Graded Rings of Modular Forms¶
This module contains functions to find generators for the graded ring of modular forms of given level.
AUTHORS:
William Stein (2007-08-24): first version
- class sage.modular.modform.find_generators.ModularFormsRing(group, base_ring=Rational Field)¶
Bases:
sage.structure.sage_object.SageObject
The ring of modular forms (of weights 0 or at least 2) for a congruence subgroup of \({\rm SL}_2(\ZZ)\), with coefficients in a specified base ring.
INPUT:
group
– a congruence subgroup of \({\rm SL}_2(\ZZ)\), or a positive integer \(N\) (interpreted as \(\Gamma_0(N)\))base_ring
(ring, default: \(\QQ\)) – a base ring, which should be \(\QQ\), \(\ZZ\), or the integers mod \(p\) for some prime \(p\).
EXAMPLES:
sage: ModularFormsRing(Gamma1(13)) Ring of modular forms for Congruence Subgroup Gamma1(13) with coefficients in Rational Field sage: m = ModularFormsRing(4); m Ring of modular forms for Congruence Subgroup Gamma0(4) with coefficients in Rational Field sage: m.modular_forms_of_weight(2) Modular Forms space of dimension 2 for Congruence Subgroup Gamma0(4) of weight 2 over Rational Field sage: m.modular_forms_of_weight(10) Modular Forms space of dimension 6 for Congruence Subgroup Gamma0(4) of weight 10 over Rational Field sage: m == loads(dumps(m)) True sage: m.generators() [(2, 1 + 24*q^2 + 24*q^4 + 96*q^6 + 24*q^8 + O(q^10)), (2, q + 4*q^3 + 6*q^5 + 8*q^7 + 13*q^9 + O(q^10))] sage: m.q_expansion_basis(2,10) [1 + 24*q^2 + 24*q^4 + 96*q^6 + 24*q^8 + O(q^10), q + 4*q^3 + 6*q^5 + 8*q^7 + 13*q^9 + O(q^10)] sage: m.q_expansion_basis(3,10) [] sage: m.q_expansion_basis(10,10) [1 + 10560*q^6 + 3960*q^8 + O(q^10), q - 8056*q^7 - 30855*q^9 + O(q^10), q^2 - 796*q^6 - 8192*q^8 + O(q^10), q^3 + 66*q^7 + 832*q^9 + O(q^10), q^4 + 40*q^6 + 528*q^8 + O(q^10), q^5 + 20*q^7 + 190*q^9 + O(q^10)]
- base_ring()¶
Return the coefficient ring of this modular forms ring.
EXAMPLES:
sage: ModularFormsRing(Gamma1(13)).base_ring() Rational Field sage: ModularFormsRing(Gamma1(13), base_ring = ZZ).base_ring() Integer Ring
- cuspidal_ideal_generators(maxweight=8, prec=None)¶
Calculate generators for the ideal of cuspidal forms in this ring, as a module over the whole ring.
EXAMPLES:
sage: ModularFormsRing(Gamma0(3)).cuspidal_ideal_generators(maxweight=12) [(6, q - 6*q^2 + 9*q^3 + 4*q^4 + O(q^5), q - 6*q^2 + 9*q^3 + 4*q^4 + 6*q^5 + O(q^6))] sage: [k for k,f,F in ModularFormsRing(13, base_ring=ZZ).cuspidal_ideal_generators(maxweight=14)] [4, 4, 4, 6, 6, 12]
- cuspidal_submodule_q_expansion_basis(weight, prec=None)¶
Calculate a basis of \(q\)-expansions for the space of cusp forms of weight
weight
for this group.INPUT:
weight
(integer) – the weightprec
(integer or None) – precision of \(q\)-expansions to return
ALGORITHM: Uses the method
cuspidal_ideal_generators()
to calculate generators of the ideal of cusp forms inside this ring. Then multiply these up to weightweight
using the generators of the whole modular form space returned byq_expansion_basis()
.EXAMPLES:
sage: R = ModularFormsRing(Gamma0(3)) sage: R.cuspidal_submodule_q_expansion_basis(20) [q - 8532*q^6 - 88442*q^7 + O(q^8), q^2 + 207*q^6 + 24516*q^7 + O(q^8), q^3 + 456*q^6 + O(q^8), q^4 - 135*q^6 - 926*q^7 + O(q^8), q^5 + 18*q^6 + 135*q^7 + O(q^8)]
We compute a basis of a space of very large weight, quickly (using this module) and slowly (using modular symbols), and verify that the answers are the same.
sage: A = R.cuspidal_submodule_q_expansion_basis(80, prec=30) # long time (1s on sage.math, 2013) sage: B = R.modular_forms_of_weight(80).cuspidal_submodule().q_expansion_basis(prec=30) # long time (19s on sage.math, 2013) sage: A == B # long time True
- gen_forms(maxweight=8, start_gens=[], start_weight=2)¶
This function calculates a list of modular forms generating this ring (as an algebra over the appropriate base ring). It differs from
generators()
only in that it returns Sage modular form objects, rather than bare \(q\)-expansions; and if the base ring is a finite field, the modular forms returned will be forms in characteristic 0 with integral \(q\)-expansions whose reductions modulo \(p\) generate the ring of modular forms mod \(p\).INPUT:
maxweight
(integer, default: 8) – calculate forms generating all forms up to this weight.start_gens
(list, default:[]
) – a list of modular forms. If this list is nonempty, we find a minimal generating set containing these forms.start_weight
(integer, default: 2) – calculate the graded subalgebra of forms of weight at leaststart_weight
.
Note
If called with the default values of
start_gens
(an empty list) andstart_weight
(2), the values will be cached for re-use on subsequent calls to this function. (This cache is shared withgenerators()
). If called with non-default values for these parameters, caching will be disabled.EXAMPLES:
sage: A = ModularFormsRing(Gamma0(11), Zmod(5)).gen_forms(); A [1 + 12*q^2 + 12*q^3 + 12*q^4 + 12*q^5 + O(q^6), q - 2*q^2 - q^3 + 2*q^4 + q^5 + O(q^6), q - 9*q^4 - 10*q^5 + O(q^6)] sage: A[0].parent() Modular Forms space of dimension 2 for Congruence Subgroup Gamma0(11) of weight 2 over Rational Field
- generators(maxweight=8, prec=10, start_gens=[], start_weight=2)¶
If \(R\) is the base ring of self, then this function calculates a set of modular forms which generate the \(R\)-algebra of all modular forms of weight up to
maxweight
with coefficients in \(R\).INPUT:
maxweight
(integer, default: 8) – check up to this weight for generatorsprec
(integer, default: 10) – return \(q\)-expansions to this precisionstart_gens
(list, default:[]
) – list of pairs \((k, f)\), or triples \((k, f, F)\), where:\(k\) is an integer,
\(f\) is the \(q\)-expansion of a modular form of weight \(k\), as a power series over the base ring of self,
\(F\) (if provided) is a modular form object corresponding to F.
If this list is nonempty, we find a minimal generating set containing these forms. If \(F\) is not supplied, then \(f\) needs to have sufficiently large precision (an error will be raised if this is not the case); otherwise, more terms will be calculated from the modular form object \(F\).
start_weight
(integer, default: 2) – calculate the graded subalgebra of forms of weight at leaststart_weight
.
OUTPUT:
a list of pairs (k, f), where f is the q-expansion to precision
prec
of a modular form of weight k.See also
gen_forms()
, which does exactly the same thing, but returns Sage modular form objects rather than bare power series, and keeps track of a lifting to characteristic 0 when the base ring is a finite field.Note
If called with the default values of
start_gens
(an empty list) andstart_weight
(2), the values will be cached for re-use on subsequent calls to this function. (This cache is shared withgen_forms()
). If called with non-default values for these parameters, caching will be disabled.EXAMPLES:
sage: ModularFormsRing(SL2Z).generators() [(4, 1 + 240*q + 2160*q^2 + 6720*q^3 + 17520*q^4 + 30240*q^5 + 60480*q^6 + 82560*q^7 + 140400*q^8 + 181680*q^9 + O(q^10)), (6, 1 - 504*q - 16632*q^2 - 122976*q^3 - 532728*q^4 - 1575504*q^5 - 4058208*q^6 - 8471232*q^7 - 17047800*q^8 - 29883672*q^9 + O(q^10))] sage: s = ModularFormsRing(SL2Z).generators(maxweight=5, prec=3); s [(4, 1 + 240*q + 2160*q^2 + O(q^3))] sage: s[0][1].parent() Power Series Ring in q over Rational Field sage: ModularFormsRing(1).generators(prec=4) [(4, 1 + 240*q + 2160*q^2 + 6720*q^3 + O(q^4)), (6, 1 - 504*q - 16632*q^2 - 122976*q^3 + O(q^4))] sage: ModularFormsRing(2).generators(prec=12) [(2, 1 + 24*q + 24*q^2 + 96*q^3 + 24*q^4 + 144*q^5 + 96*q^6 + 192*q^7 + 24*q^8 + 312*q^9 + 144*q^10 + 288*q^11 + O(q^12)), (4, 1 + 240*q^2 + 2160*q^4 + 6720*q^6 + 17520*q^8 + 30240*q^10 + O(q^12))] sage: ModularFormsRing(4).generators(maxweight=2, prec=20) [(2, 1 + 24*q^2 + 24*q^4 + 96*q^6 + 24*q^8 + 144*q^10 + 96*q^12 + 192*q^14 + 24*q^16 + 312*q^18 + O(q^20)), (2, q + 4*q^3 + 6*q^5 + 8*q^7 + 13*q^9 + 12*q^11 + 14*q^13 + 24*q^15 + 18*q^17 + 20*q^19 + O(q^20))]
Here we see that for
\Gamma_0(11)
taking a basis of forms in weights 2 and 4 is enough to generate everything up to weight 12 (and probably everything else).:sage: v = ModularFormsRing(11).generators(maxweight=12) sage: len(v) 3 sage: [k for k, _ in v] [2, 2, 4] sage: dimension_modular_forms(11,2) 2 sage: dimension_modular_forms(11,4) 4
For congruence subgroups not containing -1, we miss out some forms since we can’t calculate weight 1 forms at present, but we can still find generators for the ring of forms of weight \(\ge 2\):
sage: ModularFormsRing(Gamma1(4)).generators(prec=10, maxweight=10) [(2, 1 + 24*q^2 + 24*q^4 + 96*q^6 + 24*q^8 + O(q^10)), (2, q + 4*q^3 + 6*q^5 + 8*q^7 + 13*q^9 + O(q^10)), (3, 1 + 12*q^2 + 64*q^3 + 60*q^4 + 160*q^6 + 384*q^7 + 252*q^8 + O(q^10)), (3, q + 4*q^2 + 8*q^3 + 16*q^4 + 26*q^5 + 32*q^6 + 48*q^7 + 64*q^8 + 73*q^9 + O(q^10))]
Using different base rings will change the generators:
sage: ModularFormsRing(Gamma0(13)).generators(maxweight=12, prec=4) [(2, 1 + 2*q + 6*q^2 + 8*q^3 + O(q^4)), (4, 1 + O(q^4)), (4, q + O(q^4)), (4, q^2 + O(q^4)), (4, q^3 + O(q^4)), (6, 1 + O(q^4)), (6, q + O(q^4))] sage: ModularFormsRing(Gamma0(13),base_ring=ZZ).generators(maxweight=12, prec=4) [(2, 1 + 2*q + 6*q^2 + 8*q^3 + O(q^4)), (4, q + 4*q^2 + 10*q^3 + O(q^4)), (4, 2*q^2 + 5*q^3 + O(q^4)), (4, q^2 + O(q^4)), (4, -2*q^3 + O(q^4)), (6, O(q^4)), (6, O(q^4)), (12, O(q^4))] sage: [k for k,f in ModularFormsRing(1, QQ).generators(maxweight=12)] [4, 6] sage: [k for k,f in ModularFormsRing(1, ZZ).generators(maxweight=12)] [4, 6, 12] sage: [k for k,f in ModularFormsRing(1, Zmod(5)).generators(maxweight=12)] [4, 6] sage: [k for k,f in ModularFormsRing(1, Zmod(2)).generators(maxweight=12)] [4, 6, 12]
An example where
start_gens
are specified:sage: M = ModularForms(11, 2); f = (M.0 + M.1).qexp(8) sage: ModularFormsRing(11).generators(start_gens = [(2, f)]) Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: Requested precision cannot be higher than precision of approximate starting generators! sage: f = (M.0 + M.1).qexp(10); f 1 + 17/5*q + 26/5*q^2 + 43/5*q^3 + 94/5*q^4 + 77/5*q^5 + 154/5*q^6 + 86/5*q^7 + 36*q^8 + 146/5*q^9 + O(q^10) sage: ModularFormsRing(11).generators(start_gens = [(2, f)]) [(2, 1 + 17/5*q + 26/5*q^2 + 43/5*q^3 + 94/5*q^4 + 77/5*q^5 + 154/5*q^6 + 86/5*q^7 + 36*q^8 + 146/5*q^9 + O(q^10)), (2, 1 + 12*q^2 + 12*q^3 + 12*q^4 + 12*q^5 + 24*q^6 + 24*q^7 + 36*q^8 + 36*q^9 + O(q^10)), (4, 1 + O(q^10))]
- group()¶
Return the congruence subgroup for which this is the ring of modular forms.
EXAMPLES:
sage: R = ModularFormsRing(Gamma1(13)) sage: R.group() is Gamma1(13) True
- modular_forms_of_weight(weight)¶
Return the space of modular forms on this group of the given weight.
EXAMPLES:
sage: R = ModularFormsRing(13) sage: R.modular_forms_of_weight(10) Modular Forms space of dimension 11 for Congruence Subgroup Gamma0(13) of weight 10 over Rational Field sage: ModularFormsRing(Gamma1(13)).modular_forms_of_weight(3) Modular Forms space of dimension 20 for Congruence Subgroup Gamma1(13) of weight 3 over Rational Field
- q_expansion_basis(weight, prec=None, use_random=True)¶
Calculate a basis of q-expansions for the space of modular forms of the given weight for this group, calculated using the ring generators given by
find_generators
.INPUT:
weight
(integer) – the weightprec
(integer orNone
, default:None
) – power series precision. IfNone
, the precision defaults to the Sturm bound for the requested level and weight.use_random
(boolean, default: True) – whether or not to use a randomized algorithm when building up the space of forms at the given weight from known generators of small weight.
EXAMPLES:
sage: m = ModularFormsRing(Gamma0(4)) sage: m.q_expansion_basis(2,10) [1 + 24*q^2 + 24*q^4 + 96*q^6 + 24*q^8 + O(q^10), q + 4*q^3 + 6*q^5 + 8*q^7 + 13*q^9 + O(q^10)] sage: m.q_expansion_basis(3,10) [] sage: X = ModularFormsRing(SL2Z) sage: X.q_expansion_basis(12, 10) [1 + 196560*q^2 + 16773120*q^3 + 398034000*q^4 + 4629381120*q^5 + 34417656000*q^6 + 187489935360*q^7 + 814879774800*q^8 + 2975551488000*q^9 + O(q^10), q - 24*q^2 + 252*q^3 - 1472*q^4 + 4830*q^5 - 6048*q^6 - 16744*q^7 + 84480*q^8 - 113643*q^9 + O(q^10)]
We calculate a basis of a massive modular forms space, in two ways. Using this module is about twice as fast as Sage’s generic code.
sage: A = ModularFormsRing(11).q_expansion_basis(30, prec=40) # long time (5s) sage: B = ModularForms(Gamma0(11), 30).q_echelon_basis(prec=40) # long time (9s) sage: A == B # long time True
Check that absurdly small values of
prec
don’t mess things up:sage: ModularFormsRing(11).q_expansion_basis(10, prec=5) [1 + O(q^5), q + O(q^5), q^2 + O(q^5), q^3 + O(q^5), q^4 + O(q^5), O(q^5), O(q^5), O(q^5), O(q^5), O(q^5)]
- sage.modular.modform.find_generators.basis_for_modform_space(*args)¶
This function, which existed in earlier versions of Sage, has now been replaced by the
q_expansion_basis()
method of ModularFormsRing objects.EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.modular.modform.find_generators import basis_for_modform_space sage: basis_for_modform_space() Traceback (most recent call last): ... NotImplementedError: basis_for_modform_space has been removed -- use ModularFormsRing.q_expansion_basis()
- sage.modular.modform.find_generators.find_generators(*args)¶
This function, which existed in earlier versions of Sage, has now been replaced by the
generators()
method of ModularFormsRing objects.EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.modular.modform.find_generators import find_generators sage: find_generators() Traceback (most recent call last): ... NotImplementedError: find_generators has been removed -- use ModularFormsRing.generators()