fbpx
Wikipedia

Analytic number theory

In mathematics, analytic number theory is a branch of number theory that uses methods from mathematical analysis to solve problems about the integers.[1] It is often said to have begun with Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet's 1837 introduction of Dirichlet L-functions to give the first proof of Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions.[1][2] It is well known for its results on prime numbers (involving the Prime Number Theorem and Riemann zeta function) and additive number theory (such as the Goldbach conjecture and Waring's problem).

Riemann zeta function ζ(s) in the complex plane. The color of a point s encodes the value of ζ(s): colors close to black denote values close to zero, while hue encodes the value's argument.

Branches of analytic number theory edit

Analytic number theory can be split up into two major parts, divided more by the type of problems they attempt to solve than fundamental differences in technique.[3]

History edit

Precursors edit

Much of analytic number theory was inspired by the prime number theorem. Let π(x) be the prime-counting function that gives the number of primes less than or equal to x, for any real number x. For example, π(10) = 4 because there are four prime numbers (2, 3, 5 and 7) less than or equal to 10. The prime number theorem then states that x / ln(x) is a good approximation to π(x), in the sense that the limit of the quotient of the two functions π(x) and x / ln(x) as x approaches infinity is 1:

 

known as the asymptotic law of distribution of prime numbers.

Adrien-Marie Legendre conjectured in 1797 or 1798 that π(a) is approximated by the function a/(A ln(a) + B), where A and B are unspecified constants. In the second edition of his book on number theory (1808) he then made a more precise conjecture, with A = 1 and B ≈ −1.08366. Carl Friedrich Gauss considered the same question: "Im Jahr 1792 oder 1793" ('in the year 1792 or 1793'), according to his own recollection nearly sixty years later in a letter to Encke (1849), he wrote in his logarithm table (he was then 15 or 16) the short note "Primzahlen unter  " ('prime numbers under  '). But Gauss never published this conjecture. In 1838 Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet came up with his own approximating function, the logarithmic integral li(x) (under the slightly different form of a series, which he communicated to Gauss). Both Legendre's and Dirichlet's formulas imply the same conjectured asymptotic equivalence of π(x) and x / ln(x) stated above, although it turned out that Dirichlet's approximation is considerably better if one considers the differences instead of quotients.

Dirichlet edit

Johann Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet is credited with the creation of analytic number theory,[6] a field in which he found several deep results and in proving them introduced some fundamental tools, many of which were later named after him. In 1837 he published Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions, using mathematical analysis concepts to tackle an algebraic problem and thus creating the branch of analytic number theory. In proving the theorem, he introduced the Dirichlet characters and L-functions.[6][7] In 1841 he generalized his arithmetic progressions theorem from integers to the ring of Gaussian integers  .[8]

Chebyshev edit

In two papers from 1848 and 1850, the Russian mathematician Pafnuty L'vovich Chebyshev attempted to prove the asymptotic law of distribution of prime numbers. His work is notable for the use of the zeta function ζ(s) (for real values of the argument "s", as are works of Leonhard Euler, as early as 1737) predating Riemann's celebrated memoir of 1859, and he succeeded in proving a slightly weaker form of the asymptotic law, namely, that if the limit of π(x)/(x/ln(x)) as x goes to infinity exists at all, then it is necessarily equal to one.[9] He was able to prove unconditionally that this ratio is bounded above and below by two explicitly given constants near to 1 for all x.[10] Although Chebyshev's paper did not prove the Prime Number Theorem, his estimates for π(x) were strong enough for him to prove Bertrand's postulate that there exists a prime number between n and 2n for any integer n ≥ 2.

Riemann edit

"…es ist sehr wahrscheinlich, dass alle Wurzeln reell sind. Hiervon wäre allerdings ein strenger Beweis zu wünschen; ich habe indess die Aufsuchung desselben nach einigen flüchtigen vergeblichen Versuchen vorläufig bei Seite gelassen, da er für den nächsten Zweck meiner Untersuchung entbehrlich schien."

"…it is very probable that all roots are real. Of course one would wish for a rigorous proof here; I have for the time being, after some fleeting vain attempts, provisionally put aside the search for this, as it appears dispensable for the next objective of my investigation."

Riemann's statement of the Riemann hypothesis, from his 1859 paper.[11] (He was discussing a version of the zeta function, modified so that its roots are real rather than on the critical line. See, Riemann Xi Function.)

Bernhard Riemann made some famous contributions to modern analytic number theory. In a single short paper (the only one he published on the subject of number theory), he investigated the Riemann zeta function and established its importance for understanding the distribution of prime numbers. He made a series of conjectures about properties of the zeta function, one of which is the well-known Riemann hypothesis.

Hadamard and de la Vallée-Poussin edit

Extending the ideas of Riemann, two proofs of the prime number theorem were obtained independently by Jacques Hadamard and Charles Jean de la Vallée-Poussin and appeared in the same year (1896). Both proofs used methods from complex analysis, establishing as a main step of the proof that the Riemann zeta function ζ(s) is non-zero for all complex values of the variable s that have the form s = 1 + it with t > 0.[12]

Modern times edit

The biggest technical change after 1950 has been the development of sieve methods,[13] particularly in multiplicative problems. These are combinatorial in nature, and quite varied. The extremal branch of combinatorial theory has in return been greatly influenced by the value placed in analytic number theory on quantitative upper and lower bounds. Another recent development is probabilistic number theory,[14] which uses methods from probability theory to estimate the distribution of number theoretic functions, such as how many prime divisors a number has.

Specifically, the breakthroughs by Yitang Zhang, James Maynard, Terence Tao and Ben Green have all used the GoldstonPintzYıldırım method, which they originally used to prove that[15][16][17][18][19][20]

 

Developments within analytic number theory are often refinements of earlier techniques, which reduce the error terms and widen their applicability. For example, the circle method of Hardy and Littlewood was conceived as applying to power series near the unit circle in the complex plane; it is now thought of in terms of finite exponential sums (that is, on the unit circle, but with the power series truncated). The needs of Diophantine approximation are for auxiliary functions that are not generating functions—their coefficients are constructed by use of a pigeonhole principle—and involve several complex variables. The fields of Diophantine approximation and transcendence theory have expanded, to the point that the techniques have been applied to the Mordell conjecture.

Problems and results edit

Theorems and results within analytic number theory tend not to be exact structural results about the integers, for which algebraic and geometrical tools are more appropriate. Instead, they give approximate bounds and estimates for various number theoretical functions, as the following examples illustrate.

Multiplicative number theory edit

Euclid showed that there are infinitely many prime numbers. An important question is to determine the asymptotic distribution of the prime numbers; that is, a rough description of how many primes are smaller than a given number. Gauss, amongst others, after computing a large list of primes, conjectured that the number of primes less than or equal to a large number N is close to the value of the integral

 

In 1859 Bernhard Riemann used complex analysis and a special meromorphic function now known as the Riemann zeta function to derive an analytic expression for the number of primes less than or equal to a real number x. Remarkably, the main term in Riemann's formula was exactly the above integral, lending substantial weight to Gauss's conjecture. Riemann found that the error terms in this expression, and hence the manner in which the primes are distributed, are closely related to the complex zeros of the zeta function. Using Riemann's ideas and by getting more information on the zeros of the zeta function, Jacques Hadamard and Charles Jean de la Vallée-Poussin managed to complete the proof of Gauss's conjecture. In particular, they proved that if

 

then

 

This remarkable result is what is now known as the prime number theorem. It is a central result in analytic number theory. Loosely speaking, it states that given a large number N, the number of primes less than or equal to N is about N/log(N).

More generally, the same question can be asked about the number of primes in any arithmetic progression a+nq for any integer n. In one of the first applications of analytic techniques to number theory, Dirichlet proved that any arithmetic progression with a and q coprime contains infinitely many primes. The prime number theorem can be generalised to this problem; letting

 

then if a and q are coprime,

 

There are also many deep and wide-ranging conjectures in number theory whose proofs seem too difficult for current techniques, such as the twin prime conjecture which asks whether there are infinitely many primes p such that p + 2 is prime. On the assumption of the Elliott–Halberstam conjecture it has been proven recently that there are infinitely many primes p such that p + k is prime for some positive even k at most 12. Also, it has been proven unconditionally (i.e. not depending on unproven conjectures) that there are infinitely many primes p such that p + k is prime for some positive even k at most 246.

Additive number theory edit

One of the most important problems in additive number theory is Waring's problem, which asks whether it is possible, for any k ≥ 2, to write any positive integer as the sum of a bounded number of kth powers,

 

The case for squares, k = 2, was answered by Lagrange in 1770, who proved that every positive integer is the sum of at most four squares. The general case was proved by Hilbert in 1909, using algebraic techniques which gave no explicit bounds. An important breakthrough was the application of analytic tools to the problem by Hardy and Littlewood. These techniques are known as the circle method, and give explicit upper bounds for the function G(k), the smallest number of kth powers needed, such as Vinogradov's bound

 

Diophantine problems edit

Diophantine problems are concerned with integer solutions to polynomial equations: one may study the distribution of solutions, that is, counting solutions according to some measure of "size" or height.

An important example is the Gauss circle problem, which asks for integers points (x y) which satisfy

 

In geometrical terms, given a circle centered about the origin in the plane with radius r, the problem asks how many integer lattice points lie on or inside the circle. It is not hard to prove that the answer is  , where   as  . Again, the difficult part and a great achievement of analytic number theory is obtaining specific upper bounds on the error term E(r).

It was shown by Gauss that  . In general, an O(r) error term would be possible with the unit circle (or, more properly, the closed unit disk) replaced by the dilates of any bounded planar region with piecewise smooth boundary. Furthermore, replacing the unit circle by the unit square, the error term for the general problem can be as large as a linear function of r. Therefore, getting an error bound of the form   for some   in the case of the circle is a significant improvement. The first to attain this was Sierpiński in 1906, who showed  . In 1915, Hardy and Landau each showed that one does not have  . Since then the goal has been to show that for each fixed   there exists a real number   such that  .

In 2000 Huxley showed[21] that  , which is the best published result.

Methods of analytic number theory edit

Dirichlet series edit

One of the most useful tools in multiplicative number theory are Dirichlet series, which are functions of a complex variable defined by an infinite series of the form

 

Depending on the choice of coefficients  , this series may converge everywhere, nowhere, or on some half plane. In many cases, even where the series does not converge everywhere, the holomorphic function it defines may be analytically continued to a meromorphic function on the entire complex plane. The utility of functions like this in multiplicative problems can be seen in the formal identity

 

hence the coefficients of the product of two Dirichlet series are the multiplicative convolutions of the original coefficients. Furthermore, techniques such as partial summation and Tauberian theorems can be used to get information about the coefficients from analytic information about the Dirichlet series. Thus a common method for estimating a multiplicative function is to express it as a Dirichlet series (or a product of simpler Dirichlet series using convolution identities), examine this series as a complex function and then convert this analytic information back into information about the original function.

Riemann zeta function edit

Euler showed that the fundamental theorem of arithmetic implies (at least formally) the Euler product

 

where the product is taken over all prime numbers p.

Euler's proof of the infinity of prime numbers makes use of the divergence of the term at the left hand side for s = 1 (the so-called harmonic series), a purely analytic result. Euler was also the first to use analytical arguments for the purpose of studying properties of integers, specifically by constructing generating power series. This was the beginning of analytic number theory.[20]

Later, Riemann considered this function for complex values of s and showed that this function can be extended to a meromorphic function on the entire plane with a simple pole at s = 1. This function is now known as the Riemann Zeta function and is denoted by ζ(s). There is a plethora of literature on this function and the function is a special case of the more general Dirichlet L-functions.

Analytic number theorists are often interested in the error of approximations such as the prime number theorem. In this case, the error is smaller than x/log x. Riemann's formula for π(x) shows that the error term in this approximation can be expressed in terms of the zeros of the zeta function. In his 1859 paper, Riemann conjectured that all the "non-trivial" zeros of ζ lie on the line   but never provided a proof of this statement. This famous and long-standing conjecture is known as the Riemann Hypothesis and has many deep implications in number theory; in fact, many important theorems have been proved under the assumption that the hypothesis is true. For example, under the assumption of the Riemann Hypothesis, the error term in the prime number theorem is  .

In the early 20th century G. H. Hardy and Littlewood proved many results about the zeta function in an attempt to prove the Riemann Hypothesis. In fact, in 1914, Hardy proved that there were infinitely many zeros of the zeta function on the critical line

 

This led to several theorems describing the density of the zeros on the critical line.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Apostol 1976, p. 7.
  2. ^ Davenport 2000, p. 1.
  3. ^ Hildebrand, A.J. (2005). "Introduction to Analytic Number Theory Math 531 Lecture Notes, Fall 2005" (PDF).
  4. ^ Davenport, Harold (2013). Multiplicative number theory. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 74. Springer-Verlag. p. 1. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-5927-3. ISBN 978-1-4757-5929-7.
  5. ^ Nathason, Melvyn B. (2013). Additive Number Theory, The Classical Bases. Springer-Verlag. p. vii–viii. ISBN 978-0-387-94656-6.
  6. ^ a b Gowers, Timothy; June Barrow-Green; Imre Leader (2008). The Princeton companion to mathematics. Princeton University Press. pp. 764–765. ISBN 978-0-691-11880-2.
  7. ^ Kanemitsu, Shigeru; Chaohua Jia (2002). Number theoretic methods: future trends. Springer. pp. 271–274. ISBN 978-1-4020-1080-4.
  8. ^ Elstrodt, Jürgen (2007). (PDF). Clay Mathematics Proceedings. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-03-07. Retrieved 2007-12-25.
  9. ^ N. Costa Pereira (August–September 1985). "A Short Proof of Chebyshev's Theorem". American Mathematical Monthly. 92 (7): 494–495. doi:10.2307/2322510. JSTOR 2322510.
  10. ^ M. Nair (February 1982). "On Chebyshev-Type Inequalities for Primes". American Mathematical Monthly. 89 (2): 126–129. doi:10.2307/2320934. JSTOR 2320934.
  11. ^ Riemann, Bernhard (1859), "Ueber die Anzahl der Primzahlen unter einer gegebenen Grösse", Monatsberichte der Berliner Akademie. In Gesammelte Werke, Teubner, Leipzig (1892), Reprinted by Dover, New York (1953). Original manuscript May 23, 2013, at the Wayback Machine (with English translation). Reprinted in (Borwein et al. 2008) and (Edwards 1974)
  12. ^ Ingham, A.E. (1990). The Distribution of Prime Numbers. Cambridge University Press. pp. 2–5. ISBN 0-521-39789-8.
  13. ^ Tenenbaum 1995, p. 56.
  14. ^ Tenenbaum 1995, p. 267.
  15. ^ Green, Ben (2014-02-22). "Bounded gaps between primes". arXiv:1402.4849.
  16. ^ Maynard, James (2019). "Primes with restricted digits". Inventiones Mathematicae. 217 (1): 127–218. arXiv:1604.01041. doi:10.1007/s00222-019-00865-6.
  17. ^ Green, Ben; Tao, Terence (2008). "The primes contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions". Annals of Mathematics. 2nd Series. 167 (2): 481–547. arXiv:math/0404188. doi:10.4007/annals.2008.167.481.
  18. ^ . asone.ai. Archived from the original on 2020-12-08. Retrieved 2022-07-14.
  19. ^ Terence Tao - Large and Small Gaps in the Primes [2015], retrieved 2022-07-14
  20. ^ a b Iwaniec & Kowalski: Analytic Number Theory, AMS Colloquium Pub. Vol. 53, 2004
  21. ^ M.N. Huxley, Integer points, exponential sums and the Riemann zeta function, Number theory for the millennium, II (Urbana, IL, 2000) pp.275–290, A K Peters, Natick, MA, 2002, MR1956254.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Ayoub, Introduction to the Analytic Theory of Numbers
  • H. L. Montgomery and R. C. Vaughan, Multiplicative Number Theory I : Classical Theory
  • H. Iwaniec and E. Kowalski, Analytic Number Theory.
  • D. J. Newman, Analytic number theory, Springer, 1998

On specialized aspects the following books have become especially well-known:

Certain topics have not yet reached book form in any depth. Some examples are (i) Montgomery's pair correlation conjecture and the work that initiated from it, (ii) the new results of Goldston, Pintz and Yilidrim on small gaps between primes, and (iii) the Green–Tao theorem showing that arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions of primes exist.

analytic, number, theory, mathematics, analytic, number, theory, branch, number, theory, that, uses, methods, from, mathematical, analysis, solve, problems, about, integers, often, said, have, begun, with, peter, gustav, lejeune, dirichlet, 1837, introduction,. In mathematics analytic number theory is a branch of number theory that uses methods from mathematical analysis to solve problems about the integers 1 It is often said to have begun with Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet s 1837 introduction of Dirichlet L functions to give the first proof of Dirichlet s theorem on arithmetic progressions 1 2 It is well known for its results on prime numbers involving the Prime Number Theorem and Riemann zeta function and additive number theory such as the Goldbach conjecture and Waring s problem Riemann zeta function z s in the complex plane The color of a point s encodes the value of z s colors close to black denote values close to zero while hue encodes the value s argument Contents 1 Branches of analytic number theory 2 History 2 1 Precursors 2 2 Dirichlet 2 3 Chebyshev 2 4 Riemann 2 5 Hadamard and de la Vallee Poussin 2 6 Modern times 3 Problems and results 3 1 Multiplicative number theory 3 2 Additive number theory 3 3 Diophantine problems 4 Methods of analytic number theory 4 1 Dirichlet series 4 2 Riemann zeta function 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further readingBranches of analytic number theory editAnalytic number theory can be split up into two major parts divided more by the type of problems they attempt to solve than fundamental differences in technique 3 Multiplicative number theory deals with the distribution of the prime numbers such as estimating the number of primes in an interval and includes the prime number theorem and Dirichlet s theorem on primes in arithmetic progressions 4 Additive number theory is concerned with the additive structure of the integers such as Goldbach s conjecture that every even number greater than 2 is the sum of two primes One of the main results in additive number theory is the solution to Waring s problem 5 History editPrecursors edit Much of analytic number theory was inspired by the prime number theorem Let p x be the prime counting function that gives the number of primes less than or equal to x for any real number x For example p 10 4 because there are four prime numbers 2 3 5 and 7 less than or equal to 10 The prime number theorem then states that x ln x is a good approximation to p x in the sense that the limit of the quotient of the two functions p x and x ln x as x approaches infinity is 1 limx p x x ln x 1 displaystyle lim x to infty frac pi x x ln x 1 nbsp known as the asymptotic law of distribution of prime numbers Adrien Marie Legendre conjectured in 1797 or 1798 that p a is approximated by the function a A ln a B where A and B are unspecified constants In the second edition of his book on number theory 1808 he then made a more precise conjecture with A 1 and B 1 08366 Carl Friedrich Gauss considered the same question Im Jahr 1792 oder 1793 in the year 1792 or 1793 according to his own recollection nearly sixty years later in a letter to Encke 1849 he wrote in his logarithm table he was then 15 or 16 the short note Primzahlen unter a aln a displaystyle a infty frac a ln a nbsp prime numbers under a aln a displaystyle a infty frac a ln a nbsp But Gauss never published this conjecture In 1838 Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet came up with his own approximating function the logarithmic integral li x under the slightly different form of a series which he communicated to Gauss Both Legendre s and Dirichlet s formulas imply the same conjectured asymptotic equivalence of p x and x ln x stated above although it turned out that Dirichlet s approximation is considerably better if one considers the differences instead of quotients Dirichlet edit Main article Johann Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet Johann Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet is credited with the creation of analytic number theory 6 a field in which he found several deep results and in proving them introduced some fundamental tools many of which were later named after him In 1837 he published Dirichlet s theorem on arithmetic progressions using mathematical analysis concepts to tackle an algebraic problem and thus creating the branch of analytic number theory In proving the theorem he introduced the Dirichlet characters and L functions 6 7 In 1841 he generalized his arithmetic progressions theorem from integers to the ring of Gaussian integers Z i displaystyle mathbb Z i nbsp 8 Chebyshev edit Main article Pafnuty Chebyshev In two papers from 1848 and 1850 the Russian mathematician Pafnuty L vovich Chebyshev attempted to prove the asymptotic law of distribution of prime numbers His work is notable for the use of the zeta function z s for real values of the argument s as are works of Leonhard Euler as early as 1737 predating Riemann s celebrated memoir of 1859 and he succeeded in proving a slightly weaker form of the asymptotic law namely that if the limit of p x x ln x as x goes to infinity exists at all then it is necessarily equal to one 9 He was able to prove unconditionally that this ratio is bounded above and below by two explicitly given constants near to 1 for all x 10 Although Chebyshev s paper did not prove the Prime Number Theorem his estimates for p x were strong enough for him to prove Bertrand s postulate that there exists a prime number between n and 2n for any integer n 2 Riemann edit Main article Bernhard Riemann es ist sehr wahrscheinlich dass alle Wurzeln reell sind Hiervon ware allerdings ein strenger Beweis zu wunschen ich habe indess die Aufsuchung desselben nach einigen fluchtigen vergeblichen Versuchen vorlaufig bei Seite gelassen da er fur den nachsten Zweck meiner Untersuchung entbehrlich schien it is very probable that all roots are real Of course one would wish for a rigorous proof here I have for the time being after some fleeting vain attempts provisionally put aside the search for this as it appears dispensable for the next objective of my investigation Riemann s statement of the Riemann hypothesis from his 1859 paper 11 He was discussing a version of the zeta function modified so that its roots are real rather than on the critical line See Riemann Xi Function Bernhard Riemann made some famous contributions to modern analytic number theory In a single short paper the only one he published on the subject of number theory he investigated the Riemann zeta function and established its importance for understanding the distribution of prime numbers He made a series of conjectures about properties of the zeta function one of which is the well known Riemann hypothesis Hadamard and de la Vallee Poussin edit Main articles Jacques Hadamard and Charles Jean de la Vallee Poussin Extending the ideas of Riemann two proofs of the prime number theorem were obtained independently by Jacques Hadamard and Charles Jean de la Vallee Poussin and appeared in the same year 1896 Both proofs used methods from complex analysis establishing as a main step of the proof that the Riemann zeta function z s is non zero for all complex values of the variable s that have the form s 1 it with t gt 0 12 Modern times edit The biggest technical change after 1950 has been the development of sieve methods 13 particularly in multiplicative problems These are combinatorial in nature and quite varied The extremal branch of combinatorial theory has in return been greatly influenced by the value placed in analytic number theory on quantitative upper and lower bounds Another recent development is probabilistic number theory 14 which uses methods from probability theory to estimate the distribution of number theoretic functions such as how many prime divisors a number has Specifically the breakthroughs by Yitang Zhang James Maynard Terence Tao and Ben Green have all used the Goldston Pintz Yildirim method which they originally used to prove that 15 16 17 18 19 20 pn 1 pn o log pn displaystyle p n 1 p n geq o log p n nbsp Developments within analytic number theory are often refinements of earlier techniques which reduce the error terms and widen their applicability For example the circle method of Hardy and Littlewood was conceived as applying to power series near the unit circle in the complex plane it is now thought of in terms of finite exponential sums that is on the unit circle but with the power series truncated The needs of Diophantine approximation are for auxiliary functions that are not generating functions their coefficients are constructed by use of a pigeonhole principle and involve several complex variables The fields of Diophantine approximation and transcendence theory have expanded to the point that the techniques have been applied to the Mordell conjecture Problems and results editTheorems and results within analytic number theory tend not to be exact structural results about the integers for which algebraic and geometrical tools are more appropriate Instead they give approximate bounds and estimates for various number theoretical functions as the following examples illustrate Multiplicative number theory edit Main article Multiplicative number theory Euclid showed that there are infinitely many prime numbers An important question is to determine the asymptotic distribution of the prime numbers that is a rough description of how many primes are smaller than a given number Gauss amongst others after computing a large list of primes conjectured that the number of primes less than or equal to a large number N is close to the value of the integral 2N1log tdt displaystyle int 2 N frac 1 log t dt nbsp In 1859 Bernhard Riemann used complex analysis and a special meromorphic function now known as the Riemann zeta function to derive an analytic expression for the number of primes less than or equal to a real number x Remarkably the main term in Riemann s formula was exactly the above integral lending substantial weight to Gauss s conjecture Riemann found that the error terms in this expression and hence the manner in which the primes are distributed are closely related to the complex zeros of the zeta function Using Riemann s ideas and by getting more information on the zeros of the zeta function Jacques Hadamard and Charles Jean de la Vallee Poussin managed to complete the proof of Gauss s conjecture In particular they proved that if p x number of primes x displaystyle pi x text number of primes leq x nbsp then limx p x x log x 1 displaystyle lim x to infty frac pi x x log x 1 nbsp This remarkable result is what is now known as the prime number theorem It is a central result in analytic number theory Loosely speaking it states that given a large number N the number of primes less than or equal to N is about N log N More generally the same question can be asked about the number of primes in any arithmetic progression a nq for any integer n In one of the first applications of analytic techniques to number theory Dirichlet proved that any arithmetic progression with a and q coprime contains infinitely many primes The prime number theorem can be generalised to this problem letting p x a q number of primes x such that p is in the arithmetic progression a nq n Z displaystyle pi x a q text number of primes leq x text such that p text is in the arithmetic progression a nq n in mathbf Z nbsp then if a and q are coprime limx p x a q ϕ q x log x 1 displaystyle lim x to infty frac pi x a q phi q x log x 1 nbsp There are also many deep and wide ranging conjectures in number theory whose proofs seem too difficult for current techniques such as the twin prime conjecture which asks whether there are infinitely many primes p such that p 2 is prime On the assumption of the Elliott Halberstam conjecture it has been proven recently that there are infinitely many primes p such that p k is prime for some positive even k at most 12 Also it has been proven unconditionally i e not depending on unproven conjectures that there are infinitely many primes p such that p k is prime for some positive even k at most 246 Additive number theory edit Main article Additive number theory One of the most important problems in additive number theory is Waring s problem which asks whether it is possible for any k 2 to write any positive integer as the sum of a bounded number of kth powers n x1k xℓk displaystyle n x 1 k cdots x ell k nbsp The case for squares k 2 was answered by Lagrange in 1770 who proved that every positive integer is the sum of at most four squares The general case was proved by Hilbert in 1909 using algebraic techniques which gave no explicit bounds An important breakthrough was the application of analytic tools to the problem by Hardy and Littlewood These techniques are known as the circle method and give explicit upper bounds for the function G k the smallest number of kth powers needed such as Vinogradov s bound G k k 3log k 11 displaystyle G k leq k 3 log k 11 nbsp Diophantine problems edit Main article Diophantine problem Diophantine problems are concerned with integer solutions to polynomial equations one may study the distribution of solutions that is counting solutions according to some measure of size or height An important example is the Gauss circle problem which asks for integers points x y which satisfy x2 y2 r2 displaystyle x 2 y 2 leq r 2 nbsp In geometrical terms given a circle centered about the origin in the plane with radius r the problem asks how many integer lattice points lie on or inside the circle It is not hard to prove that the answer is pr2 E r displaystyle pi r 2 E r nbsp where E r r2 0 displaystyle E r r 2 to 0 nbsp as r displaystyle r to infty nbsp Again the difficult part and a great achievement of analytic number theory is obtaining specific upper bounds on the error term E r It was shown by Gauss that E r O r displaystyle E r O r nbsp In general an O r error term would be possible with the unit circle or more properly the closed unit disk replaced by the dilates of any bounded planar region with piecewise smooth boundary Furthermore replacing the unit circle by the unit square the error term for the general problem can be as large as a linear function of r Therefore getting an error bound of the form O rd displaystyle O r delta nbsp for some d lt 1 displaystyle delta lt 1 nbsp in the case of the circle is a significant improvement The first to attain this was Sierpinski in 1906 who showed E r O r2 3 displaystyle E r O r 2 3 nbsp In 1915 Hardy and Landau each showed that one does not have E r O r1 2 displaystyle E r O r 1 2 nbsp Since then the goal has been to show that for each fixed ϵ gt 0 displaystyle epsilon gt 0 nbsp there exists a real number C ϵ displaystyle C epsilon nbsp such that E r C ϵ r1 2 ϵ displaystyle E r leq C epsilon r 1 2 epsilon nbsp In 2000 Huxley showed 21 that E r O r131 208 displaystyle E r O r 131 208 nbsp which is the best published result Methods of analytic number theory editDirichlet series edit Main article Dirichlet series One of the most useful tools in multiplicative number theory are Dirichlet series which are functions of a complex variable defined by an infinite series of the form f s n 1 ann s displaystyle f s sum n 1 infty a n n s nbsp Depending on the choice of coefficients an displaystyle a n nbsp this series may converge everywhere nowhere or on some half plane In many cases even where the series does not converge everywhere the holomorphic function it defines may be analytically continued to a meromorphic function on the entire complex plane The utility of functions like this in multiplicative problems can be seen in the formal identity n 1 ann s n 1 bnn s n 1 kℓ nakbℓ n s displaystyle left sum n 1 infty a n n s right left sum n 1 infty b n n s right sum n 1 infty left sum k ell n a k b ell right n s nbsp hence the coefficients of the product of two Dirichlet series are the multiplicative convolutions of the original coefficients Furthermore techniques such as partial summation and Tauberian theorems can be used to get information about the coefficients from analytic information about the Dirichlet series Thus a common method for estimating a multiplicative function is to express it as a Dirichlet series or a product of simpler Dirichlet series using convolution identities examine this series as a complex function and then convert this analytic information back into information about the original function Riemann zeta function edit Main article Riemann zeta function Euler showed that the fundamental theorem of arithmetic implies at least formally the Euler product n 1 1ns p 11 p s for s gt 1 displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac 1 n s prod p infty frac 1 1 p s text for s gt 1 nbsp where the product is taken over all prime numbers p Euler s proof of the infinity of prime numbers makes use of the divergence of the term at the left hand side for s 1 the so called harmonic series a purely analytic result Euler was also the first to use analytical arguments for the purpose of studying properties of integers specifically by constructing generating power series This was the beginning of analytic number theory 20 Later Riemann considered this function for complex values of s and showed that this function can be extended to a meromorphic function on the entire plane with a simple pole at s 1 This function is now known as the Riemann Zeta function and is denoted by z s There is a plethora of literature on this function and the function is a special case of the more general Dirichlet L functions Analytic number theorists are often interested in the error of approximations such as the prime number theorem In this case the error is smaller than x log x Riemann s formula for p x shows that the error term in this approximation can be expressed in terms of the zeros of the zeta function In his 1859 paper Riemann conjectured that all the non trivial zeros of z lie on the line ℜ s 1 2 displaystyle Re s 1 2 nbsp but never provided a proof of this statement This famous and long standing conjecture is known as the Riemann Hypothesis and has many deep implications in number theory in fact many important theorems have been proved under the assumption that the hypothesis is true For example under the assumption of the Riemann Hypothesis the error term in the prime number theorem is O x1 2 e displaystyle O x 1 2 varepsilon nbsp In the early 20th century G H Hardy and Littlewood proved many results about the zeta function in an attempt to prove the Riemann Hypothesis In fact in 1914 Hardy proved that there were infinitely many zeros of the zeta function on the critical line ℜ z 1 2 displaystyle Re z 1 2 nbsp This led to several theorems describing the density of the zeros on the critical line See also editAutomorphic L function Automorphic form Langlands program Maier s matrix methodNotes edit a b Apostol 1976 p 7 Davenport 2000 p 1 Hildebrand A J 2005 Introduction to Analytic Number Theory Math 531 Lecture Notes Fall 2005 PDF Davenport Harold 2013 Multiplicative number theory Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 74 Springer Verlag p 1 doi 10 1007 978 1 4757 5927 3 ISBN 978 1 4757 5929 7 Nathason Melvyn B 2013 Additive Number Theory The Classical Bases Springer Verlag p vii viii ISBN 978 0 387 94656 6 a b Gowers Timothy June Barrow Green Imre Leader 2008 The Princeton companion to mathematics Princeton University Press pp 764 765 ISBN 978 0 691 11880 2 Kanemitsu Shigeru Chaohua Jia 2002 Number theoretic methods future trends Springer pp 271 274 ISBN 978 1 4020 1080 4 Elstrodt Jurgen 2007 The Life and Work of Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet 1805 1859 PDF Clay Mathematics Proceedings Archived from the original PDF on 2008 03 07 Retrieved 2007 12 25 N Costa Pereira August September 1985 A Short Proof of Chebyshev s Theorem American Mathematical Monthly 92 7 494 495 doi 10 2307 2322510 JSTOR 2322510 M Nair February 1982 On Chebyshev Type Inequalities for Primes American Mathematical Monthly 89 2 126 129 doi 10 2307 2320934 JSTOR 2320934 Riemann Bernhard 1859 Ueber die Anzahl der Primzahlen unter einer gegebenen Grosse Monatsberichte der Berliner Akademie In Gesammelte Werke Teubner Leipzig 1892 Reprinted by Dover New York 1953 Original manuscript Archived May 23 2013 at the Wayback Machine with English translation Reprinted in Borwein et al 2008 and Edwards 1974 Ingham A E 1990 The Distribution of Prime Numbers Cambridge University Press pp 2 5 ISBN 0 521 39789 8 Tenenbaum 1995 p 56 Tenenbaum 1995 p 267 Green Ben 2014 02 22 Bounded gaps between primes arXiv 1402 4849 Maynard James 2019 Primes with restricted digits Inventiones Mathematicae 217 1 127 218 arXiv 1604 01041 doi 10 1007 s00222 019 00865 6 Green Ben Tao Terence 2008 The primes contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions Annals of Mathematics 2nd Series 167 2 481 547 arXiv math 0404188 doi 10 4007 annals 2008 167 481 Bounded gaps between primes Polymath Wiki asone ai Archived from the original on 2020 12 08 Retrieved 2022 07 14 Terence Tao Large and Small Gaps in the Primes 2015 retrieved 2022 07 14 a b Iwaniec amp Kowalski Analytic Number Theory AMS Colloquium Pub Vol 53 2004 M N Huxley Integer points exponential sums and the Riemann zeta function Number theory for the millennium II Urbana IL 2000 pp 275 290 A K Peters Natick MA 2002 MR1956254 References editApostol Tom M 1976 Introduction to analytic number theory Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics New York Heidelberg Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90163 3 MR 0434929 Zbl 0335 10001 Borwein Peter Choi Stephen Rooney Brendan Weirathmueller Andrea eds 2008 The Riemann Hypothesis A Resource for the Afficionado and Virtuoso Alike CMS Books in Mathematics New York Springer doi 10 1007 978 0 387 72126 2 ISBN 978 0 387 72125 5 Davenport Harold 2000 Multiplicative number theory Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 74 3rd revised ed New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 95097 6 MR 1790423 Edwards H M 1974 Riemann s Zeta Function New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 41740 0 MR 0466039 Tenenbaum Gerald 1995 Introduction to Analytic and Probabilistic Number Theory Cambridge studies in advanced mathematics vol 46 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 41261 7Further reading editAyoub Introduction to the Analytic Theory of Numbers H L Montgomery and R C Vaughan Multiplicative Number Theory I Classical Theory H Iwaniec and E Kowalski Analytic Number Theory D J Newman Analytic number theory Springer 1998On specialized aspects the following books have become especially well known Titchmarsh Edward Charles 1986 The Theory of the Riemann Zeta Function 2nd ed Oxford University Press H Halberstam and H E Richert Sieve Methods R C Vaughan The Hardy Littlewood method 2nd edn Certain topics have not yet reached book form in any depth Some examples are i Montgomery s pair correlation conjecture and the work that initiated from it ii the new results of Goldston Pintz and Yilidrim on small gaps between primes and iii the Green Tao theorem showing that arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions of primes exist Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Analytic number theory amp oldid 1217742975, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.