Zilber–Pink Conjecture
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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, the Zilber–Pink conjecture is a far-reaching generalisation of many famous Diophantine conjectures and statements, such as André–Oort, Manin–Mumford, and Mordell–Lang. For
algebraic tori Algebraic may refer to any subject related to algebra in mathematics and related branches like algebraic number theory and algebraic topology. The word algebra itself has several meanings. Algebraic may also refer to: * Algebraic data type, a dat ...
and semiabelian varieties it was proposed by Boris Zilber and independently by Enrico Bombieri,
David Masser David William Masser (born 8 November 1948) is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at the University of Basel. He is known for his work in transcendental number theory, Diophantine approximation, and Diophanti ...
,
Umberto Zannier Umberto Zannier (born 25 May 1957, in Spilimbergo, Italy) is an Italian mathematician, specializing in number theory and Diophantine geometry. Education Zannier earned a Laurea degree from University of Pisa and studied at the Scuola Normale Sup ...
in the early 2000's. For semiabelian varieties the conjecture implies the Mordell–Lang and Manin–Mumford conjectures. Richard Pink proposed (again independently) a more general conjecture for
Shimura varieties In number theory, a Shimura variety is a higher-dimensional analogue of a modular curve that arises as a quotient variety of a Hermitian symmetric space by a congruence subgroup of a reductive algebraic group defined over Q. Shimura varieties are no ...
which also implies the André–Oort conjecture. In the case of algebraic tori, Zilber called it the Conjecture on Intersection with Tori (CIT). The general version is now known as the Zilber–Pink conjecture. It states roughly that atypical or unlikely intersections of an algebraic variety with certain special varieties are accounted for by finitely many special varieties.


Statement


Atypical and unlikely intersections

The intersection of two algebraic varieties is called ''atypical'' if its dimension is larger than expected. More precisely, given three varieties X, Y \subseteq U, a component Z of the intersection X \cap Y is said to be atypical in U if \dim Z > \dim X + \dim Y - \dim U. Since the expected dimension of X \cap Y is \dim X + \dim Y - \dim U, atypical intersections are "atypically large" and are not expected to occur. When \dim X + \dim Y - \dim U < 0, the varieties X and Y are not expected to intersect at all, so when they do, the intersection is said to be ''unlikely''. For example, if in a 3-dimensional space two lines intersect, then it is an unlikely intersection, for two randomly chosen lines would almost never intersect.


Special varieties

Special varieties of a Shimura variety are certain arithmetically defined subvarieties. They are higher dimensional versions of special points. For example, in semiabelian varieties special points are torsion points and special varieties are translates of irreducible algebraic subgroups by torsion points. In the modular setting special points are the
singular moduli Singular may refer to: * Singular, the grammatical number that denotes a unit quantity, as opposed to the plural and other forms * Singular homology * SINGULAR, an open source Computer Algebra System (CAS) * Singular or sounder, a group of boar, s ...
and special varieties are irreducible components of varieties defined by modular equations. Given a mixed Shimura variety X and a subvariety V \subseteq X, an ''atypical subvariety'' of V is an atypical component of an intersection V \cap T where T \subseteq X is a special subvariety.


The Zilber–Pink conjecture

Let X be a mixed Shimura variety or a semiabelian variety defined over \mathbb, and let V\subseteq X be a subvariety. Then V contains only finitely many maximal atypical subvarieties. The abelian and modular versions of the Zilber–Pink conjecture are special cases of the conjecture for Shimura varieties, while in general the semiabelian case is not. However, special subvarieties of semiabelian and Shimura varieties share many formal properties which makes the same formulation valid in both settings.


Partial results and special cases

While the Zilber–Pink conjecture is wide open, many special cases and weak versions have been proven. If a variety V\subseteq X contains a special variety T then by definition T is an atypical subvariety of V. Hence, the Zilber–Pink conjecture implies that V contains only finitely many maximal special subvarieties. This is the Manin–Mumford conjecture in the semiabelian setting and the André–Oort conjecture in the Shimura setting. Both are now theorems; the former has been known for several decades, while the latter was proven in full generality only recently. Many partial results have been proven on the Zilber–Pink conjecture. An example in the modular setting is the result that any variety contains only finitely many maximal ''strongly'' atypical subvarieties, where a strongly atypical subvariety is an atypical subvariety with no constant coordinate.


References


Further reading

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Zilber-Pink conjecture Diophantine geometry Conjectures