Mordell–Weil theorem
| Field | Number theory |
|---|---|
| Conjectured by | Henri Poincaré |
| Conjectured in | 1901 |
| First proof by | André Weil |
| First proof in | 1929 |
| Generalizations | Faltings's theorem Bombieri–Lang conjecture Mordell–Lang conjecture |
In mathematics, the Mordell–Weil theorem states that for an abelian variety over a number field , the group of K-rational points of is a finitely-generated abelian group, called the Mordell–Weil group. The case with an elliptic curve and the field of rational numbers is Mordell's theorem, answering a question apparently posed by Henri Poincaré around 1901; it was proved by Louis Mordell in 1922. It is a foundational theorem of Diophantine geometry and the arithmetic of abelian varieties.