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Andrew Ogg’s mathematical viewpoint has inspired an increasingly broad array of results and conjectures. His results and conjectures have earmarked fruitful turning points in our subject, and his influence has been such a gift to all of us. Ogg’s celebrated torsion conjecture—as it relates to modular curves—can be paraphrased as saying that rational points (on the modular curves that parametrize torsion points on elliptic curves) exist if and only if there is a good geometric reason for them to exist. We give a survey of Ogg’s torsion conjecture and the subsequent developments in our understanding of rational points on modular curves over the last fifty years.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
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We describe how the quadratic Chabauty method may be applied to determine the set of rational points on modular curves of genus$$g>1$$whose Jacobians have Mordell–Weil rank$$g$$. This extends our previous work on the split Cartan curve of level 13 and allows us to consider modular curves that may have few known rational points or non-trivial local height contributions at primes of bad reduction. We illustrate our algorithms with a number of examples where we determine the set of rational points on several modular curves of genus 2 and 3: this includes Atkin–Lehner quotients$$X_0^+(N)$$of prime level$$N$$, the curve$$X_{S_4}(13)$$, as well as a few other curves relevant to Mazur's Program B. We also compute the set of rational points on the genus 6 non-split Cartan modular curve$$X_{\scriptstyle \mathrm { ns}} ^+ (17)$$.more » « less
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Abstract We give new instances where Chabauty–Kim sets can be proved to be finite, by developing a notion of “generalised height functions” on Selmer varieties. We also explain how to compute these generalised heights in terms of iterated integrals and give the 1st explicit nonabelian Chabauty result for a curve $$X/\mathbb{Q}$$ whose Jacobian has Mordell–Weil rank larger than its genus.more » « less
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The Chabauty–Kim method allows one to find rational points on curves under certain technical conditions, generalising Chabauty’s proof of the Mordell conjecture for curves with Mordell–Weil rank less than their genus. We show how the Chabauty–Kim method, when these technical conditions are satisfied in depth 2, may be applied to bound the number of rational points on a curve of higher rank. This provides a non-abelian generalisation of Coleman’s effective Chabauty theorem.more » « less
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