Proof.
[Sketch of Proof]
First one proves that if

is a prime of good reduction
for

, then the natural reduction map
![$ \pi: E(K)[n] \to
\tilde{E}(\O_K/\mathfrak{p})$](img2058.png)
is injective. The argument that

is
injective uses ``formal groups'', whose development is outside the
scope of this course. Next, as above,
![$ \sigma(Q)-Q \in E(K)[n]$](img2059.png)
for
all

. Let

be the
inertia group at

. Then by definition of interia group,

acts trivially on

. Thus for each

we have
Since

is injective, it follows that

for

,
i.e., that

is fixed under all

. This means that the subfield
of

generated by the coordinates of

is unramified at

.
Repeating this argument with all choices of

implies that

is unramified at

.
Proof.
First suppose all elements of
![$ E[n]$](img1813.png)
have coordinates in

. Then
the homomorphism (
12.2.2) provides an injection of

into
By
Theorem
12.2.1, the image consists of homomorphisms whose
kernels cut out an abelian extension of

unramified outside

and primes of bad reduction for

. Since this is a finite set of
primes, Theorem
12.1.1 implies that the homomorphisms
all factor through a finite quotient

of

.
Thus there can be only finitely many such homomorphisms, so the
image of

is finite. Thus

itself is
finite, which proves the theorem in this case.
Next suppose
is an elliptic curve over a number field, but do not make the hypothesis that the elements of
have
coordinates in
. Since the group
is finite and its
elements are defined over
, the extension
of
got by
adjoining to
all coordinates of elements of
is a finite
extension. It is also Galois, as we saw when constructing Galois
representations attached to elliptic curves. By Proposition 11.3.1,
we have an exact sequence
The kernel of the restriction map
![$ \H^1(K,E[n])\to \H^1(L,E[n])$](img2069.png)
is finite, since it is
isomorphic to the finite group cohomology group
)$](img2070.png)
. By the argument of the previous
paragraph, the image of

in
![$ \H^1(L,E[n])$](img2071.png)
under
is finite, since it is contained in the image of

.
Thus

is finite, since we just proved
the kernel of

is finite.