Are all elliptic curves from $w^3 = \text{cubic}(z)$ isomorphic?

334 Views Asked by At

I've been playing around with Riemann surfaces of cubics, and it seems to me that all surfaces obtained as coverings of the Riemann sphere from equations of the form $w^3 = q(z)$, where $q(z)$ is a cubic with three distinct roots, must be isomorphic.

Argument: we have a critical point of multiplicity 3 at each of the roots of $q(z)$. Monodromy around a small counterclockwise circuit about any of these points multiplies $w$ by the same cube root of unity ($\neq 1$). So monodromy around a circuit enclosing all three roots of $q(z)$ leaves $w$ unchanged, so no branch points over $\infty$.

Now we can move the three roots of $q(z)$ to any other positions using a Möbius transformation, so by the previous paragraph, we should be able to establish an analytic isomorphism between the surfaces via continuation.

Is this correct? If so, what is the common J-invariant? And since we can choose $q(z)=z^3-1$, this means that all these curves have CM, right?

References appreciated.

1

There are 1 best solutions below

2
On BEST ANSWER

This is a great observation!

Let $E/\mathbb{Q}$ be a curve given by a model $v^3=q(u)$, for some cubic polynomial $q\in\mathbb{Q}[u]$, and assume that the projective closure of this model, i.e., $V^3=W^3q(U/W)$, is smooth, and it has a rational point $P$. Then, $(E,P)$ is an elliptic curve defined over $\mathbb{Q}$. Moreover, $E$ admits an endomorphism $$[\rho] : E\to E$$ that sends $[U,V,W]$ to $[U,\rho V,W]$, where $\rho$ is a primitive third root of unity. Hence, $\operatorname{End}(E)$ is strictly larger than $\mathbb{Z}$, and so $E/\mathbb{Q}$ is a curve with complex multiplication. Further, $$\operatorname{End}(E)\otimes \mathbb{Q} \cong \mathbb{Q}(\rho),$$ and therefore the complex multiplication is by an order in the ring of integers of the quadratic imaginary field $\mathbb{Q}(\rho)=\mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{-3})$. It is a fact that follows from the theory of complex multiplication that all the elliptic curves with complex multiplication by $\mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{-3})$ have $j$-invariant equal to $0$. It follows that all the elliptic curves of the form $V^3=W^3q(U/W)$ are isomorphic over $\mathbb{C}$ (as the $j$-invariant classifies elliptic curves up to isomorphism over $\mathbb{C}$).

For example, consider $E: V^3=U^3-W^3$ (or $v^3=u^3-1$ in affine coordinates), with $P=[1,1,0]$. Then, $E$ is isomorphic to $$E': Y^2Z-9YZ^2=X^3-27Z^3$$ or $y^2 - 9y = x^3 - 27$ in affine coordinates, via the map $\phi:E'\to E$ that sends $$\phi([X,Y,Z])=(Y-9Z,Y,3X),$$ which sends $[0,1,0]$ to $[1,1,0]$. The curve $E'$ is now easily checked to have $j=0$ via the usual formulas, and therefore it has complex multiplication by $\mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{-3})$.