In 1980,
Benedict Gross formulated the
Gross–Stark conjecture, a
p-adic analogue of the Stark conjectures relating derivatives of
Deligne–Ribet p-adic L-functions (for totally even characters of
totally real number fields) to
p-units. This was proved conditionally by
Henri Darmon,
Samit Dasgupta, and Robert Pollack in 2011. The proof was completed and made unconditional by Dasgupta,
Mahesh Kakde, and Kevin Ventullo in 2018. A further refinement of the
p-adic conjecture was proposed by Gross in 1988. In 1984,
John Tate formulated the
Brumer–Stark conjecture, which gives a refinement of the abelian rank-one Stark conjecture at totally split finite primes (for totally complex extensions of totally real base fields). The function field analogue of the Brumer–Stark conjecture was proved by John Tate and
Pierre Deligne in 1984. In 2023, Dasgupta and Kakde proved the
Brumer–Stark conjecture away from the prime 2. In 1996,
Karl Rubin proposed an
integral refinement of the Stark conjecture in the abelian case. In 1999,
Cristian Dumitru Popescu proposed a function field analogue of Rubin's conjecture and proved it in some cases. ==Notes==