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To every elliptic curve one can attach a certain series that we call .  To define  recall that we have previously discussed points on an elliptic curve over such fields as  or .  However, the notion of points on an elliptic curve is not limited to these fields.  One can consider the number of points on an elliptic curve over 
 for any prime  (that does not divide the discriminant of the curve).  We denote the number of points on  over 
 as 
.  We can now define a sequence of numbers  such that 
.  There is also a slightly more complicated way to define  for any number.  These  can be found in PARI by using the ellan command.
Once we have these  we can now define :
It is a theorem of Breuil, Conrad, Diamond, Taylor, and Wiles that  can be extended to an analytic function on all of .  As with any other analytic function we can ask what the order of vanishing of  is at any point.  It turns out that the order of vanishing of  at  is a rather interesting story.  In fact the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture is that the order of vanishing at  is exactly equal to the rank of the elliptic curve.
In other words, for any elliptic curve, , 
at .  Where here  and  is such that 
.
The BSD conjecture is fairly amazing in that it asserts the equality of two seemingly very different quantities.
So far, the BSD conjecture has been proved when ord
 by Gross, Kolyvagin, Zagier, et al.  However, for ord  it is still an open problem, and as was mentioned above, it has yet to be proven that any elliptic curve has rank 4.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 Next: How I learned to
 Up: A quick introduction to
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Ariel Shwayder
2002-12-11