Relations de d\'ependance et intersections exceptionnelles (Dependence relations and exceptional intersections)
Abstract
This text is devoted to the following result, stemming out works of Bombieri, Masser, Zannier, and Maurin: Let X be an complex algebraic (projective, connected) curve and let us consider n rational functions f1,...,fn on X which are multiplicatively independent. The points x of X where their values f1(x),...,fn(x) satisfy at least two independent multiplicative dependence relations form a finite set. We discuss the conjectural generalizations of this theorem (Bombieri, Masser, Zannier; Zilber; Pink) concerning the finiteness of points of a d-dimensional subvariety X of a semiabelian variety G which belong to an algebraic subgroup of codimension >d of G, their relations with theorems of Mordell-Lang or Manin-Mumford type, and, in the arithmetic case, recent results in this direction (Habegger; R\'emond; Viada). ----- Ce texte est consacr\'e au r\'esultat suivant, issus des travaux de Bombieri, Masser, Zannier et Maurin: Soit X une courbe alg\'ebrique (projective, connexe) complexe et consid\'erons n fonctions rationnelles f1,...,fn multiplicativement ind\'ependantes sur X. Les points x de X o\`u leurs valeurs f1(x),...,fn(x) v\'erifient au moins deux relations de d\'ependance multiplicative ind\'ependantes forment un ensemble fini. Nous discutons les g\'en\'eralisations conjecturales de ce th\'eor\`eme (Bombieri, Masser, Zannier; Zilber; Pink) concernant la finitude des points d'une sous-vari\'et\'e X de dimension d d'une vari\'et\'e semi-ab\'elienne G qui appartiennent \`a un sous-groupe alg\'ebrique de codimension >d dans G, leurs relations avec les th\'eor\`emes de type Mordell-Lang ou Manin-Mumford et, dans le cas arithm\'etique, les r\'esultats r\'ecents dans cette direction (Habegger; R\'emond; Viada).
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.