[1] https://www.maa.org/sites/default/files/pdf/upload_library/2...
[2] https://www.maa.org/sites/default/files/pdf/upload_library/2...
I'm not being facetious, some books are much less Theorem Lemma Proof (and nothing else) than others.
I'd like to think that I'm pretty good with elliptic curves, given that I explain them to other folks. However, this tweet-thread still showed me things that I didn't know about the history of maths. Some of these tweets directly led to minutes (hours) on Wikipedia and chasing down various PDFs to read.
Honestly, you could stand to be less self-aggrandizing. It's okay if you don't get every joke immediately; you don't have to know every bit of historical background.
Elliptic curves aren't interesting because of the answers that we have. They're interesting because of the questions. One open question [0] is on the Millennium Prize list. Another open question is almost never written down because it's so simple; "why 1728?" [1] Coming to understand these questions is the goal of our entire process, so there's not much that I can really do other than to ask you to join the process of exploration.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birch_and_Swinnerton-Dyer_conj...
To answer your specific question: "Elliptic curves have almost nothing to do with ellipses at all. Why then are they called elliptic curves? The answer lies in the word almost. There is a connection between ellipses and elliptic curves, but it’s not at all obvious and is the result of a connected but distinctly nonlinear sequence of mathematical events."
Here's a better explanation about this cryptic tweet:
Backdoors in NIST elliptic curves
Of particular concern are the NIST standard elliptic curves. There is a concern that these were some-how “cooked” to facilitate an NSA backdoor into elliptic curve cryptography. The suspicion is that while the vast majority of elliptic curves are secure, these ones were deliberately chosen as having a mathematical weakness known only to the NSA.
Lisper here says that he wished for a serious writeup, I agree — right now this is a set of in-jokes; it would make a fantastic Quanta Magazine article, or two, or n..
NSA: Antoine Joux > Quantum Computers, Like him!
Crown Sterling: We sell CADO-NFS™ for breaking ECDSA of Nakamoto's funny money.
To be continued ...
A great mathematical mind -- meets a great ability to summarize the works of previous mathematicians (not easy to do!)!
Worth re-reading in the future!