Uniform boundedness conjecture for rational points

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Template:Short description Template:For In arithmetic geometry, the uniform boundedness conjecture for rational points asserts that for a given number field K and a positive integer g2, there exists a number N(K,g) depending only on K and g such that for any algebraic curve C defined over K having genus equal to g has at most N(K,g) K-rational points. This is a refinement of Faltings's theorem, which asserts that the set of K-rational points C(K) is necessarily finite.

Progress

The first significant progress towards the conjecture was due to Caporaso, Harris, and Mazur.[1] They proved that the conjecture holds if one assumes the Bombieri–Lang conjecture.

Mazur's conjecture B

Mazur's conjecture B is a weaker variant of the uniform boundedness conjecture that asserts that there should be a number N(K,g,r) such that for any algebraic curve C defined over K having genus g and whose Jacobian variety JC has Mordell–Weil rank over K equal to r, the number of K-rational points of C is at most N(K,g,r).

Michael Stoll proved that Mazur's conjecture B holds for hyperelliptic curves with the additional hypothesis that rg3.[2] Stoll's result was further refined by Katz, Rabinoff, and Zureick-Brown in 2015.[3] Both of these works rely on Chabauty's method.

Mazur's conjecture B was resolved by Dimitrov, Gao, and Habegger in 2021 using the earlier work of Gao and Habegger on the geometric Bogomolov conjecture instead of Chabauty's method.[4]

References

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