Quadratic Fields Admitting Elliptic Curves with Rational $j$-Invariant and Good Reduction Everywhere
Abstract: Clemm and Trebat-Leder (2014) proved that the number of quadratic number fields with absolute discriminant bounded by $x$ over which there exist elliptic curves with good reduction everywhere and rational $j$-invariant is $\gg x\log{-1/2}(x)$. In this paper, we assume the $abc$-conjecture to show the sharp asymptotic $\sim cx\log{-1/2}(x)$ for this number, obtaining formulae for $c$ in both the real and imaginary cases. Our method has three ingredients: (1) We make progress towards a conjecture of Granville: Given a fixed elliptic curve $E/\mathbb{Q}$ with short Weierstrass equation $y2 = f(x)$ for reducible $f \in \mathbb{Z}[x]$, we show that the number of integers $d$, $|d| \leq D$, for which the quadratic twist $dy2 = f(x)$ has an integral non-$2$-torsion point is at most $D{2/3+o(1)}$, assuming the $abc$-conjecture. (2) We apply the Selberg--Delange method to obtain a Tauberian theorem which allows us to count integers satisfying certain congruences while also being divisible only by certain primes. (3) We show that for a polynomially sparse subset of the natural numbers, the number of pairs of elements with least common multiple at most $x$ is $O(x{1-\epsilon})$ for some $\epsilon > 0$. We also exhibit a matching lower bound. If instead of the $abc$-conjecture we assume a particular tail bound, we can prove all the aforementioned results and that the coefficient $c$ above is greater in the real quadratic case than in the imaginary quadratic case, in agreement with an experimentally observed bias.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.