
In number theory, the modularity theorem states that elliptic curves over the field of rational numbers are related to modular forms in a particular way. Andrew Wiles and Richard Taylor proved the modularity theorem for semistable elliptic curves, which was enough to imply Fermat's Last Theorem. Later, a series of papers by Wiles's former students Brian Conrad, Fred Diamond and Richard Taylor, culminating in a joint paper with Christophe Breuil, extended Wiles's techniques to prove the full modularity theorem in 2001. Before that, the statement was known as the Taniyama–Shimura conjecture, Taniyama–Shimura–Weil conjecture or modularity conjecture for elliptic curves
Field | Number theory |
---|---|
Conjectured by | Yutaka Taniyama Goro Shimura |
Conjectured in | 1957 |
First proof by | Christophe Breuil Brian Conrad Fred Diamond Richard Taylor |
First proof in | 2001 |
Consequences | Fermat's Last Theorem |
Statement
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The theorem states that any elliptic curve over can be obtained via a rational map with integer coefficients from the classical modular curve X0(N) for some integer N; this is a curve with integer coefficients with an explicit definition. This mapping is called a modular parametrization of level N. If N is the smallest integer for which such a parametrization can be found (which by the modularity theorem itself is now known to be a number called the conductor), then the parametrization may be defined in terms of a mapping generated by a particular kind of modular form of weight two and level N, a normalized newform with integer q-expansion, followed if need be by an isogeny.
Related statements
The modularity theorem implies a closely related analytic statement:
To each elliptic curve E over we may attach a corresponding L-series. The L-series is a Dirichlet series, commonly written
The generating function of the coefficients an is then
If we make the substitution
we see that we have written the Fourier expansion of a function f(E,τ) of the complex variable τ, so the coefficients of the q-series are also thought of as the Fourier coefficients of f. The function obtained in this way is, remarkably, a cusp form of weight two and level N and is also an eigenform (an eigenvector of all Hecke operators); this is the Hasse–Weil conjecture, which follows from the modularity theorem.
Some modular forms of weight two, in turn, correspond to holomorphic differentials for an elliptic curve. The Jacobian of the modular curve can (up to isogeny) be written as a product of irreducible Abelian varieties, corresponding to Hecke eigenforms of weight 2. The 1-dimensional factors are elliptic curves (there can also be higher-dimensional factors, so not all Hecke eigenforms correspond to rational elliptic curves). The curve obtained by finding the corresponding cusp form, and then constructing a curve from it, is isogenous to the original curve (but not, in general, isomorphic to it).
History
Yutaka Taniyama stated a preliminary (slightly incorrect) version of the conjecture at the 1955 international symposium on algebraic number theory in Tokyo and Nikkō as the twelfth of his set of 36 unsolved problems. Goro Shimura and Taniyama worked on improving its rigor until 1957. André Weil rediscovered the conjecture, and showed in 1967 that it would follow from the (conjectured) functional equations for some twisted L-series of the elliptic curve; this was the first serious evidence that the conjecture might be true. Weil also showed that the conductor of the elliptic curve should be the level of the corresponding modular form. The Taniyama–Shimura–Weil conjecture became a part of the Langlands program.
The conjecture attracted considerable interest when Gerhard Frey suggested in 1986 that it implies Fermat's Last Theorem. He did this by attempting to show that any counterexample to Fermat's Last Theorem would imply the existence of at least one non-modular elliptic curve. This argument was completed in 1987 when Jean-Pierre Serre identified a missing link (now known as the epsilon conjecture or Ribet's theorem) in Frey's original work, followed two years later by Ken Ribet's completion of a proof of the epsilon conjecture.
Even after gaining serious attention, the Taniyama–Shimura–Weil conjecture was seen by contemporary mathematicians as extraordinarily difficult to prove or perhaps even inaccessible to prove. For example, Wiles's Ph.D. supervisor John Coates states that it seemed "impossible to actually prove", and Ken Ribet considered himself "one of the vast majority of people who believed [it] was completely inaccessible".
In 1995, Andrew Wiles, with some help from Richard Taylor, proved the Taniyama–Shimura–Weil conjecture for all semistable elliptic curves. Wiles used this to prove Fermat's Last Theorem, and the full Taniyama–Shimura–Weil conjecture was finally proved by Diamond, Conrad, Diamond & Taylor; and Breuil, Conrad, Diamond & Taylor; building on Wiles's work, they incrementally chipped away at the remaining cases until the full result was proved in 1999. Once fully proven, the conjecture became known as the modularity theorem.
Several theorems in number theory similar to Fermat's Last Theorem follow from the modularity theorem. For example: no cube can be written as a sum of two coprime nth powers, n ≥ 3.
Generalizations
The modularity theorem is a special case of more general conjectures due to Robert Langlands. The Langlands program seeks to attach an automorphic form or automorphic representation (a suitable generalization of a modular form) to more general objects of arithmetic algebraic geometry, such as to every elliptic curve over a number field. Most cases of these extended conjectures have not yet been proved.
In 2013, Freitas, Le Hung, and Siksek proved that elliptic curves defined over real quadratic fields are modular.
Example
For example, the elliptic curve y2 − y = x3 − x, with discriminant (and conductor) 37, is associated to the form
For prime numbers l not equal to 37, one can verify the property about the coefficients. Thus, for l = 3, there are 6 solutions of the equation modulo 3: (0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 0), (1, 1), (2, 0), (2, 1); thus a(3) = 3 − 6 = −3.
The conjecture, going back to the 1950s, was completely proven by 1999 using the ideas of Andrew Wiles, who proved it in 1994 for a large family of elliptic curves.
There are several formulations of the conjecture. Showing that they are equivalent was a main challenge of number theory in the second half of the 20th century. The modularity of an elliptic curve E of conductor N can be expressed also by saying that there is a non-constant rational map defined over ℚ, from the modular curve X0(N) to E. In particular, the points of E can be parametrized by modular functions.
For example, a modular parametrization of the curve y2 − y = x3 − x is given by
where, as above, q = e2πiz. The functions x(z) and y(z) are modular of weight 0 and level 37; in other words they are meromorphic, defined on the upper half-plane Im(z) > 0 and satisfy
and likewise for y(z), for all integers a, b, c, d with ad − bc = 1 and 37 | c.
Another formulation depends on the comparison of Galois representations attached on the one hand to elliptic curves, and on the other hand to modular forms. The latter formulation has been used in the proof of the conjecture. Dealing with the level of the forms (and the connection to the conductor of the curve) is particularly delicate.
The most spectacular application of the conjecture is the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem (FLT). Suppose that for a prime p ≥ 5, the Fermat equation
has a solution with non-zero integers, hence a counter-example to FLT. Then as
was the first to notice, the elliptic curveof discriminant
cannot be modular. Thus, the proof of the Taniyama–Shimura–Weil conjecture for this family of elliptic curves (called Hellegouarch–Frey curves) implies FLT. The proof of the link between these two statements, based on an idea of Gerhard Frey (1985), is difficult and technical. It was established by Kenneth Ribet in 1987.
Notes
- The case n = 3 was already known by Euler.
References
- Taniyama 1956.
- Weil 1967.
- Harris, Michael (2020). "Virtues of Priority". arXiv:2003.08242 [math.HO].
- Lang, Serge (November 1995). "Some History of the Shimura-Taniyama Conjecture" (PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 42 (11): 1301–1307. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
- Frey 1986.
- Serre 1987.
- Ribet 1990.
- Singh 1997, pp. 203–205, 223, 226.
- Wiles 1995a; Wiles 1995b.
- Diamond 1996.
- Conrad, Diamond & Taylor 1999.
- Breuil et al. 2001.
- Freitas, Le Hung & Siksek 2015.
- For the calculations, see for example Zagier 1985, pp. 225–248
- LMFDB: http://www.lmfdb.org/EllipticCurve/Q/37/a/1
- OEIS: https://oeis.org/A007653
- A synthetic presentation (in French) of the main ideas can be found in this Bourbaki article of Jean-Pierre Serre. For more details see Hellegouarch 2001
- Zagier, D. (1985). "Modular points, modular curves, modular surfaces and modular forms". Arbeitstagung Bonn 1984. Lecture Notes in Mathematics. Vol. 1111. Springer. pp. 225–248. doi:10.1007/BFb0084592. ISBN 978-3-540-39298-9.
- Hellegouarch, Yves (1974). "Points d'ordre 2ph sur les courbes elliptiques" (PDF). Acta Arithmetica. 26 (3): 253–263. doi:10.4064/aa-26-3-253-263. ISSN 0065-1036. MR 0379507.
- See the survey of Ribet, K. (1990b). "From the Taniyama–Shimura conjecture to Fermat's Last Theorem". Annales de la Faculté des Sciences de Toulouse. 11: 116–139. doi:10.5802/afst.698.
Bibliography
- Breuil, Christophe; Conrad, Brian; Diamond, Fred; Taylor, Richard (2001), "On the modularity of elliptic curves over Q: wild 3-adic exercises", Journal of the American Mathematical Society, 14 (4): 843–939, doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-01-00370-8, ISSN 0894-0347, MR 1839918
- Conrad, Brian; Diamond, Fred; Taylor, Richard (1999), "Modularity of certain potentially Barsotti–Tate Galois representations", Journal of the American Mathematical Society, 12 (2): 521–567, doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-99-00287-8, ISSN 0894-0347, MR 1639612
- Cornell, Gary; Silverman, Joseph H.; Stevens, Glenn, eds. (1997), Modular forms and Fermat's last theorem, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-94609-2, MR 1638473
- Darmon, Henri (1999), "A proof of the full Shimura–Taniyama–Weil conjecture is announced" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 46 (11): 1397–1401, ISSN 0002-9920, MR 1723249Contains a gentle introduction to the theorem and an outline of the proof.
- Diamond, Fred (1996), "On deformation rings and Hecke rings", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 144 (1): 137–166, doi:10.2307/2118586, ISSN 0003-486X, JSTOR 2118586, MR 1405946
- Freitas, Nuno; Le Hung, Bao V.; Siksek, Samir (2015), "Elliptic curves over real quadratic fields are modular", Inventiones Mathematicae, 201 (1): 159–206, arXiv:1310.7088, Bibcode:2015InMat.201..159F, doi:10.1007/s00222-014-0550-z, ISSN 0020-9910, MR 3359051, S2CID 119132800
- Frey, Gerhard (1986), "Links between stable elliptic curves and certain Diophantine equations", Annales Universitatis Saraviensis. Series Mathematicae, 1 (1): iv+40, ISSN 0933-8268, MR 0853387
- Mazur, Barry (1991), "Number theory as gadfly", The American Mathematical Monthly, 98 (7): 593–610, doi:10.2307/2324924, ISSN 0002-9890, JSTOR 2324924, MR 1121312 Discusses the Taniyama–Shimura–Weil conjecture 3 years before it was proven for infinitely many cases.
- Ribet, Kenneth A. (1990), "On modular representations of Gal(Q/Q) arising from modular forms", Inventiones Mathematicae, 100 (2): 431–476, Bibcode:1990InMat.100..431R, doi:10.1007/BF01231195, hdl:10338.dmlcz/147454, ISSN 0020-9910, MR 1047143, S2CID 120614740
- Serre, Jean-Pierre (1987), "Sur les représentations modulaires de degré 2 de Gal(Q/Q)", Duke Mathematical Journal, 54 (1): 179–230, doi:10.1215/S0012-7094-87-05413-5, ISSN 0012-7094, MR 0885783
- Shimura, Goro (1989), "Yutaka Taniyama and his time. Very personal recollections", The Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society, 21 (2): 186–196, doi:10.1112/blms/21.2.186, ISSN 0024-6093, MR 0976064
- Singh, Simon (1997), Fermat's Last Theorem, Fourth Estate, ISBN 978-1-85702-521-7
- Taniyama, Yutaka (1956), "Problem 12", Sugaku (in Japanese), 7: 269 English translation in (Shimura 1989, p. 194)
- Taylor, Richard; Wiles, Andrew (1995), "Ring-theoretic properties of certain Hecke algebras", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 141 (3): 553–572, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.128.531, doi:10.2307/2118560, ISSN 0003-486X, JSTOR 2118560, MR 1333036
- Weil, André (1967), "Über die Bestimmung Dirichletscher Reihen durch Funktionalgleichungen", Mathematische Annalen, 168: 149–156, doi:10.1007/BF01361551, ISSN 0025-5831, MR 0207658, S2CID 120553723
- Wiles, Andrew (1995a), "Modular elliptic curves and Fermat's last theorem", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 141 (3): 443–551, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.169.9076, doi:10.2307/2118559, ISSN 0003-486X, JSTOR 2118559, MR 1333035
- Wiles, Andrew (1995b), "Modular forms, elliptic curves, and Fermat's last theorem", Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Vol. 1, 2 (Zürich, 1994), Basel, Boston, Berlin: Birkhäuser, pp. 243–245, MR 1403925
External links
- Darmon, H. (2001) [1994], "Shimura–Taniyama conjecture", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Taniyama–Shimura Conjecture". MathWorld.
In number theory the modularity theorem states that elliptic curves over the field of rational numbers are related to modular forms in a particular way Andrew Wiles and Richard Taylor proved the modularity theorem for semistable elliptic curves which was enough to imply Fermat s Last Theorem Later a series of papers by Wiles s former students Brian Conrad Fred Diamond and Richard Taylor culminating in a joint paper with Christophe Breuil extended Wiles s techniques to prove the full modularity theorem in 2001 Before that the statement was known as the Taniyama Shimura conjecture Taniyama Shimura Weil conjecture or modularity conjecture for elliptic curvesModularity theoremFieldNumber theoryConjectured byYutaka Taniyama Goro ShimuraConjectured in1957First proof byChristophe Breuil Brian Conrad Fred Diamond Richard TaylorFirst proof in2001ConsequencesFermat s Last TheoremStatementThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Modularity theorem news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message The theorem states that any elliptic curve over Q displaystyle mathbb Q can be obtained via a rational map with integer coefficients from the classical modular curve X0 N for some integer N this is a curve with integer coefficients with an explicit definition This mapping is called a modular parametrization of level N If N is the smallest integer for which such a parametrization can be found which by the modularity theorem itself is now known to be a number called the conductor then the parametrization may be defined in terms of a mapping generated by a particular kind of modular form of weight two and level N a normalized newform with integer q expansion followed if need be by an isogeny Related statements The modularity theorem implies a closely related analytic statement To each elliptic curve E over Q displaystyle mathbb Q we may attach a corresponding L series The L series is a Dirichlet series commonly written L E s n 1 anns displaystyle L E s sum n 1 infty frac a n n s The generating function of the coefficients an is then f E q n 1 anqn displaystyle f E q sum n 1 infty a n q n If we make the substitution q e2pit displaystyle q e 2 pi i tau we see that we have written the Fourier expansion of a function f E t of the complex variable t so the coefficients of the q series are also thought of as the Fourier coefficients of f The function obtained in this way is remarkably a cusp form of weight two and level N and is also an eigenform an eigenvector of all Hecke operators this is the Hasse Weil conjecture which follows from the modularity theorem Some modular forms of weight two in turn correspond to holomorphic differentials for an elliptic curve The Jacobian of the modular curve can up to isogeny be written as a product of irreducible Abelian varieties corresponding to Hecke eigenforms of weight 2 The 1 dimensional factors are elliptic curves there can also be higher dimensional factors so not all Hecke eigenforms correspond to rational elliptic curves The curve obtained by finding the corresponding cusp form and then constructing a curve from it is isogenous to the original curve but not in general isomorphic to it HistoryYutaka Taniyama stated a preliminary slightly incorrect version of the conjecture at the 1955 international symposium on algebraic number theory in Tokyo and Nikkō as the twelfth of his set of 36 unsolved problems Goro Shimura and Taniyama worked on improving its rigor until 1957 Andre Weil rediscovered the conjecture and showed in 1967 that it would follow from the conjectured functional equations for some twisted L series of the elliptic curve this was the first serious evidence that the conjecture might be true Weil also showed that the conductor of the elliptic curve should be the level of the corresponding modular form The Taniyama Shimura Weil conjecture became a part of the Langlands program The conjecture attracted considerable interest when Gerhard Frey suggested in 1986 that it implies Fermat s Last Theorem He did this by attempting to show that any counterexample to Fermat s Last Theorem would imply the existence of at least one non modular elliptic curve This argument was completed in 1987 when Jean Pierre Serre identified a missing link now known as the epsilon conjecture or Ribet s theorem in Frey s original work followed two years later by Ken Ribet s completion of a proof of the epsilon conjecture Even after gaining serious attention the Taniyama Shimura Weil conjecture was seen by contemporary mathematicians as extraordinarily difficult to prove or perhaps even inaccessible to prove For example Wiles s Ph D supervisor John Coates states that it seemed impossible to actually prove and Ken Ribet considered himself one of the vast majority of people who believed it was completely inaccessible In 1995 Andrew Wiles with some help from Richard Taylor proved the Taniyama Shimura Weil conjecture for all semistable elliptic curves Wiles used this to prove Fermat s Last Theorem and the full Taniyama Shimura Weil conjecture was finally proved by Diamond Conrad Diamond amp Taylor and Breuil Conrad Diamond amp Taylor building on Wiles s work they incrementally chipped away at the remaining cases until the full result was proved in 1999 Once fully proven the conjecture became known as the modularity theorem Several theorems in number theory similar to Fermat s Last Theorem follow from the modularity theorem For example no cube can be written as a sum of two coprime n th powers n 3 GeneralizationsThe modularity theorem is a special case of more general conjectures due to Robert Langlands The Langlands program seeks to attach an automorphic form or automorphic representation a suitable generalization of a modular form to more general objects of arithmetic algebraic geometry such as to every elliptic curve over a number field Most cases of these extended conjectures have not yet been proved In 2013 Freitas Le Hung and Siksek proved that elliptic curves defined over real quadratic fields are modular ExampleFor example the elliptic curve y2 y x3 x with discriminant and conductor 37 is associated to the form f z q 2q2 3q3 2q4 2q5 6q6 q e2piz displaystyle f z q 2q 2 3q 3 2q 4 2q 5 6q 6 cdots qquad q e 2 pi iz For prime numbers l not equal to 37 one can verify the property about the coefficients Thus for l 3 there are 6 solutions of the equation modulo 3 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 2 0 2 1 thus a 3 3 6 3 The conjecture going back to the 1950s was completely proven by 1999 using the ideas of Andrew Wiles who proved it in 1994 for a large family of elliptic curves There are several formulations of the conjecture Showing that they are equivalent was a main challenge of number theory in the second half of the 20th century The modularity of an elliptic curve E of conductor N can be expressed also by saying that there is a non constant rational map defined over ℚ from the modular curve X0 N to E In particular the points of E can be parametrized by modular functions For example a modular parametrization of the curve y2 y x3 x is given by x z q 2 2q 1 5 9q 18q2 29q3 51q4 y z q 3 3q 2 9q 1 21 46q 92q2 180q3 displaystyle begin aligned x z amp q 2 2q 1 5 9q 18q 2 29q 3 51q 4 cdots y z amp q 3 3q 2 9q 1 21 46q 92q 2 180q 3 cdots end aligned where as above q e2piz The functions x z and y z are modular of weight 0 and level 37 in other words they are meromorphic defined on the upper half plane Im z gt 0 and satisfy x az bcz d x z displaystyle x left frac az b cz d right x z and likewise for y z for all integers a b c d with ad bc 1 and 37 c Another formulation depends on the comparison of Galois representations attached on the one hand to elliptic curves and on the other hand to modular forms The latter formulation has been used in the proof of the conjecture Dealing with the level of the forms and the connection to the conductor of the curve is particularly delicate The most spectacular application of the conjecture is the proof of Fermat s Last Theorem FLT Suppose that for a prime p 5 the Fermat equation ap bp cp displaystyle a p b p c p has a solution with non zero integers hence a counter example to FLT Then as fr was the first to notice the elliptic curve y2 x x ap x bp displaystyle y 2 x x a p x b p of discriminant D 1256 abc 2p displaystyle Delta frac 1 256 abc 2p cannot be modular Thus the proof of the Taniyama Shimura Weil conjecture for this family of elliptic curves called Hellegouarch Frey curves implies FLT The proof of the link between these two statements based on an idea of Gerhard Frey 1985 is difficult and technical It was established by Kenneth Ribet in 1987 NotesThe case n 3 was already known by Euler ReferencesTaniyama 1956 Weil 1967 Harris Michael 2020 Virtues of Priority arXiv 2003 08242 math HO Lang Serge November 1995 Some History of the Shimura Taniyama Conjecture PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 42 11 1301 1307 Retrieved 2022 11 08 Frey 1986 Serre 1987 Ribet 1990 Singh 1997 pp 203 205 223 226 Wiles 1995a Wiles 1995b Diamond 1996 Conrad Diamond amp Taylor 1999 Breuil et al 2001 Freitas Le Hung amp Siksek 2015 For the calculations see for example Zagier 1985 pp 225 248 LMFDB http www lmfdb org EllipticCurve Q 37 a 1 OEIS https oeis org A007653 A synthetic presentation in French of the main ideas can be found in this Bourbaki article of Jean Pierre Serre For more details see Hellegouarch 2001 Zagier D 1985 Modular points modular curves modular surfaces and modular forms Arbeitstagung Bonn 1984 Lecture Notes in Mathematics Vol 1111 Springer pp 225 248 doi 10 1007 BFb0084592 ISBN 978 3 540 39298 9 Hellegouarch Yves 1974 Points d ordre 2ph sur les courbes elliptiques PDF Acta Arithmetica 26 3 253 263 doi 10 4064 aa 26 3 253 263 ISSN 0065 1036 MR 0379507 See the survey of Ribet K 1990b From the Taniyama Shimura conjecture to Fermat s Last Theorem Annales de la Faculte des Sciences de Toulouse 11 116 139 doi 10 5802 afst 698 Bibliography Breuil Christophe Conrad Brian Diamond Fred Taylor Richard 2001 On the modularity of elliptic curves over Q wild 3 adic exercises Journal of the American Mathematical Society 14 4 843 939 doi 10 1090 S0894 0347 01 00370 8 ISSN 0894 0347 MR 1839918 Conrad Brian Diamond Fred Taylor Richard 1999 Modularity of certain potentially Barsotti Tate Galois representations Journal of the American Mathematical Society 12 2 521 567 doi 10 1090 S0894 0347 99 00287 8 ISSN 0894 0347 MR 1639612 Cornell Gary Silverman Joseph H Stevens Glenn eds 1997 Modular forms and Fermat s last theorem Berlin New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 94609 2 MR 1638473 Darmon Henri 1999 A proof of the full Shimura Taniyama Weil conjecture is announced PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 46 11 1397 1401 ISSN 0002 9920 MR 1723249 Contains a gentle introduction to the theorem and an outline of the proof Diamond Fred 1996 On deformation rings and Hecke rings Annals of Mathematics Second Series 144 1 137 166 doi 10 2307 2118586 ISSN 0003 486X JSTOR 2118586 MR 1405946 Freitas Nuno Le Hung Bao V Siksek Samir 2015 Elliptic curves over real quadratic fields are modular Inventiones Mathematicae 201 1 159 206 arXiv 1310 7088 Bibcode 2015InMat 201 159F doi 10 1007 s00222 014 0550 z ISSN 0020 9910 MR 3359051 S2CID 119132800 Frey Gerhard 1986 Links between stable elliptic curves and certain Diophantine equations Annales Universitatis Saraviensis Series Mathematicae 1 1 iv 40 ISSN 0933 8268 MR 0853387 Mazur Barry 1991 Number theory as gadfly The American Mathematical Monthly 98 7 593 610 doi 10 2307 2324924 ISSN 0002 9890 JSTOR 2324924 MR 1121312 Discusses the Taniyama Shimura Weil conjecture 3 years before it was proven for infinitely many cases Ribet Kenneth A 1990 On modular representations of Gal Q Q arising from modular forms Inventiones Mathematicae 100 2 431 476 Bibcode 1990InMat 100 431R doi 10 1007 BF01231195 hdl 10338 dmlcz 147454 ISSN 0020 9910 MR 1047143 S2CID 120614740 Serre Jean Pierre 1987 Sur les representations modulaires de degre 2 de Gal Q Q Duke Mathematical Journal 54 1 179 230 doi 10 1215 S0012 7094 87 05413 5 ISSN 0012 7094 MR 0885783 Shimura Goro 1989 Yutaka Taniyama and his time Very personal recollections The Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 21 2 186 196 doi 10 1112 blms 21 2 186 ISSN 0024 6093 MR 0976064 Singh Simon 1997 Fermat s Last Theorem Fourth Estate ISBN 978 1 85702 521 7 Taniyama Yutaka 1956 Problem 12 Sugaku in Japanese 7 269 English translation in Shimura 1989 p 194 Taylor Richard Wiles Andrew 1995 Ring theoretic properties of certain Hecke algebras Annals of Mathematics Second Series 141 3 553 572 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 128 531 doi 10 2307 2118560 ISSN 0003 486X JSTOR 2118560 MR 1333036 Weil Andre 1967 Uber die Bestimmung Dirichletscher Reihen durch Funktionalgleichungen Mathematische Annalen 168 149 156 doi 10 1007 BF01361551 ISSN 0025 5831 MR 0207658 S2CID 120553723 Wiles Andrew 1995a Modular elliptic curves and Fermat s last theorem Annals of Mathematics Second Series 141 3 443 551 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 169 9076 doi 10 2307 2118559 ISSN 0003 486X JSTOR 2118559 MR 1333035 Wiles Andrew 1995b Modular forms elliptic curves and Fermat s last theorem Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians Vol 1 2 Zurich 1994 Basel Boston Berlin Birkhauser pp 243 245 MR 1403925External linksDarmon H 2001 1994 Shimura Taniyama conjecture Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Weisstein Eric W Taniyama Shimura Conjecture MathWorld