dual isogeny. Every isogeny is an algebraic homomorphism and thus induces homomorphisms of the groups of the elliptic curves for -valued points.
Connections to number theory
The Mordell-Weil theorem states that if the underlying field ''K'' is the field of rational numbers (or more generally a number field), then the group of ''K''-rational points is finitely generated. This means that the group can be expressed as the direct sum of a free abelian group and a finite torsion subgroup. While it is relatively easy to determine the torsion subgroup of ''E''(''K''), no general algorithm is known to compute the rank of the free subgroup. A formula for this rank is given by the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture.
The recent proof of Fermat's last theorem proceeded by proving a special case of the deep Taniyama-Shimura conjecture relating elliptic curves over the rationals to modular forms; this conjecture has since been completely proved.
While the precise number of rational points of an elliptic curve ''E'' over a finite field 'F'''p'' is in general rather difficult to compute, Hasse's theorem on elliptic curves tells us
:
This fact can be understood and proven with the
help of some general theory; see local zeta function, Étale cohomology. The number of points on a specific curve can be computed with Schoof's algorithm.
For further developments see arithmetic of abelian varieties.
Algorithms that use elliptic curves
Elliptic curves over finite fields are used in some cryptographic applications as well as for integer factorization. Typically, the general idea in these applications is that a known algorithm which makes use of certain finite groups is rewritten to use the groups of rational points of elliptic curves. For more see also:
★ Elliptic curve cryptography
★ Elliptic Curve DSA
★ Lenstra elliptic curve factorization
★ Elliptic curve primality proving
References
Serge Lang, in the introduction to the book cited below, stated that "It is possible to write endlessly on elliptic curves. (This is not a threat.)" The following short list is thus at best a guide to the vast expository literature available on the theoretical, algorithmic, and cryptographic aspects of elliptic curves.
★ Elliptic Curves in Cryptography, I. Blake, , , Cambridge Univ. Press, 2000, ISBN 0-521-65374-6
★ Prime Numbers: A Computational Perspective, Richard Crandall, , , Springer, 2001, ISBN 0-387-94777-9
★ Algorithms for Modular Elliptic Curves, John Cremona, , , Cambridge Univ. Press, 1992,
★ Elliptic Curves, Dale Husemöller, , , Springer, 2004,
★ A Classical Introduction to Modern Number Theory, Kenneth Ireland, , , Springer, 1990,
★ Elliptic Curves, Anthony Knapp, , , Math Notes 40, Princeton Univ. Press, 1992,
★ Introduction to Elliptic Curves and Modular Forms, Neal Koblitz, , , Springer, 1984,
★ A Course in Number Theory and Cryptography, Neal Koblitz, , , Springer, 1994, ISBN 0-387-94293-9
★ Elliptic Curves: Diophantine Analysis, Serge Lang, , , Springer, 1978,
★ The Arithmetic of Elliptic Curves, Joseph H. Silverman, , , Springer, 1986,
★ Advanced Topics in the Arithmetic of Elliptic Curves, Joseph H. Silverman, , , Springer, 1994,
★ Rational Points on Elliptic Curves, Joseph H. Silverman, , , Springer, 1992,
★ Elliptic Curves: Number Theory and Cryptography, Lawrence Washington, , , Chapman & Hall/CRC, 2003, ISBN 1-58488-365-0
External links
★ The Mathematical Atlas: 14H52 Elliptic Curves
★
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