We will use, when possible, similar notation to the notation
Kolyvagin uses in his papers (e.g.,
[Kol91]). If is an abelian group let
. Kolyvagin writes
for the
-torsion subgroup,
but we will instead write
for this group.
Let be an elliptic curve over
with no constraint
on the rank of
.
Fix a modular parametrization
, where
is the conductor of
.
Let
be a quadratic imaginary field with discriminant
that satisfies the Heegner hypothesis for
, so each
prime dividing
splits in
,
and assume for simplicity that
.
Let be the ring of integer of
. Since
satisfies the
Heegner hypothesis, there is an ideal
in
such that
is cyclic of order
. For any positive integer
, let
be the ray class field of
associated to the conductor
(see Definition 3.13).
Recall that
is an abelian extension of
that is unramified outside
, whose existence is
guaranteed by class field theory.
Let
be the order in
of conductor
, and let
.
Let
Let
, and
let
be the set of primes
in
that do not divide the discriminant of
and
are such that the image of the representation
sage: E = EllipticCurve('11a') sage: E.non_surjective() [(5, '5-torsion')] sage: E = EllipticCurve('389a') sage: E.non_surjective() []
Fix a prime . We next introduce some
very useful notation. Let
denote the set of all
primes
such that
,
remains prime in
,
and for which
Fix an element
, with
, and
consider the
-power
If is any Galois extension, we have
(see Section 2.1.2 for most of this)
an exact sequence
Thus (3.4.1) with becomes
Thus to construct
, it suffices
to construct a class
that is invariant under the action of
.
We will do this by constructing an element of
and using the inclusion
Recall that
. Unfortunately,
there is no reason that the class
Let be the Hilbert class field of
.
Write
, and for each
let
where
is the ray class
field associated to
. Class field theory implies
that the natural map
Finally, let be a set of coset representatives
for
in
,
and let
Let
Before proving that we can use to define
a cohomology class in
, we state two
crucial facts about the structure of the Heegner points
.
We have now constructed an element of
that is fixed by
. Via (3.4.3)
this defines an element
.
But then using (3.4.2) we obtain our
sought after class
.
We will also be interested in the image
of
in
.
Next we consider a consequence of Proposition 3.27
when is not a torsion point. Note that
nontorsion implies
that
for all but finitely many
. Moreover,
the Gross-Zagier theorem implies that
is nontorsion if and only if
.
After Kolyvagin proved his theorem, independently
Murty-Murty, Bump-Friedberg-Hoffstein, Waldspurger,
each proved that infinitely many such quadratic imaginary
always exists so long as
has analytic rank
or
. Also, Taylor and Wiles proved
that every
over
is modular. Thus we have
the following theorem:
The author has computed the upper bound of the theorem
for all elliptic curves with conductor up to and
.
William 2007-05-25