Canonical heights for elliptic curves over number fields¶
Also, rigorous lower bounds for the canonical height of non-torsion
points, implementing the algorithms in [CS] (over
) and [TT],
which also refer to [CPS].
AUTHORS:
- Robert Bradshaw (2010): initial version
- John Cremona (2014): added many docstrings and doctests
REFERENCES:
| [CS] | (1, 2, 3) J.E.Cremona, and S. Siksek, Computing a Lower Bound for the
Canonical Height on Elliptic Curves over , ANTS VII
Proceedings: F.Hess, S.Pauli and M.Pohst (eds.), ANTS VII, Lecture
Notes in Computer Science 4076 (2006), pages 275-286. |
| [TT] | (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18) T. Thongjunthug, Computing a lower bound for the canonical height on elliptic curves over number fields, Math. Comp. 79 (2010), pages 2431-2449. |
| [CPS] | (1, 2, 3, 4) J.E. Cremona, M. Prickett and S. Siksek, Height Difference Bounds For Elliptic Curves over Number Fields, Journal of Number Theory 116(1) (2006), pages 42-68. |
-
class
sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height.EllipticCurveCanonicalHeight(E)¶ Class for computing canonical heights of points on elliptic curves defined over number fields, including rigorous lower bounds for the canonical height of non-torsion points.
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import EllipticCurveCanonicalHeight sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,1]) sage: EllipticCurveCanonicalHeight(E) EllipticCurveCanonicalHeight object associated to Elliptic Curve defined by y^2 = x^3 + 1 over Rational Field
Normally this object would be created like this:
sage: E.height_function() EllipticCurveCanonicalHeight object associated to Elliptic Curve defined by y^2 = x^3 + 1 over Rational Field
-
B(n, mu)¶ Return the value
.INPUT:
n(int) - a positive integermu(real) - a positive real number
OUTPUT:
The real value
as defined in [TT], section 5.EXAMPLES:
Example 10.2 from [TT]:
sage: K.<i>=QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,1-i,i,-i,0]) sage: H = E.height_function()
In [TT] the value is given as 0.772:
sage: RealField(12)( H.B(5, 0.01) ) 0.777
-
DE(n)¶ Return the value
.INPUT:
n(int) - a positive integer
OUTPUT:
The value
as defined in [TT], section 4.EXAMPLES:
sage: K.<i>=QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,1+5*i,3+i]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: [H.DE(n) for n in srange(1,6)] [0, 2*log(5) + 2*log(2), 0, 2*log(13) + 2*log(5) + 4*log(2), 0]
-
ME()¶ Return the norm of the ideal
.OUTPUT:
The norm of the ideal
as defined in [TT], section 3.1.
This is
if
is a global minimal model, and in general
measures the non-minimality of
.EXAMPLES:
sage: K.<i>=QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,1+5*i,3+i]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.ME() 1 sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,1]) sage: E.height_function().ME() 1 sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,64]) sage: E.height_function().ME() 4096 sage: E.discriminant()/E.minimal_model().discriminant() 4096
-
S(xi1, xi2, v)¶ Return the union of intervals
.INPUT:
xi1, xi2(real) - real numbers with
.v(embedding) - a real embedding of the field.
OUTPUT:
The union of intervals
defined in [TT]
section 6.1.EXAMPLES:
An example over
:sage: E = EllipticCurve('389a') sage: v = QQ.places()[0] sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.S(2,3,v) ([0.224512677391895, 0.274544821597130] U [0.725455178402870, 0.775487322608105])
An example over a number field:
sage: K.<a> = NumberField(x^3-2) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,a]) sage: v = K.real_places()[0] sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.S(9,10,v) ([0.0781194447253472, 0.0823423732016403] U [0.917657626798360, 0.921880555274653])
-
Sn(xi1, xi2, n, v)¶ Return the union of intervals
.INPUT:
xi1, xi2(real) - real numbers with
.n(integer) - a positive integer.v(embedding) - a real embedding of the field.
OUTPUT:
The union of intervals
defined in [TT]
(Lemma 6.1).EXAMPLES:
An example over
:sage: E = EllipticCurve('389a') sage: v = QQ.places()[0] sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.S(2,3,v) , H.Sn(2,3,1,v) (([0.224512677391895, 0.274544821597130] U [0.725455178402870, 0.775487322608105]), ([0.224512677391895, 0.274544821597130] U [0.725455178402870, 0.775487322608105])) sage: H.Sn(2,3,6,v) ([0.0374187795653158, 0.0457574702661884] U [0.120909196400478, 0.129247887101351] U [0.204085446231982, 0.212424136932855] U [0.287575863067145, 0.295914553768017] U [0.370752112898649, 0.379090803599522] U [0.454242529733812, 0.462581220434684] U [0.537418779565316, 0.545757470266188] U [0.620909196400478, 0.629247887101351] U [0.704085446231982, 0.712424136932855] U [0.787575863067145, 0.795914553768017] U [0.870752112898649, 0.879090803599522] U [0.954242529733812, 0.962581220434684])
An example over a number field:
sage: K.<a> = NumberField(x^3-2) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,a]) sage: v = K.real_places()[0] sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.S(2,3,v) , H.Sn(2,3,1,v) (([0.142172065860075, 0.172845716928584] U [0.827154283071416, 0.857827934139925]), ([0.142172065860075, 0.172845716928584] U [0.827154283071416, 0.857827934139925])) sage: H.Sn(2,3,6,v) ([0.0236953443100124, 0.0288076194880974] U [0.137859047178569, 0.142971322356654] U [0.190362010976679, 0.195474286154764] U [0.304525713845236, 0.309637989023321] U [0.357028677643346, 0.362140952821431] U [0.471192380511903, 0.476304655689988] U [0.523695344310012, 0.528807619488097] U [0.637859047178569, 0.642971322356654] U [0.690362010976679, 0.695474286154764] U [0.804525713845236, 0.809637989023321] U [0.857028677643346, 0.862140952821431] U [0.971192380511903, 0.976304655689988])
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alpha(v, tol=0.01)¶ Return the constant
associated to the embedding v.INPUT:
v– an embedding of the base field into
or 
OUTPUT:
The constant
. In the notation of [CPS] (2006) and
[TT] (section 3.2),
. The result is
cached since it only depends on the curve.EXAMPLES:
Example 1 from [CPS] (2006):
sage: K.<i>=QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,1+5*i,3+i]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: alpha = H.alpha(K.places()[0]) sage: alpha 1.12272013439355
Compare with
in [CPS]:sage: 3*alpha.log() 0.347263296676126
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base_field()¶ Return the base field.
EXAMPLES:
sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,1]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.base_field() Rational Field
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complex_intersection_is_empty(Bk, v, verbose=False, use_half=True)¶ Returns True iff an intersection of
sets is empty.INPUT:
Bk(list) - a list of reals.v(embedding) - a complex embedding of the number field.verbose(boolean, default False) - verbosity flag.use_half(boolean, default False) - if True, use only half the fundamental region.
OUTPUT:
True or False, according as the intersection of the unions of intervals
for
in the list Bk(see [TT], section 7) is empty or not. WhenBkis the list of
for
for some
this
means that all non-torsion points on
with everywhere good
reduction have canonical height strictly greater than
,
by [TT], Proposition 7.8.EXAMPLES:
sage: K.<a> = NumberField(x^3-2) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,a]) sage: v = K.complex_embeddings()[0] sage: H = E.height_function()
The following two lines prove that the heights of non-torsion points on
with everywhere good reduction have canonical
height strictly greater than 0.02, but fail to prove the same
for 0.03. For the first proof, using only
is not
sufficient:sage: H.complex_intersection_is_empty([H.B(n,0.02) for n in [1,2,3]],v) # long time (~6s) False sage: H.complex_intersection_is_empty([H.B(n,0.02) for n in [1,2,3,4]],v) True sage: H.complex_intersection_is_empty([H.B(n,0.03) for n in [1,2,3,4]],v) # long time (4s) False
Using
enables us to prove the lower bound 0.03. Note
that it takes longer when the result is Falsethan when it isTrue:sage: H.complex_intersection_is_empty([H.B(n,0.03) for n in [1..6]],v) True
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curve()¶ Return the elliptic curve.
EXAMPLES:
sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,1]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.curve() Elliptic Curve defined by y^2 = x^3 + 1 over Rational Field
-
e_p(p)¶ Return the exponent of the group over the residue field at
p.INPUT:
p- a prime ideal of
(or a prime number if
).
OUTPUT:
A positive integer
, the exponent of the group of
nonsingular points on the reduction of the elliptic curve
modulo
. The result is cached.EXAMPLES:
sage: K.<i>=QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,1+5*i,3+i]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.e_p(K.prime_above(2)) 2 sage: H.e_p(K.prime_above(3)) 10 sage: H.e_p(K.prime_above(5)) 9 sage: E.conductor().norm().factor() 2^10 * 20921 sage: p1, p2 = K.primes_above(20921) sage: E.local_data(p1) Local data at Fractional ideal (-40*i + 139): Reduction type: bad split multiplicative ... sage: H.e_p(p1) 20920 sage: E.local_data(p2) Local data at Fractional ideal (40*i + 139): Reduction type: good ... sage: H.e_p(p2) 20815
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fk_intervals(v=None, N=20, domain=Complex Interval Field with 53 bits of precision)¶ Return a function approximating the Weierstrass function, with error.
INPUT:
v(embedding) - an embedding of the number field. If None (default) use the real embedding if the field is
and raise an error for other fields.N(int) - The number of terms to use in the
-expansion of
.domain(complex field) - the model of
to use, for
example CDFofCIF(default).
OUTPUT:
A pair of functions fk, err which can be evaluated at complex numbers
(in the correct domain) to give an approximation to
and an upper bound on the error,
respectively. The Weierstrass function returned is with
respect to the normalised lattice
associated to the
given embedding.EXAMPLES:
sage: E = EllipticCurve('37a') sage: L = E.period_lattice() sage: w1, w2 = L.normalised_basis() sage: z = CDF(0.3, 0.4)
Compare the value give by the standard elliptic exponential (scaled since
fkis with respect to the normalised lattice):sage: L.elliptic_exponential(z*w2, to_curve=False)[0] * w2 ** 2 -1.82543539306049 - 2.49336319992847*I
to the value given by this function, and see the error:
sage: fk, err = E.height_function().fk_intervals(N=10) sage: fk(CIF(z)) -1.82543539306049? - 2.49336319992847?*I sage: err(CIF(z)) 2.71750621458744e-31
The same, but in the domain
CDFinstad ofCIF:sage: fk, err = E.height_function().fk_intervals(N=10, domain=CDF) sage: fk(z) -1.8254353930604... - 2.493363199928...*I
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min(tol, n_max, verbose=False)¶ Returns a lower bound for all points of infinite order.
INPUT:
tol- tolerance in output (see below).n_max- how many multiples to use in iteration.verbose(boolean, default False) - verbosity flag.
OUTPUT:
A positive real
for which it has been established
rigorously that every point of infinite order on the elliptic
curve (defined over its ground field) has canonical height
greater than
, and such that it is not possible (at least
without increasing n_max) to prove the same for
.EXAMPLES:
Example 1 from [CS] (where the same lower bound of 0.1126 was given):
sage: E = EllipticCurve([1, 0, 1, 421152067, 105484554028056]) # 60490d1 sage: E.height_function().min(.0001, 5) 0.0011263287309893311
Example 10.1 from [TT] (where a lower bound of 0.18 was given):
sage: K.<i> = QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,91-26*i,-144-323*i]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.min(0.1,4) # long time (8.1s) 0.1621049443313762
Example 10.2 from [TT]:
sage: K.<i> = QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,1-i,i,-i,0]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.min(0.01,5) # long time (4s) 0.015043796434657225
In this example the point
has height 0.023 so our
lower bound is quite good:sage: P = E((0,0)) sage: P.height() 0.0230242154471211
Example 10.3 from [TT] (where the same bound of 0.0625 is given):
sage: K.<a> = NumberField(x^3-2) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,-3*a-a^2,a^2]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.min(0.1,5) # long time (7s) 0.0625
More examples over
:sage: E = EllipticCurve('37a') sage: h = E.height_function() sage: h.min(.01, 5) 0.03987318057488725 sage: E.gen(0).height() 0.0511114082399688
After base change the lower bound can decrease:
sage: K.<a> = QuadraticField(-5) sage: E.change_ring(K).height_function().min(0.5, 10) # long time (8s) 0.04419417382415922 sage: E = EllipticCurve('389a') sage: h = E.height_function() sage: h.min(0.1, 5) 0.05731275270029196 sage: [P.height() for P in E.gens()] [0.686667083305587, 0.327000773651605]
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min_gr(tol, n_max, verbose=False)¶ Returns a lower bound for points of infinite order with good reduction.
INPUT:
tol- tolerance in output (see below).n_max- how many multiples to use in iteration.verbose(boolean, default False) - verbosity flag.
OUTPUT:
A positive real
for which it has been established
rigorously that every point of infinite order on the elliptic
curve (defined over its ground field), which has good
reduction at all primes, has canonical height greater than
, and such that it is not possible (at least without
increasing n_max) to prove the same for
.EXAMPLES:
Example 1 from [CS] (where a lower bound of 1.9865 was given):
sage: E = EllipticCurve([1, 0, 1, 421152067, 105484554028056]) # 60490d1 sage: E.height_function().min_gr(.0001, 5) 1.98684388146518
Example 10.1 from [TT] (where a lower bound of 0.18 was given):
sage: K.<i> = QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,91-26*i,-144-323*i]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.min_gr(0.1,4) # long time (8.1s) 0.1621049443313762
Example 10.2 from [TT]:
sage: K.<i> = QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,1-i,i,-i,0]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.min_gr(0.01,5) 0.015043796434657225
In this example the point
has height 0.023 so our
lower bound is quite good:sage: P = E((0,0)) sage: P.has_good_reduction() True sage: P.height() 0.0230242154471211
Example 10.3 from [TT] (where the same bound of 0.25 is given):
sage: K.<a> = NumberField(x^3-2) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,-3*a-a^2,a^2]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.min_gr(0.1,5) # long time (7.2s) 0.25
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psi(xi, v)¶ Return the normalised elliptic log of a point with this x-coordinate.
INPUT:
xi(real) - the real x-coordinate of a point on the curve in the connected component with respect to a real embedding.v(embedding) - a real embedding of the number field.
OUTPUT:
A real number in the interval [0.5,1] giving the elliptic logarithm of a point on
with
-coordinate xi, on the connected component with respect to the embedding
, scaled
by the real period.EXAMPLES:
An example over
:sage: E = EllipticCurve('389a') sage: v = QQ.places()[0] sage: L = E.period_lattice(v) sage: P = E.lift_x(10/9) sage: L(P) 1.53151606047462 sage: L(P) / L.real_period() 0.615014189772115 sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.psi(10/9,v) 0.615014189772115
An example over a number field:
sage: K.<a> = NumberField(x^3-2) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,a]) sage: P = E.lift_x(1/3*a^2 + a + 5/3) sage: v = K.real_places()[0] sage: L = E.period_lattice(v) sage: L(P) 3.51086196882538 sage: L(P) / L.real_period() 0.867385122699931 sage: xP = v(P.xy()[0]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.psi(xP,v) 0.867385122699931 sage: H.psi(1.23,v) 0.785854718241495
-
real_intersection_is_empty(Bk, v)¶ Returns True iff an intersection of
sets is empty.INPUT:
Bk(list) - a list of reals.v(embedding) - a real embedding of the number field.
OUTPUT:
True or False, according as the intersection of the unions of intervals
for
in the list Bkis empty or not. WhenBkis the list of
for
for some
this means that all
non-torsion points on
with everywhere good reduction have
canonical height strictly greater than
, by [TT],
Proposition 6.2.EXAMPLES:
An example over
:sage: E = EllipticCurve('389a') sage: v = QQ.places()[0] sage: H = E.height_function()
The following two lines prove that the heights of non-torsion points on
with everywhere good reduction have canonical
height strictly greater than 0.2, but fail to prove the same
for 0.3:sage: H.real_intersection_is_empty([H.B(n,0.2) for n in srange(1,10)],v) True sage: H.real_intersection_is_empty([H.B(n,0.3) for n in srange(1,10)],v) False
An example over a number field:
sage: K.<a> = NumberField(x^3-2) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,a]) sage: v = K.real_places()[0] sage: H = E.height_function()
The following two lines prove that the heights of non-torsion points on
with everywhere good reduction have canonical
height strictly greater than 0.07, but fail to prove the same
for 0.08:sage: H.real_intersection_is_empty([H.B(n,0.07) for n in srange(1,5)],v) # long time (3.3s) True sage: H.real_intersection_is_empty([H.B(n,0.08) for n in srange(1,5)],v) False
-
tau(v)¶ Return the normalised upper half-plane parameter
for
the period lattice with respect to the embedding
.INPUT:
v(embedding) - a real or complex embedding of the number field.
OUTPUT:
(Complex)
in the fundamental region
of the upper half-plane.EXAMPLES:
sage: E = EllipticCurve('37a') sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.tau(QQ.places()[0]) 1.22112736076463*I
-
test_mu(mu, N, verbose=True)¶ Return
Trueif we can prove that
is a lower bound.INPUT:
mu(real) - a positive real numberN(integer) - upper bounf do the multiples to be used.verbose(boolean, default True) - verbosity flag.
OUTPUT:
TrueorFalse, according to whether we succeed in proving that
is a lower bound for the canonical heights
of points of infinite order with everywhere good reduction.Note
A
Trueresult is rigorous;Falseonly means that the attempt failed: trying again with larger
may yield
True.EXAMPLE:
sage: K.<a> = NumberField(x^3-2) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,0,a]) sage: H = E.height_function()
This curve does have a point of good reduction whose canonical point is approximately 1.68:
sage: P = E.gens(lim3=5)[0] sage: P.height() 1.68038085233673 sage: P.has_good_reduction() True
Using
we can prove that 0.1 is a lower bound (in fact we
only need
), but not that 0.2 is:sage: H.test_mu(0.1, 5) B_1(0.100000000000000) = 1.51580969677387 B_2(0.100000000000000) = 0.932072561526720 True sage: H.test_mu(0.2, 5) B_1(0.200000000000000) = 2.04612906979932 B_2(0.200000000000000) = 3.09458988474327 B_3(0.200000000000000) = 27.6251108409484 B_4(0.200000000000000) = 1036.24722370223 B_5(0.200000000000000) = 3.67090854562318e6 False
Since 0.1 is a lower bound we can deduce that the point
is
either primitive or divisible by either 2 or 3. In fact it is
primitive:sage: (P.height()/0.1).sqrt() 4.09924487233530 sage: P.division_points(2) [] sage: P.division_points(3) []
-
wp_c(v)¶ Return a bound for the Weierstrass
-function.INPUT:
v(embedding) - a real or complex embedding of the number field.
OUTPUT:
(Real)
such that
whenever
. Given the recurrence relations for the
Laurent series expansion of
, it is easy to see that
there is such a constant
. [Reference?]EXAMPLES:
sage: E = EllipticCurve('37a') sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.wp_c(QQ.places()[0]) 2.68744508779950 sage: K.<i>=QuadraticField(-1) sage: E = EllipticCurve([0,0,0,1+5*i,3+i]) sage: H = E.height_function() sage: H.wp_c(K.places()[0]) 2.66213425640096
-
wp_intervals(v=None, N=20, abs_only=False)¶ Return a function approximating the Weierstrass function.
INPUT:
v(embedding) - an embedding of the number field. If None (default) use the real embedding if the field is
and raise an error for other fields.N(int, default 20) - The number of terms to use in the
-expansion of
.abs_only(boolean, default False) - flag to determine whether (if True) the error adjustment should use the absolute value or (if False) the real and imaginary parts.
OUTPUT:
A function wp which can be evaluated at complex numbers
to
give an approximation to
. The Weierstrass function
returned is with respect to the normalised lattice
associated to the given embedding. For
which are not near
a lattice point the function fkis used, otherwise a better approximation is used.EXAMPLES:
sage: E = EllipticCurve('37a') sage: wp = E.height_function().wp_intervals() sage: z = CDF(0.3, 0.4) sage: wp(CIF(z)) -1.82543539306049? - 2.4933631999285?*I sage: L = E.period_lattice() sage: w1, w2 = L.normalised_basis() sage: L.elliptic_exponential(z*w2, to_curve=False)[0] * w2^2 -1.82543539306049 - 2.49336319992847*I sage: z = CDF(0.3, 0.1) sage: wp(CIF(z)) 8.5918243572165? - 5.4751982004351?*I sage: L.elliptic_exponential(z*w2, to_curve=False)[0] * w2^2 8.59182435721650 - 5.47519820043503*I
-
wp_on_grid(v, N, half=False)¶ Return an array of the values of
on an
grid.INPUT:
v(embedding) - an embedding of the number field.N(int) - The number of terms to use in the
-expansion of
.half(boolean, default False) - if True, use an array of size
instead of
.
OUTPUT:
An array of size either
or
whose
entry is the value of the Weierstrass
-function
at
, a grid of points in the
fundamental region for the lattice
.EXAMPLES:
sage: E = EllipticCurve('37a') sage: H = E.height_function() sage: v = QQ.places()[0]
The array of values on the grid shows symmetry, since
is
even:sage: H.wp_on_grid(v,4) array([[ 25.43920182, 5.28760943, 5.28760943, 25.43920182], [ 6.05099485, 1.83757786, 1.83757786, 6.05099485], [ 6.05099485, 1.83757786, 1.83757786, 6.05099485], [ 25.43920182, 5.28760943, 5.28760943, 25.43920182]])
The array of values on the half-grid:
sage: H.wp_on_grid(v,4,True) array([[ 25.43920182, 5.28760943], [ 6.05099485, 1.83757786], [ 6.05099485, 1.83757786], [ 25.43920182, 5.28760943]])
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class
sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height.UnionOfIntervals(endpoints)¶ A class representing a finite union of closed intervals in
which can be scaled, shifted, intersected, etc.The intervals are represented as an ordered list of their endpoints, which may include
and
.EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import UnionOfIntervals sage: R = UnionOfIntervals([1,2,3,infinity]); R ([1, 2] U [3, +Infinity]) sage: R + 5 ([6, 7] U [8, +Infinity]) sage: ~R ([-Infinity, 1] U [2, 3]) sage: ~R | (10*R + 100) ([-Infinity, 1] U [2, 3] U [110, 120] U [130, +Infinity])
Todo
Unify
UnionOfIntervalswith the classRealSetintroduced by trac ticket #13125; see trac ticket #16063.-
finite_endpoints()¶ Returns the finite endpoints of this union of intervals.
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import UnionOfIntervals sage: UnionOfIntervals([0,1]).finite_endpoints() [0, 1] sage: UnionOfIntervals([-infinity, 0, 1, infinity]).finite_endpoints() [0, 1]
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classmethod
intersection(L)¶ Return the intersection of a list of UnionOfIntervals.
INPUT:
L(list) – a list of UnionOfIntervals instances
OUTPUT:
A new UnionOfIntervals instance representing the intersection of the UnionOfIntervals in the list.
Note
This is a class method.
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import UnionOfIntervals sage: A = UnionOfIntervals([1,3,5,7]); A ([1, 3] U [5, 7]) sage: B = A+1; B ([2, 4] U [6, 8]) sage: A.intersection([A,B]) ([2, 3] U [6, 7])
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intervals()¶ Returns the intervals in self, as a list of 2-tuples.
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import UnionOfIntervals sage: UnionOfIntervals(range(10)).intervals() [(0, 1), (2, 3), (4, 5), (6, 7), (8, 9)] sage: UnionOfIntervals([-infinity, pi, 17, infinity]).intervals() [(-Infinity, pi), (17, +Infinity)]
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is_empty()¶ Returns whether self is empty.
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import UnionOfIntervals sage: UnionOfIntervals([3,4]).is_empty() False sage: all = UnionOfIntervals([-infinity, infinity]) sage: all.is_empty() False sage: (~all).is_empty() True sage: A = UnionOfIntervals([0,1]) & UnionOfIntervals([2,3]) sage: A.is_empty() True
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static
join(L, condition)¶ Utility function to form the union or intersection of a list of UnionOfIntervals.
INPUT:
L(list) – a list of UnionOfIntervals instancescondition(function) – eitheranyorall, or some other boolean function of a list of boolean values.
OUTPUT:
A new UnionOfIntervals instance representing the subset of ‘RR’ equal to those reals in any/all/condition of the UnionOfIntervals in the list.
Note
This is a static method for the class.
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import UnionOfIntervals sage: A = UnionOfIntervals([1,3,5,7]); A ([1, 3] U [5, 7]) sage: B = A+1; B ([2, 4] U [6, 8]) sage: A.join([A,B],any) # union ([1, 4] U [5, 8]) sage: A.join([A,B],all) # intersection ([2, 3] U [6, 7]) sage: A.join([A,B],sum) # symmetric difference ([1, 2] U [3, 4] U [5, 6] U [7, 8])
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classmethod
union(L)¶ Return the union of a list of UnionOfIntervals.
INPUT:
L(list) – a list of UnionOfIntervals instances
OUTPUT:
A new UnionOfIntervals instance representing the union of the UnionOfIntervals in the list.
Note
This is a class method.
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import UnionOfIntervals sage: A = UnionOfIntervals([1,3,5,7]); A ([1, 3] U [5, 7]) sage: B = A+1; B ([2, 4] U [6, 8]) sage: A.union([A,B]) ([1, 4] U [5, 8])
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sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height.eps(err, is_real)¶ Return a Real or Complex interval centered on 0 with radius err.
INPUT:
err(real) – a positive real number, the radius of the intervalis_real(boolean) – if True, returns a real interval in RIF, else a complex interval in CIF
OUTPUT:
An element of RIF or CIF (as specified), centered on 0, with given radius.
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import eps sage: eps(0.01, True) 0.0? sage: eps(0.01, False) 0.0? + 0.0?*I
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sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height.inf_max_abs(f, g, D)¶ Returns
.INPUT:
f,g(polynomials) – real univariate polynomaialsD(UnionOfIntervals) – a subset of
OUTPUT:
A real number approximating the value of
.ALGORITHM:
The extreme values must occur at an endpoint of a subinterval of
or at a point where one of
,
,
,
,
is
zero.EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import inf_max_abs, UnionOfIntervals sage: x = polygen(RR) sage: f = (x-10)^4+1 sage: g = 2*x^3+100 sage: inf_max_abs(f,g,UnionOfIntervals([1,2,3,4,5,6])) 425.638201706391 sage: r0 = (f-g).roots()[0][0] sage: r0 5.46053402234697 sage: max(abs(f(r0)),abs(g(r0))) 425.638201706391
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sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height.min_on_disk(f, tol, max_iter=10000)¶ Returns the minimum of a real-valued complex function on a square.
INPUT:
f– a function from CIF to RIFtol(real) – a positive real numbermax_iter(integer, default 10000) – a positive integer bounding the number of iterations to be used
OUTPUT:
A 2-tuple
, where
and
is a CIF element
contained in the disk
, at which
takes its minumum
value.EXAMPLE:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import min_on_disk sage: f = lambda x: (x^2+100).abs() sage: s, t = min_on_disk(f, 0.0001) sage: s, f(s), t (0.01? + 1.00?*I, 99.01?, 99.0000000000000)
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sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height.nonneg_region(f)¶ Returns the UnionOfIntervals representing the region where
fis non-negative.INPUT:
f(polynomial) – a univariate polynomial over
.
OUTPUT:
A UnionOfIntervals representing the set
.EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import nonneg_region sage: x = polygen(RR) sage: nonneg_region(x^2-1) ([-Infinity, -1.00000000000000] U [1.00000000000000, +Infinity]) sage: nonneg_region(1-x^2) ([-1.00000000000000, 1.00000000000000]) sage: nonneg_region(1-x^3) ([-Infinity, 1.00000000000000]) sage: nonneg_region(x^3-1) ([1.00000000000000, +Infinity]) sage: nonneg_region((x-1)*(x-2)) ([-Infinity, 1.00000000000000] U [2.00000000000000, +Infinity]) sage: nonneg_region(-(x-1)*(x-2)) ([1.00000000000000, 2.00000000000000]) sage: nonneg_region((x-1)*(x-2)*(x-3)) ([1.00000000000000, 2.00000000000000] U [3.00000000000000, +Infinity]) sage: nonneg_region(-(x-1)*(x-2)*(x-3)) ([-Infinity, 1.00000000000000] U [2.00000000000000, 3.00000000000000]) sage: nonneg_region(x^4+1) ([-Infinity, +Infinity]) sage: nonneg_region(-x^4-1) ()
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sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height.rat_term_CIF(z, try_strict=True)¶ Compute the value of
in CIF, where
.INPUT:
z(complex) – a CIF elementtry_strict(bool) – flag
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.elliptic_curves.height import rat_term_CIF sage: z = CIF(0.5,0.2) sage: rat_term_CIF(z) -0.172467461182437? + 0.?e-16*I sage: rat_term_CIF(z, False) -0.172467461182437? + 0.?e-16*I
