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Hilbert–Pólya conjecture

In mathematics, the Hilbert–Pólya conjecture states that the non-trivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function correspond to eigenvalues of a self-adjoint operator. It is a possible approach to the Riemann hypothesis, by means of spectral theory.

History edit

In a letter to Andrew Odlyzko, dated January 3, 1982, George Pólya said that while he was in Göttingen around 1912 to 1914 he was asked by Edmund Landau for a physical reason that the Riemann hypothesis should be true, and suggested that this would be the case if the imaginary parts t of the zeros

 

of the Riemann zeta function corresponded to eigenvalues of a self-adjoint operator.[1] The earliest published statement of the conjecture seems to be in Montgomery (1973).[1][2]

David Hilbert did not work in the central areas of analytic number theory, but his name has become known for the Hilbert–Pólya conjecture due to a story told by Ernst Hellinger, a student of Hilbert, to André Weil. Hellinger said that Hilbert announced in his seminar in the early 1900s that he expected the Riemann Hypothesis would be a consequence of Fredholm's work on integral equations with a symmetric kernel.[3][4][5][6]

1950s and the Selberg trace formula edit

At the time of Pólya's conversation with Landau, there was little basis for such speculation. However Selberg in the early 1950s proved a duality between the length spectrum of a Riemann surface and the eigenvalues of its Laplacian. This so-called Selberg trace formula bore a striking resemblance to the explicit formulae, which gave credibility to the Hilbert–Pólya conjecture.

1970s and random matrices edit

Hugh Montgomery investigated and found that the statistical distribution of the zeros on the critical line has a certain property, now called Montgomery's pair correlation conjecture. The zeros tend not to cluster too closely together, but to repel.[2] Visiting at the Institute for Advanced Study in 1972, he showed this result to Freeman Dyson, one of the founders of the theory of random matrices.

Dyson saw that the statistical distribution found by Montgomery appeared to be the same as the pair correlation distribution for the eigenvalues of a random Hermitian matrix. These distributions are of importance in physics — the eigenstates of a Hamiltonian, for example the energy levels of an atomic nucleus, satisfy such statistics. Subsequent work has strongly borne out the connection between the distribution of the zeros of the Riemann zeta function and the eigenvalues of a random Hermitian matrix drawn from the Gaussian unitary ensemble, and both are now believed to obey the same statistics. Thus the Hilbert–Pólya conjecture now has a more solid basis, though it has not yet led to a proof of the Riemann hypothesis.[7]

Later developments edit

In 1998, Alain Connes formulated a trace formula that is actually equivalent to the Riemann hypothesis. This strengthened the analogy with the Selberg trace formula to the point where it gives precise statements. He gives a geometric interpretation of the explicit formula of number theory as a trace formula on noncommutative geometry of Adele classes.[8]

Possible connection with quantum mechanics edit

A possible connection of Hilbert–Pólya operator with quantum mechanics was given by Pólya. The Hilbert–Pólya conjecture operator is of the form   where   is the Hamiltonian of a particle of mass   that is moving under the influence of a potential  . The Riemann conjecture is equivalent to the assertion that the Hamiltonian is Hermitian, or equivalently that   is real.

Using perturbation theory to first order, the energy of the nth eigenstate is related to the expectation value of the potential:

 

where   and   are the eigenvalues and eigenstates of the free particle Hamiltonian. This equation can be taken to be a Fredholm integral equation of first kind, with the energies  . Such integral equations may be solved by means of the resolvent kernel, so that the potential may be written as

 

where   is the resolvent kernel,   is a real constant and

 

where   is the Dirac delta function, and the   are the "non-trivial" roots of the zeta function  .

Michael Berry and Jonathan Keating have speculated that the Hamiltonian H is actually some quantization of the classical Hamiltonian xp, where p is the canonical momentum associated with x[9] The simplest Hermitian operator corresponding to xp is

 

This refinement of the Hilbert–Pólya conjecture is known as the Berry conjecture (or the Berry–Keating conjecture). As of 2008, it is still quite far from being concrete, as it is not clear on which space this operator should act in order to get the correct dynamics, nor how to regularize it in order to get the expected logarithmic corrections. Berry and Keating have conjectured that since this operator is invariant under dilations perhaps the boundary condition f(nx) = f(x) for integer n may help to get the correct asymptotic results valid for large n

 [10]

A paper was published in March 2017, written by Carl M. Bender, Dorje C. Brody, and Markus P. Müller,[11] which builds on Berry's approach to the problem. There the operator

 

was introduced, which they claim satisfies a certain modified versions of the conditions of the Hilbert–Pólya conjecture. Jean Bellissard has criticized this paper,[12] and the authors have responded with clarifications.[13] Moreover, Frederick Moxley has approached the problem with a Schrödinger equation.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Odlyzko, Andrew, Correspondence about the origins of the Hilbert–Polya Conjecture.
  2. ^ a b Montgomery, Hugh L. (1973), "The pair correlation of zeros of the zeta function", Analytic number theory, Proc. Sympos. Pure Math., vol. XXIV, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, pp. 181–193, MR 0337821.
  3. ^ Broughan, K. (2017), Equivalents of the Riemann Hypothesis Volume 2: Analytic Equivalents, p. 192, ISBN 978-1107197121
  4. ^ Dieudonne, J. (1981), History of Functional Analysis, p. 106, ISBN 978-0444861481
  5. ^ Endres, S.; Steiner, F. (2009), "The Berry–Keating operator on   and on compact quantum graphs with general self-adjoint realizations", Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical, 43 (9): 37, arXiv:0912.3183v5, doi:10.1088/1751-8113/43/9/095204, S2CID 115162684
  6. ^ Simon, B. (2015), Operator Theory: A Comprehensive Course in Analysis, Part 4, p. 42, ISBN 978-1-4704-1103-9
  7. ^ Rudnick, Zeev; Sarnak, Peter (1996), "Zeros of Principal L-functions and Random Matrix Theory", Duke Journal of Mathematics, 81 (2): 269–322, doi:10.1215/s0012-7094-96-08115-6.
  8. ^ Connes, Alain (1999). "Trace formula in noncommutative geometry and the zeros of the Riemann zeta function". Selecta Mathematica. 5: 29–106. arXiv:math/9811068. doi:10.1007/s000290050042. S2CID 55820659..
  9. ^ Berry, Michael V.; Keating, Jonathan P. (1999a), "H = xp and the Riemann zeros" (PDF), in Keating, Jonathan P.; Khmelnitski, David E.; Lerner, Igor V. (eds.), Supersymmetry and Trace Formulae: Chaos and Disorder, New York: Plenum, pp. 355–367, ISBN 978-0-306-45933-7.
  10. ^ Berry, Michael V.; Keating, Jonathan P. (1999b), "The Riemann zeros and eigenvalue asymptotics" (PDF), SIAM Review, 41 (2): 236–266, Bibcode:1999SIAMR..41..236B, doi:10.1137/s0036144598347497.
  11. ^ Bender, Carl M.; Brody, Dorje C.; Müller, Markus P. (2017), "Hamiltonian for the Zeros of the Riemann Zeta Function", Physical Review Letters, 118 (13): 130201, arXiv:1608.03679, Bibcode:2017PhRvL.118m0201B, doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.130201, PMID 28409977, S2CID 46816531.
  12. ^ Belissard, Jean (2017), "Comment on "Hamiltonian for the Zeros of the Riemann Zeta Function"", arXiv:1704.02644 [quant-ph]
  13. ^ Bender, Carl M.; Brody, Dorje C.; Müller, Markus P. (2017), "Comment on 'Comment on "Hamiltonian for the zeros of the Riemann zeta function"'", arXiv:1705.06767 [quant-ph].
  14. ^ Moxley, Frederick (2017). A Schrödinger equation for solving the Bender-Brody-Müller conjecture. 13Th Imt-Gt International Conference on Mathematics. AIP Conference Proceedings. Vol. 1905. p. 030024. Bibcode:2017AIPC.1905c0024M. doi:10.1063/1.5012170.

Further reading edit

  • Aneva, B. (1999), "Symmetry of the Riemann operator" (PDF), Physics Letters B, 450 (4): 388–396, arXiv:0804.1618, doi:10.1016/s0370-2693(99)00172-0, S2CID 222175681.

Wolf, M. (2020), "Will a physicist prove the Riemann hypothesis?", Reports on Progress in Physics, 83 (4): 036001, arXiv:1410.1214, doi:10.1088/1361-6633/ab3de7, PMID 31437818, S2CID 85450819.

  • Elizalde, Emilio (1994), Zeta regularization techniques with applications, World Scientific, Bibcode:1994zrta.book.....E, ISBN 978-981-02-1441-8. Here the author explains in what sense the problem of Hilbert–Polya is related with the problem of the Gutzwiller trace formula and what would be the value of the sum   taken over the imaginary parts of the zeros.

hilbert, pólya, conjecture, mathematics, states, that, trivial, zeros, riemann, zeta, function, correspond, eigenvalues, self, adjoint, operator, possible, approach, riemann, hypothesis, means, spectral, theory, contents, history, 1950s, selberg, trace, formul. In mathematics the Hilbert Polya conjecture states that the non trivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function correspond to eigenvalues of a self adjoint operator It is a possible approach to the Riemann hypothesis by means of spectral theory Contents 1 History 1 1 1950s and the Selberg trace formula 1 2 1970s and random matrices 1 3 Later developments 2 Possible connection with quantum mechanics 3 References 4 Further readingHistory editIn a letter to Andrew Odlyzko dated January 3 1982 George Polya said that while he was in Gottingen around 1912 to 1914 he was asked by Edmund Landau for a physical reason that the Riemann hypothesis should be true and suggested that this would be the case if the imaginary parts t of the zeros 1 2 i t displaystyle tfrac 1 2 it nbsp of the Riemann zeta function corresponded to eigenvalues of a self adjoint operator 1 The earliest published statement of the conjecture seems to be in Montgomery 1973 1 2 David Hilbert did not work in the central areas of analytic number theory but his name has become known for the Hilbert Polya conjecture due to a story told by Ernst Hellinger a student of Hilbert to Andre Weil Hellinger said that Hilbert announced in his seminar in the early 1900s that he expected the Riemann Hypothesis would be a consequence of Fredholm s work on integral equations with a symmetric kernel 3 4 5 6 1950s and the Selberg trace formula edit At the time of Polya s conversation with Landau there was little basis for such speculation However Selberg in the early 1950s proved a duality between the length spectrum of a Riemann surface and the eigenvalues of its Laplacian This so called Selberg trace formula bore a striking resemblance to the explicit formulae which gave credibility to the Hilbert Polya conjecture 1970s and random matrices edit Hugh Montgomery investigated and found that the statistical distribution of the zeros on the critical line has a certain property now called Montgomery s pair correlation conjecture The zeros tend not to cluster too closely together but to repel 2 Visiting at the Institute for Advanced Study in 1972 he showed this result to Freeman Dyson one of the founders of the theory of random matrices Dyson saw that the statistical distribution found by Montgomery appeared to be the same as the pair correlation distribution for the eigenvalues of a random Hermitian matrix These distributions are of importance in physics the eigenstates of a Hamiltonian for example the energy levels of an atomic nucleus satisfy such statistics Subsequent work has strongly borne out the connection between the distribution of the zeros of the Riemann zeta function and the eigenvalues of a random Hermitian matrix drawn from the Gaussian unitary ensemble and both are now believed to obey the same statistics Thus the Hilbert Polya conjecture now has a more solid basis though it has not yet led to a proof of the Riemann hypothesis 7 Later developments edit In 1998 Alain Connes formulated a trace formula that is actually equivalent to the Riemann hypothesis This strengthened the analogy with the Selberg trace formula to the point where it gives precise statements He gives a geometric interpretation of the explicit formula of number theory as a trace formula on noncommutative geometry of Adele classes 8 Possible connection with quantum mechanics editA possible connection of Hilbert Polya operator with quantum mechanics was given by Polya The Hilbert Polya conjecture operator is of the form 1 2 i H displaystyle tfrac 1 2 iH nbsp where H displaystyle H nbsp is the Hamiltonian of a particle of mass m displaystyle m nbsp that is moving under the influence of a potential V x displaystyle V x nbsp The Riemann conjecture is equivalent to the assertion that the Hamiltonian is Hermitian or equivalently that V displaystyle V nbsp is real Using perturbation theory to first order the energy of the nth eigenstate is related to the expectation value of the potential E n E n 0 f n 0 V f n 0 displaystyle E n E n 0 left left langle varphi n 0 right V left varphi n 0 right right rangle nbsp where E n 0 displaystyle E n 0 nbsp and f n 0 displaystyle varphi n 0 nbsp are the eigenvalues and eigenstates of the free particle Hamiltonian This equation can be taken to be a Fredholm integral equation of first kind with the energies E n displaystyle E n nbsp Such integral equations may be solved by means of the resolvent kernel so that the potential may be written as V x A g k g k E k 0 R x k d k displaystyle V x A int infty infty left g k overline g k E k 0 right R x k dk nbsp where R x k displaystyle R x k nbsp is the resolvent kernel A displaystyle A nbsp is a real constant and g k i n 0 1 2 r n d k n displaystyle g k i sum n 0 infty left frac 1 2 rho n right delta k n nbsp where d k n displaystyle delta k n nbsp is the Dirac delta function and the r n displaystyle rho n nbsp are the non trivial roots of the zeta function z r n 0 displaystyle zeta rho n 0 nbsp Michael Berry and Jonathan Keating have speculated that the Hamiltonian H is actually some quantization of the classical Hamiltonian xp where p is the canonical momentum associated with x 9 The simplest Hermitian operator corresponding to xp is H 1 2 x p p x i x d d x 1 2 displaystyle hat H tfrac 1 2 hat x hat p hat p hat x i left x frac mathrm d mathrm d x frac 1 2 right nbsp This refinement of the Hilbert Polya conjecture is known as the Berry conjecture or the Berry Keating conjecture As of 2008 it is still quite far from being concrete as it is not clear on which space this operator should act in order to get the correct dynamics nor how to regularize it in order to get the expected logarithmic corrections Berry and Keating have conjectured that since this operator is invariant under dilations perhaps the boundary condition f nx f x for integer n may help to get the correct asymptotic results valid for large n 1 2 i 2 p n log n displaystyle frac 1 2 i frac 2 pi n log n nbsp 10 A paper was published in March 2017 written by Carl M Bender Dorje C Brody and Markus P Muller 11 which builds on Berry s approach to the problem There the operator H 1 1 e i p x p p x 1 e i p displaystyle hat H frac 1 1 e i hat p left hat x hat p hat p hat x right left 1 e i hat p right nbsp was introduced which they claim satisfies a certain modified versions of the conditions of the Hilbert Polya conjecture Jean Bellissard has criticized this paper 12 and the authors have responded with clarifications 13 Moreover Frederick Moxley has approached the problem with a Schrodinger equation 14 References edit a b Odlyzko Andrew Correspondence about the origins of the Hilbert Polya Conjecture a b Montgomery Hugh L 1973 The pair correlation of zeros of the zeta function Analytic number theory Proc Sympos Pure Math vol XXIV Providence R I American Mathematical Society pp 181 193 MR 0337821 Broughan K 2017 Equivalents of the Riemann Hypothesis Volume 2 Analytic Equivalents p 192 ISBN 978 1107197121 Dieudonne J 1981 History of Functional Analysis p 106 ISBN 978 0444861481 Endres S Steiner F 2009 The Berry Keating operator on L 2 R gt d x displaystyle L 2 mathbb R gt rm d x nbsp and on compact quantum graphs with general self adjoint realizations Journal of Physics A Mathematical and Theoretical 43 9 37 arXiv 0912 3183v5 doi 10 1088 1751 8113 43 9 095204 S2CID 115162684 Simon B 2015 Operator Theory A Comprehensive Course in Analysis Part 4 p 42 ISBN 978 1 4704 1103 9 Rudnick Zeev Sarnak Peter 1996 Zeros of Principal L functions and Random Matrix Theory Duke Journal of Mathematics 81 2 269 322 doi 10 1215 s0012 7094 96 08115 6 Connes Alain 1999 Trace formula in noncommutative geometry and the zeros of the Riemann zeta function Selecta Mathematica 5 29 106 arXiv math 9811068 doi 10 1007 s000290050042 S2CID 55820659 Berry Michael V Keating Jonathan P 1999a H xp and the Riemann zeros PDF in Keating Jonathan P Khmelnitski David E Lerner Igor V eds Supersymmetry and Trace Formulae Chaos and Disorder New York Plenum pp 355 367 ISBN 978 0 306 45933 7 Berry Michael V Keating Jonathan P 1999b The Riemann zeros and eigenvalue asymptotics PDF SIAM Review 41 2 236 266 Bibcode 1999SIAMR 41 236B doi 10 1137 s0036144598347497 Bender Carl M Brody Dorje C Muller Markus P 2017 Hamiltonian for the Zeros of the Riemann Zeta Function Physical Review Letters 118 13 130201 arXiv 1608 03679 Bibcode 2017PhRvL 118m0201B doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 118 130201 PMID 28409977 S2CID 46816531 Belissard Jean 2017 Comment on Hamiltonian for the Zeros of the Riemann Zeta Function arXiv 1704 02644 quant ph Bender Carl M Brody Dorje C Muller Markus P 2017 Comment on Comment on Hamiltonian for the zeros of the Riemann zeta function arXiv 1705 06767 quant ph Moxley Frederick 2017 A Schrodinger equation for solving the Bender Brody Muller conjecture 13Th Imt Gt International Conference on Mathematics AIP Conference Proceedings Vol 1905 p 030024 Bibcode 2017AIPC 1905c0024M doi 10 1063 1 5012170 Further reading editAneva B 1999 Symmetry of the Riemann operator PDF Physics Letters B 450 4 388 396 arXiv 0804 1618 doi 10 1016 s0370 2693 99 00172 0 S2CID 222175681 Wolf M 2020 Will a physicist prove the Riemann hypothesis Reports on Progress in Physics 83 4 036001 arXiv 1410 1214 doi 10 1088 1361 6633 ab3de7 PMID 31437818 S2CID 85450819 Elizalde Emilio 1994 Zeta regularization techniques with applications World Scientific Bibcode 1994zrta book E ISBN 978 981 02 1441 8 Here the author explains in what sense the problem of Hilbert Polya is related with the problem of the Gutzwiller trace formula and what would be the value of the sum exp i g displaystyle exp i gamma nbsp taken over the imaginary parts of the zeros Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hilbert Polya conjecture amp oldid 1140532192, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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