| ‘Amazing’ Math Bridge Extended Beyond Fermat’s Last Theorem By Erica Klarreich
 
 April 6, 2020
 
 
 
 
 quantamagazine.org
  
 Robert  Langlands, who conjectured the influential Langlands correspondence  about 50 years ago, giving a talk at the Institute for Advanced Study in  Princeton, New Jersey, in 2016.
 
 Dan Komoda/Institute for Advanced Study
 
 Namely,  for both Diophantine equations and automorphic forms, there’s a natural  way to generate an infinite sequence of numbers. For a Diophantine  equation, you can count how many solutions the equation has in each  clock-style arithmetic system (for example, in the usual 12-hour clock,  10 + 4 = 2). And for the kind of automorphic form that appears in the  Langlands correspondence, you can compute an infinite list of numbers  analogous to quantum energy levels.
 
 If you include only the clock arithmetics that have a prime number of  hours, Langlands conjectured that these two number sequences match up  in an astonishingly broad array of circumstances. In other words, given  an automorphic form, its energy levels govern the clock sequence of some  Diophantine equation, and vice versa.
 
 This connection is “weirder than telepathy,” Emerton said. “How these  two sides communicate with each other … for me it seems incredible and  amazing, even though I have been studying it for over 20 years.”
 
 In the 1950s and 1960s, mathematicians figured out the beginnings of  this bridge in one direction: how to go from certain automorphic forms  to elliptic curves with coefficients that are rational numbers (ratios  of whole numbers). Then in the 1990s, Wiles, with contributions from  Taylor,  figured out  the opposite direction  for a certain family of elliptic curves. Their result gave an instant  proof of Fermat’s Last Theorem, since mathematicians had already shown  that if Fermat’s Last Theorem were false, at least one of those elliptic  curves would not have a matching automorphic form.
 
 Fermat’s Last Theorem was far from the only discovery to emerge from  the construction of this bridge. Mathematicians have used it, for  instance, to  prove the Sato-Tate conjecture,  a decades-old problem about the statistical distribution of the number  of clock solutions to an elliptic curve, as well as a conjecture about  the energy levels of automorphic forms that originated with the  legendary early 20th-century mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan.
 
 After Wiles and Taylor published their findings, it became clear that  their method still had some juice. Soon mathematicians figured out how  to  extend the method to all elliptic curves with rational coefficients. More recently, mathematicians  figured out how to cover coefficients that include simple irrational numbers, such as 3 + $latex \sqrt{2}$.
 
 What they couldn’t do, however, was extend the Taylor-Wiles method to  elliptic curves whose coefficients include complex numbers such as i (the square root of -1) or 3 + i or $latex \sqrt{2}$i. Nor  could they handle Diophantine equations with exponents much higher than  those in elliptic curves. Equations where the highest exponent on the  right-hand side is 4 instead of 3 come along for free with the  Taylor-Wiles method, but as soon as the exponent rises to 5, the method  no longer works.
 
 Mathematicians gradually realized that for these two next natural  extensions of the Langlands bridge, it wasn’t simply a matter of finding  some small adjustment to the Taylor-Wiles method. Instead, there seemed  to be a fundamental obstruction.
 
 They’re “the next examples you’d think of,” Gee said. “But you’re told, ‘No, these things are hopelessly out of reach.’”
 
 The problem was that the Taylor-Wiles method finds the matching  automorphic form for a Diophantine equation by successively  approximating it with other automorphic forms. But in the situations  where the equation’s coefficients include complex numbers or the  exponent is 5 or higher, automorphic forms become exceedingly rare — so  rare that a given automorphic form will usually have no nearby  automorphic forms to use for approximation purposes.
 
 In Wiles’ setting, the automorphic form you’re seeking “is like a  needle in a haystack, but the haystack exists,” Emerton said. “And it’s  almost as if it’s like a haystack of iron filings, and you’re putting in  this magnet so it lines them up to point to your needle.”
 
 But when it comes to complex-number coefficients or higher exponents, he said, “it’s like a needle in a vacuum.”
 
 Going to the Moon  Many of today’s number theorists came of age in the era of Wiles’  proof. “It was the only piece of mathematics I ever saw on the front  page of a newspaper,” recalled Gee, who was 13 at the time. “For many  people, it’s something that seemed exciting, that they wanted to  understand, and then they ended up working in this area because of  that.”
 
 So when in 2012, two mathematicians —  Frank Calegari of the University of Chicago and David Geraghty (now a research scientist at Facebook) —  proposed a way  to overcome the obstruction to extending the Taylor-Wiles method, their  idea sent ripples of excitement through the new generation of number  theorists.
 
 Their work showed that “this fundamental obstruction to going any  further is not really an obstruction at all,” Gee said. Instead, he  said, the seeming limitations of the Taylor-Wiles method are telling you  “that in fact you’ve only got the shadow of the actual, more general  method that [Calegari and Geraghty] introduced.”
 
 In the cases where the obstruction crops up, the automorphic forms  live on higher-dimensional tilings than the two-dimensional Escher-style  tilings Wiles studied. In these higher-dimensional worlds, automorphic  forms are inconveniently rare. But on the plus side, higher-dimensional  tilings often have a much richer structure than two-dimensional tilings  do. Calegari and Geraghty’s insight was to tap into this rich structure  to make up for the shortage of automorphic forms.
 
 More specifically, whenever you have an automorphic form, you can use  its “coloring” of the tiling as a sort of measuring tool that can  calculate the average color on any chunk of the tiling you choose. In  the two-dimensional setting, automorphic forms are essentially the only  such measuring tools available. But for higher-dimensional tilings, new  measuring tools crop up called torsion classes, which assign to each  chunk of the tiling not an average color but a number from a clock  arithmetic. There’s an abundance of these torsion classes.
 
 For some Diophantine equations, Calegari and Geraghty proposed, it  might be possible to find the matching automorphic form by approximating  it not with other automorphic forms but with torsion classes. “The  insight they had was fantastic,” Caraiani said.
 
 Calegari and Geraghty provided the blueprint for a much broader  bridge from Diophantine equations to automorphic forms than the one  Wiles and Taylor built. Yet their idea was far from a complete bridge.  For it to work, mathematicians would first have to prove three major  conjectures. It was, Calegari said, as if his paper with Geraghty  explained how you could get to the moon — provided someone would  obligingly whip up a spaceship, rocket fuel and spacesuits. The three  conjectures “were completely beyond us,” Calegari said.
 
 In particular, Calegari and Geraghty’s method required that there  already be a bridge going in the other direction, from automorphic forms  to the Diophantine equations side. And that bridge would have to  transport not just automorphic forms but also torsion classes. “I think a  lot of people thought this was a hopeless problem when Calegari and  Geraghty first outlined their program,” said Taylor, who is now at  Stanford University.
 
 Yet less than a year after Calegari and Geraghty posted their paper online,  Peter Scholze — a mathematician at the University of Bonn who went on to  win the Fields Medal, mathematics’ highest honor — astonished number theorists by  figuring out  how to go from torsion classes to the Diophantine equations side in the  case of elliptic curves whose coefficients are simple complex numbers  such as 3 + 2i or 4 - $latex \sqrt{5}$i. “He’s done a lot of exciting things, but that’s perhaps his most exciting achievement,” Taylor said.
 
 Scholze had proved the first of Calegari and Geraghty’s three conjectures. And a pair of  subsequent  papers  by Scholze and Caraiani came close to proving the second conjecture,  which involves showing that Scholze’s bridge has the right properties.
 
 It started to feel as if the program was within reach, so in the fall  of 2016, to try to make further progress, Caraiani and Taylor organized  what Calegari called a “secret”  workshop at the Institute for Advanced Study. “We took over the lecture room — no one else was allowed in,” Calegari said.
 
 After a couple of days of expository talks, the workshop participants  started realizing how to both polish off the second conjecture and  sidestep the third conjecture. “Maybe within a day of having actually  stated all the problems, they were all solved,” said Gee, another  participant.
 
 The participants spent the rest of the week elaborating various  aspects of the proof, and over the next two years they wrote up their  findings into a  10-author paper —  an almost unheard-of number of authors for a number theory paper. Their  paper essentially establishes the Langlands bridge for elliptic curves  with coefficients drawn from any number system made up of rational  numbers plus simple irrational and complex numbers.
 
 “The plan in advance [of the workshop] was just to see how close one  could get to proving things,” Gee said. “I don’t think anyone really  expected to prove the result.”
 
 Extending the Bridge Meanwhile, a parallel story was unfolding for extending the bridge  beyond elliptic curves. Calegari and Gee had been working with George  Boxer (now at the École Normale Supérieure in Lyon, France) to tackle  the case where the highest exponent in the Diophantine equation is 5 or 6  (instead of 3 or 4, the cases that were already known). But the three  mathematicians were stuck on a key part of their argument.
 
 Then, the very weekend after the “secret” workshop,  Vincent Pilloni of the École Normale Supérieure put out a  paper that  showed how to circumvent that very obstacle. “We have to stop what  we’re doing now and work with Pilloni!” the other three researchers  immediately told each other, according to Calegari.
 
 Within a few weeks, the four mathematicians had solved this problem  too, though it took a couple of years and nearly 300 pages for them to  fully flesh out their ideas.  Their paper and the 10-author paper were both posted online in late December 2018, within four days of each other.
 
 
 
 
  
 Soon  after the secret workshop at the IAS, Frank Calegari (left), Toby Gee  (center) and Vincent Pilloni, working with George Boxer (not pictured),  found a way to extend the Langlands bridge beyond elliptic curves.
 
 Frank Calegari, University of Chicago; Courtesy of Toby Gee; Arnold Nipoli
 
 “I  think they’re pretty huge,” Emerton said of the two papers. Those  papers and the preceding building blocks are all “state of the art,” he  said.
 
 While these two papers essentially prove that the mysterious  telepathy between Diophantine equations and automorphic forms carries  over to these new settings, there’s one caveat: They don’t quite build a  perfect bridge between the two sides. Instead, both papers establish  “potential automorphy.” This means that each Diophantine equation has a  matching automorphic form, but we don’t know for sure that the  automorphic form lives in the patch of its continent that mathematicians  would expect. But potential automorphy is enough for many applications —  for instance, the Sato-Tate conjecture about the statistics of clock  solutions to Diophantine equations, which the 10-author paper succeeded  in proving in much broader contexts than before.
 
 And mathematicians are already starting to figure out how to improve  on these potential automorphy results. In October, for instance, three  mathematicians —  Patrick Allen of the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign,  Chandrashekhar Khare of the University of California, Los Angeles and  Jack Thorne  of the University of Cambridge — proved that a substantial proportion  of the elliptic curves studied in the 10-author paper do have bridges  that land in exactly the right place.
 
 Bridges with this higher level of precision may eventually allow  mathematicians to prove a host of new theorems, including a century-old  generalization of Fermat’s Last Theorem. This conjectures that the  equation at the heart of the theorem continues to have no solutions even  when x, y and z are drawn not just from whole numbers but from combinations of whole numbers and the imaginary number i.
 
 The two papers carrying out the Calegari-Geraghty program form an important proof of principle, said  Michael Harris of Columbia University. They’re “a demonstration that the method does have wide scope,” he said.
 
 While the new papers connect much wider regions of the two Langlands  continents than before, they still leave vast territories uncharted. On  the Diophantine equations side, there are still all the equations with  exponents higher than 6, as well as equations with more than two  variables. On the other side are automorphic forms that live on more  complicated symmetric spaces than the ones that have been studied so  far.
 
 “These papers, right now, are kind of the pinnacle of achievement,”  Emerton said. But “at some point, they will just be looked back at as  one more step on the way.”
 
 Langlands himself never considered torsion when he thought about  automorphic forms, so one challenge for mathematicians is to come up  with a unifying vision of these different threads. “The envelope is  being expanded,” Taylor said. “We’ve to some degree left the path laid  out by Langlands, and we don’t quite know where we’re going.”
 
 
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