Supersingular elliptic curve

Supersingular elliptic curve

In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, supersingular elliptic curves form a certain class of elliptic curves over a field of characteristic p > 0. Elliptic curves over such fields which are not supersingular are called ordinary and these two classes of elliptic curves behave fundamentally differently in many aspects.

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Definition

Let K be a field with algebraic closure \overline{K} and E an elliptic curve over K. Then the \overline{K}-valued points E(\overline{K}) have the structure of an abelian group. For every n, we have a multiplication map [n]: E\to E. Its kernel is denoted by E[n]. Now assume that the characteristic of K is p > 0. Then one can show that either

 E[p^r](\overline{K}) \cong \begin{cases} 0 & \mbox{or}\\ \mathbb{Z}/p^r\mathbb{Z} \end{cases}

for r = 1, 2, 3, ... In the first case, E is called supersingular. Otherwise it is called ordinary. The term 'supersingular' does not mean, of course, that E is singular since all elliptic curves are smooth.

Equivalent conditions

There is a number of equivalent conditions to supersingularity:

  • Supersingular elliptic curves have many endomorphisms in the sense that an elliptic curve is supersingular if and only if its endomorphism algebra (over \overline{K}) is an order in a quaternion algebra. Thus, their endomorphism group has rank 4, while the endomorphism group of every other elliptic curve has only rank 1 or 2.
  • Let G be the formal group associated to E. Since K is of positive characteristic, we can define its height ht(G), which is 2 if and only if E is supersingular and else is 1.
  • We have a Frobenius morphism F: E\to E, which induces a map in cohomology
F^*: H^1(E, \mathcal{O}_E) \to H^1(E,\mathcal{O}_E).

The elliptic curve E is supersingular if and only if F * equals 0.

  • Suppose E is in Legendre form, defined by the equation y2 = x(x − 1)(x − λ). Then E is supersingular if and only if the sum
\sum_{i=0}^k {k\choose{i}}^2\lambda^i

vanishes, where k = \frac12(p-1). Using this formula, one can show that there are only finitely many supersingular elliptic curves for every K.

Examples

  • If K is a field of characteristic 2, every elliptic curve defined by an equation of the form
y2 + a3y = x3 + a4x + a6

is supersingular (see Washington2003, p. 122).

  • If K is a field of characteristic 3, every elliptic curve defined by an equation of the form
y2 = x3 + a4x + a6

is supersingular (see Washington2003, p. 122).

  • For \mathbb{F}_p with p>3 we have that the elliptic curve defined by y2 = x3 + 1 is supersingular if and only if p\equiv 2 \text{(mod 3)} and the elliptic curve defined by y2 = x3 + x is supersingular if and only if p\equiv 3 \text{(mod 4)} (see Washington2003, 4.35).
  • There are also more exotic examples: The elliptic curve given by y2 = x(x − 1)(x + 2) is nonsingular over \mathbb{F}_p for p\neq 2,3. It is supersingular for p = 23 and ordinary for every other p\leq 73 (see Hartshorne1977, 4.23.6).
  • Elkies (1987) showed that any elliptic curve defined over the rationals is supersingular for an infinite number of primes.
  • Birch & Kuyk (1975) give a table of all supersingular curves for primes up to 307. For the first few primes the supersingular elliptic curves are given as follows. The number of supersingular values of j other than 0 or 1728 is the integer part of (p−1)/12.
prime supersingular j invariants
2 0
3 0=1728
5 0
7 6=1728
11 0, 1=1728
13 5
17 0,8
19 7, 1728
23 0,19, 1728
29 0,2, 25
31 2, 4, 1728
37 8, 3±√15

References


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