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Apéry's theorem

In mathematics, Apéry's theorem is a result in number theory that states the Apéry's constant ζ(3) is irrational. That is, the number

cannot be written as a fraction where p and q are integers. The theorem is named after Roger Apéry.

The special values of the Riemann zeta function at even integers () can be shown in terms of Bernoulli numbers to be irrational, while it remains open whether the function's values are in general rational or not at the odd integers () (though they are conjectured to be irrational).

History edit

Leonhard Euler proved that if n is a positive integer then

 

for some rational number  . Specifically, writing the infinite series on the left as  , he showed

 

where the   are the rational Bernoulli numbers. Once it was proved that   is always irrational, this showed that   is irrational for all positive integers n.

No such representation in terms of π is known for the so-called zeta constants for odd arguments, the values   for positive integers n. It has been conjectured that the ratios of these quantities

 

are transcendental for every integer  .[1]

Because of this, no proof could be found to show that the zeta constants with odd arguments were irrational, even though they were (and still are) all believed to be transcendental. However, in June 1978, Roger Apéry gave a talk titled "Sur l'irrationalité de ζ(3)." During the course of the talk he outlined proofs that   and   were irrational, the latter using methods simplified from those used to tackle the former rather than relying on the expression in terms of π. Due to the wholly unexpected nature of the proof and Apéry's blasé and very sketchy approach to the subject, many of the mathematicians in the audience dismissed the proof as flawed. However Henri Cohen, Hendrik Lenstra, and Alfred van der Poorten suspected Apéry was on to something and set out to confirm his proof. Two months later they finished verification of Apéry's proof, and on August 18 Cohen delivered a lecture giving full details of the proof. After the lecture Apéry himself took to the podium to explain the source of some of his ideas.[2]

Apéry's proof edit

Apéry's original proof[3][4] was based on the well known irrationality criterion from Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet, which states that a number   is irrational if there are infinitely many coprime integers p and q such that

 

for some fixed c, δ > 0.

The starting point for Apéry was the series representation of   as

 

Roughly speaking, Apéry then defined a sequence   which converges to   about as fast as the above series, specifically

 

He then defined two more sequences   and   that, roughly, have the quotient  . These sequences were

 

and

 

The sequence   converges to   fast enough to apply the criterion, but unfortunately   is not an integer after  . Nevertheless, Apéry showed that even after multiplying   and   by a suitable integer to cure this problem the convergence was still fast enough to guarantee irrationality.

Later proofs edit

Within a year of Apéry's result an alternative proof was found by Frits Beukers,[5] who replaced Apéry's series with integrals involving the shifted Legendre polynomials  . Using a representation that would later be generalized to Hadjicostas's formula, Beukers showed that

 

for some integers An and Bn (sequences OEISA171484 and OEISA171485). Using partial integration and the assumption that   was rational and equal to  , Beukers eventually derived the inequality

 

which is a contradiction since the right-most expression tends to zero as  , and so must eventually fall below  .

A more recent proof by Wadim Zudilin is more reminiscent of Apéry's original proof,[6] and also has similarities to a fourth proof by Yuri Nesterenko.[7] These later proofs again derive a contradiction from the assumption that   is rational by constructing sequences that tend to zero but are bounded below by some positive constant. They are somewhat less transparent than the earlier proofs, since they rely upon hypergeometric series.

Higher zeta constants edit

See also Particular values of the Riemann zeta function § Odd positive integers

Apéry and Beukers could simplify their proofs to work on   as well thanks to the series representation

 

Due to the success of Apéry's method a search was undertaken for a number   with the property that

 

If such a   were found then the methods used to prove Apéry's theorem would be expected to work on a proof that   is irrational. Unfortunately, extensive computer searching[8] has failed to find such a constant, and in fact it is now known that if   exists and if it is an algebraic number of degree at most 25, then the coefficients in its minimal polynomial must be enormous, at least  , so extending Apéry's proof to work on the higher odd zeta constants does not seem likely to work.

Despite this, many mathematicians working in this area expect a breakthrough sometime soon.[when?][9] Indeed, recent work by Wadim Zudilin and Tanguy Rivoal has shown that infinitely many of the numbers   must be irrational,[10] and even that at least one of the numbers  ,  ,  , and   must be irrational.[11] Their work uses linear forms in values of the zeta function and estimates upon them to bound the dimension of a vector space spanned by values of the zeta function at odd integers. Hopes that Zudilin could cut his list further to just one number did not materialise, but work on this problem is still an active area of research. Higher zeta constants have application to physics: they describe correlation functions in quantum spin chains.[12]

References edit

  1. ^ Kohnen, Winfried (1989). "Transcendence conjectures about periods of modular forms and rational structures on spaces of modular forms". Proc. Indian Acad. Sci. Math. Sci. 99 (3): 231–233. doi:10.1007/BF02864395. S2CID 121346325.
  2. ^ A. van der Poorten (1979). "A proof that Euler missed..." (PDF). The Mathematical Intelligencer. 1 (4): 195–203. doi:10.1007/BF03028234. S2CID 121589323.
  3. ^ Apéry, R. (1979). "Irrationalité de ζ(2) et ζ(3)". Astérisque. 61: 11–13.
  4. ^ Apéry, R. (1981), "Interpolation de fractions continues et irrationalité de certaines constantes", Bulletin de la section des sciences du C.T.H.S III, pp. 37–53
  5. ^ F. Beukers (1979). "A note on the irrationality of ζ(2) and ζ(3)". Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society. 11 (3): 268–272. doi:10.1112/blms/11.3.268.
  6. ^ Zudilin, W. (2002). "An Elementary Proof of Apéry's Theorem". arXiv:math/0202159.
  7. ^ Ю. В. Нестеренко (1996). Некоторые замечания о ζ(3). Матем. Заметки (in Russian). 59 (6): 865–880. doi:10.4213/mzm1785. English translation: Yu. V. Nesterenko (1996). "A Few Remarks on ζ(3)". Math. Notes. 59 (6): 625–636. doi:10.1007/BF02307212. S2CID 117487836.
  8. ^ D. H. Bailey, J. Borwein, N. Calkin, R. Girgensohn, R. Luke, and V. Moll, Experimental Mathematics in Action, 2007.
  9. ^ Jorn Steuding (2005). Diophantine Analysis. Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications. Boca Raton: Chapman & Hall/CRC. p. 280. ISBN 978-1-58488-482-8.
  10. ^ Rivoal, T. (2000). "La fonction zeta de Riemann prend une infinité de valeurs irrationnelles aux entiers impairs". Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série I. 331: 267–270. arXiv:math/0008051. Bibcode:2000CRASM.331..267R. doi:10.1016/S0764-4442(00)01624-4. S2CID 119678120.
  11. ^ W. Zudilin (2001). "One of the numbers ζ(5), ζ(7), ζ(9), ζ(11) is irrational". Russ. Math. Surv. 56 (4): 774–776. Bibcode:2001RuMaS..56..774Z. doi:10.1070/RM2001v056n04ABEH000427.
  12. ^ H. E. Boos; V. E. Korepin; Y. Nishiyama; M. Shiroishi (2002). "Quantum Correlations and Number Theory". Journal of Physics A. 35 (20): 4443–4452. arXiv:cond-mat/0202346. Bibcode:2002JPhA...35.4443B. doi:10.1088/0305-4470/35/20/305. S2CID 119143600.

External links edit

  • Huylebrouck, Dirk (2001). "Similarities in Irrationality Proofs for π, ln2, ζ(2), and ζ(3)" (PDF). Amer. Math. Monthly. 108 (3): 222–231. doi:10.2307/2695383. JSTOR 2695383.

apéry, theorem, mathematics, result, number, theory, that, states, apéry, constant, irrational, that, number, 2020569, displaystyle, zeta, infty, frac, frac, frac, frac, cdots, 2020569, ldots, cannot, written, fraction, displaystyle, where, integers, theorem, . In mathematics Apery s theorem is a result in number theory that states the Apery s constant z 3 is irrational That is the number z 3 n 1 1 n 3 1 1 3 1 2 3 1 3 3 1 2020569 displaystyle zeta 3 sum n 1 infty frac 1 n 3 frac 1 1 3 frac 1 2 3 frac 1 3 3 cdots 1 2020569 ldots cannot be written as a fraction p q displaystyle p q where p and q are integers The theorem is named after Roger Apery The special values of the Riemann zeta function at even integers 2 n displaystyle 2n n gt 0 displaystyle n gt 0 can be shown in terms of Bernoulli numbers to be irrational while it remains open whether the function s values are in general rational or not at the odd integers 2 n 1 displaystyle 2n 1 n gt 1 displaystyle n gt 1 though they are conjectured to be irrational Contents 1 History 2 Apery s proof 3 Later proofs 4 Higher zeta constants 5 References 6 External linksHistory editLeonhard Euler proved that if n is a positive integer then 1 1 2 n 1 2 2 n 1 3 2 n 1 4 2 n p q p 2 n displaystyle frac 1 1 2n frac 1 2 2n frac 1 3 2n frac 1 4 2n cdots frac p q pi 2n nbsp for some rational number p q displaystyle p q nbsp Specifically writing the infinite series on the left as z 2 n displaystyle zeta 2n nbsp he showed z 2 n 1 n 1 B 2 n 2 p 2 n 2 2 n displaystyle zeta 2n 1 n 1 frac B 2n 2 pi 2n 2 2n nbsp where the B n displaystyle B n nbsp are the rational Bernoulli numbers Once it was proved that p n displaystyle pi n nbsp is always irrational this showed that z 2 n displaystyle zeta 2n nbsp is irrational for all positive integers n No such representation in terms of p is known for the so called zeta constants for odd arguments the values z 2 n 1 displaystyle zeta 2n 1 nbsp for positive integers n It has been conjectured that the ratios of these quantities z 2 n 1 p 2 n 1 displaystyle frac zeta 2n 1 pi 2n 1 nbsp are transcendental for every integer n 1 displaystyle n geq 1 nbsp 1 Because of this no proof could be found to show that the zeta constants with odd arguments were irrational even though they were and still are all believed to be transcendental However in June 1978 Roger Apery gave a talk titled Sur l irrationalite de z 3 During the course of the talk he outlined proofs that z 3 displaystyle zeta 3 nbsp and z 2 displaystyle zeta 2 nbsp were irrational the latter using methods simplified from those used to tackle the former rather than relying on the expression in terms of p Due to the wholly unexpected nature of the proof and Apery s blase and very sketchy approach to the subject many of the mathematicians in the audience dismissed the proof as flawed However Henri Cohen Hendrik Lenstra and Alfred van der Poorten suspected Apery was on to something and set out to confirm his proof Two months later they finished verification of Apery s proof and on August 18 Cohen delivered a lecture giving full details of the proof After the lecture Apery himself took to the podium to explain the source of some of his ideas 2 Apery s proof editApery s original proof 3 4 was based on the well known irrationality criterion from Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet which states that a number 3 displaystyle xi nbsp is irrational if there are infinitely many coprime integers p and q such that 3 p q lt c q 1 d displaystyle left xi frac p q right lt frac c q 1 delta nbsp for some fixed c d gt 0 The starting point for Apery was the series representation of z 3 displaystyle zeta 3 nbsp as z 3 5 2 n 1 1 n 1 n 3 2 n n displaystyle zeta 3 frac 5 2 sum n 1 infty frac 1 n 1 n 3 binom 2n n nbsp Roughly speaking Apery then defined a sequence c n k displaystyle c n k nbsp which converges to z 3 displaystyle zeta 3 nbsp about as fast as the above series specifically c n k m 1 n 1 m 3 m 1 k 1 m 1 2 m 3 n m n m m displaystyle c n k sum m 1 n frac 1 m 3 sum m 1 k frac 1 m 1 2m 3 binom n m binom n m m nbsp He then defined two more sequences a n displaystyle a n nbsp and b n displaystyle b n nbsp that roughly have the quotient c n k displaystyle c n k nbsp These sequences were a n k 0 n c n k n k 2 n k k 2 displaystyle a n sum k 0 n c n k binom n k 2 binom n k k 2 nbsp and b n k 0 n n k 2 n k k 2 displaystyle b n sum k 0 n binom n k 2 binom n k k 2 nbsp The sequence a n b n displaystyle frac a n b n nbsp converges to z 3 displaystyle zeta 3 nbsp fast enough to apply the criterion but unfortunately a n displaystyle a n nbsp is not an integer after n 2 displaystyle n 2 nbsp Nevertheless Apery showed that even after multiplying a n displaystyle a n nbsp and b n displaystyle b n nbsp by a suitable integer to cure this problem the convergence was still fast enough to guarantee irrationality Later proofs editWithin a year of Apery s result an alternative proof was found by Frits Beukers 5 who replaced Apery s series with integrals involving the shifted Legendre polynomials P n x displaystyle tilde P n x nbsp Using a representation that would later be generalized to Hadjicostas s formula Beukers showed that 0 1 0 1 log x y 1 x y P n x P n y d x d y A n B n z 3 lcm 1 n 3 displaystyle int 0 1 int 0 1 frac log xy 1 xy tilde P n x tilde P n y dxdy frac A n B n zeta 3 operatorname lcm left 1 ldots n right 3 nbsp for some integers An and Bn sequences OEIS A171484 and OEIS A171485 Using partial integration and the assumption that z 3 displaystyle zeta 3 nbsp was rational and equal to a b displaystyle frac a b nbsp Beukers eventually derived the inequality 0 lt 1 b A n B n z 3 4 4 5 n displaystyle 0 lt frac 1 b leq left A n B n zeta 3 right leq 4 left frac 4 5 right n nbsp which is a contradiction since the right most expression tends to zero as n displaystyle n to infty nbsp and so must eventually fall below 1 b displaystyle frac 1 b nbsp A more recent proof by Wadim Zudilin is more reminiscent of Apery s original proof 6 and also has similarities to a fourth proof by Yuri Nesterenko 7 These later proofs again derive a contradiction from the assumption that z 3 displaystyle zeta 3 nbsp is rational by constructing sequences that tend to zero but are bounded below by some positive constant They are somewhat less transparent than the earlier proofs since they rely upon hypergeometric series Higher zeta constants editSee also Particular values of the Riemann zeta function Odd positive integers Apery and Beukers could simplify their proofs to work on z 2 displaystyle zeta 2 nbsp as well thanks to the series representation z 2 3 n 1 1 n 2 2 n n displaystyle zeta 2 3 sum n 1 infty frac 1 n 2 binom 2n n nbsp Due to the success of Apery s method a search was undertaken for a number 3 5 displaystyle xi 5 nbsp with the property that z 5 3 5 n 1 1 n 1 n 5 2 n n displaystyle zeta 5 xi 5 sum n 1 infty frac 1 n 1 n 5 binom 2n n nbsp If such a 3 5 displaystyle xi 5 nbsp were found then the methods used to prove Apery s theorem would be expected to work on a proof that z 5 displaystyle zeta 5 nbsp is irrational Unfortunately extensive computer searching 8 has failed to find such a constant and in fact it is now known that if 3 5 displaystyle xi 5 nbsp exists and if it is an algebraic number of degree at most 25 then the coefficients in its minimal polynomial must be enormous at least 10 383 displaystyle 10 383 nbsp so extending Apery s proof to work on the higher odd zeta constants does not seem likely to work Despite this many mathematicians working in this area expect a breakthrough sometime soon when 9 Indeed recent work by Wadim Zudilin and Tanguy Rivoal has shown that infinitely many of the numbers z 2 n 1 displaystyle zeta 2n 1 nbsp must be irrational 10 and even that at least one of the numbers z 5 displaystyle zeta 5 nbsp z 7 displaystyle zeta 7 nbsp z 9 displaystyle zeta 9 nbsp and z 11 displaystyle zeta 11 nbsp must be irrational 11 Their work uses linear forms in values of the zeta function and estimates upon them to bound the dimension of a vector space spanned by values of the zeta function at odd integers Hopes that Zudilin could cut his list further to just one number did not materialise but work on this problem is still an active area of research Higher zeta constants have application to physics they describe correlation functions in quantum spin chains 12 References edit Kohnen Winfried 1989 Transcendence conjectures about periods of modular forms and rational structures on spaces of modular forms Proc Indian Acad Sci Math Sci 99 3 231 233 doi 10 1007 BF02864395 S2CID 121346325 A van der Poorten 1979 A proof that Euler missed PDF The Mathematical Intelligencer 1 4 195 203 doi 10 1007 BF03028234 S2CID 121589323 Apery R 1979 Irrationalite de z 2 et z 3 Asterisque 61 11 13 Apery R 1981 Interpolation de fractions continues et irrationalite de certaines constantes Bulletin de la section des sciences du C T H S III pp 37 53 F Beukers 1979 A note on the irrationality of z 2 and z 3 Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 11 3 268 272 doi 10 1112 blms 11 3 268 Zudilin W 2002 An Elementary Proof of Apery s Theorem arXiv math 0202159 Yu V Nesterenko 1996 Nekotorye zamechaniya o z 3 Matem Zametki in Russian 59 6 865 880 doi 10 4213 mzm1785 English translation Yu V Nesterenko 1996 A Few Remarks on z 3 Math Notes 59 6 625 636 doi 10 1007 BF02307212 S2CID 117487836 D H Bailey J Borwein N Calkin R Girgensohn R Luke and V Moll Experimental Mathematics in Action 2007 Jorn Steuding 2005 Diophantine Analysis Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications Boca Raton Chapman amp Hall CRC p 280 ISBN 978 1 58488 482 8 Rivoal T 2000 La fonction zeta de Riemann prend une infinite de valeurs irrationnelles aux entiers impairs Comptes Rendus de l Academie des Sciences Serie I 331 267 270 arXiv math 0008051 Bibcode 2000CRASM 331 267R doi 10 1016 S0764 4442 00 01624 4 S2CID 119678120 W Zudilin 2001 One of the numbers z 5 z 7 z 9 z 11 is irrational Russ Math Surv 56 4 774 776 Bibcode 2001RuMaS 56 774Z doi 10 1070 RM2001v056n04ABEH000427 H E Boos V E Korepin Y Nishiyama M Shiroishi 2002 Quantum Correlations and Number Theory Journal of Physics A 35 20 4443 4452 arXiv cond mat 0202346 Bibcode 2002JPhA 35 4443B doi 10 1088 0305 4470 35 20 305 S2CID 119143600 External links editHuylebrouck Dirk 2001 Similarities in Irrationality Proofs for p ln2 z 2 and z 3 PDF Amer Math Monthly 108 3 222 231 doi 10 2307 2695383 JSTOR 2695383 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apery 27s theorem amp oldid 1181973237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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