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Tate pairing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, Tate pairing is any of several closely related bilinear pairings involving elliptic curves or abelian varieties, usually over local or finite fields, based on the Tate duality pairings introduced by Tate (1958, 1963) and extended by Lichtenbaum (1969). Rück & Frey (1994) applied the Tate pairing over finite fields to cryptography.

See also

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References

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  • Lichtenbaum, Stephen (1969), "Duality theorems for curves over p-adic fields", Inventiones Mathematicae, 7 (2): 120–136, Bibcode:1969InMat...7..120L, doi:10.1007/BF01389795, ISSN 0020-9910, MR 0242831, S2CID 122239828
  • Rück, Hans-Georg; Frey, Gerhard (1994), "A remark concerning m-divisibility and the discrete logarithm in the divisor class group of curves", Mathematics of Computation, 62 (206): 865–874, doi:10.2307/2153546, ISSN 0025-5718, JSTOR 2153546, MR 1218343
  • Tate, John (1958), WC-groups over p-adic fields, Séminaire Bourbaki; 10e année: 1957/1958, vol. 13, Paris: Secrétariat Mathématique, MR 0105420
  • Tate, John (1963), "Duality theorems in Galois cohomology over number fields", Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians (Stockholm, 1962), Djursholm: Inst. Mittag-Leffler, pp. 288–295, MR 0175892, archived from the original on 2011-07-17