The Bombieri–Lang conjecture is an analogue for surfaces of
Faltings' theorem, which states that algebraic curves of
genus greater than one only have finitely many rational points. If true, the Bombieri–Lang conjecture would resolve the
Erdős–Ulam problem, as it would imply that there do not exist dense subsets of the Euclidean plane all of whose pairwise distances are rational. In 1997,
Lucia Caporaso,
Barry Mazur,
Joe Harris, and Patricia Pacelli showed that the Bombieri–Lang conjecture implies a
uniform boundedness conjecture for rational points: there is a constant B_{g,d} depending only on g and d such that the number of rational points of any genus g curve X over any
degree d number field is at most B_{g,d}. ==References==