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Riemann zeta function

The Riemann zeta function or Euler–Riemann zeta function, denoted by the Greek letter ζ (zeta), is a mathematical function of a complex variable defined as

The Riemann zeta function ζ(z) plotted with domain coloring.[1]
The pole at and two zeros on the critical line.
for and its analytic continuation elsewhere.[2]

The Riemann zeta function plays a pivotal role in analytic number theory, and has applications in physics, probability theory, and applied statistics.

Leonhard Euler first introduced and studied the function over the reals in the first half of the eighteenth century. Bernhard Riemann's 1859 article "On the Number of Primes Less Than a Given Magnitude" extended the Euler definition to a complex variable, proved its meromorphic continuation and functional equation, and established a relation between its zeros and the distribution of prime numbers. This paper also contained the Riemann hypothesis, a conjecture about the distribution of complex zeros of the Riemann zeta function that is considered by many mathematicians to be the most important unsolved problem in pure mathematics.[3]

The values of the Riemann zeta function at even positive integers were computed by Euler. The first of them, ζ(2), provides a solution to the Basel problem. In 1979 Roger Apéry proved the irrationality of ζ(3). The values at negative integer points, also found by Euler, are rational numbers and play an important role in the theory of modular forms. Many generalizations of the Riemann zeta function, such as Dirichlet series, Dirichlet L-functions and L-functions, are known.

Definition

 
Bernhard Riemann's article On the number of primes below a given magnitude

The Riemann zeta function ζ(s) is a function of a complex variable s = σ + it. (The notation s, σ, and t is used traditionally in the study of the zeta function, following Riemann.) When Re(s) = σ > 1, the function can be written as a converging summation or integral:

 

where

 

is the gamma function. The Riemann zeta function is defined for other complex values via analytic continuation of the function defined for σ > 1.

Leonhard Euler considered the above series in 1740 for positive integer values of s, and later Chebyshev extended the definition to  [4]

The above series is a prototypical Dirichlet series that converges absolutely to an analytic function for s such that σ > 1 and diverges for all other values of s. Riemann showed that the function defined by the series on the half-plane of convergence can be continued analytically to all complex values s ≠ 1. For s = 1, the series is the harmonic series which diverges to +∞, and

 
Thus the Riemann zeta function is a meromorphic function on the whole complex plane, which is holomorphic everywhere except for a simple pole at s = 1 with residue 1.

Euler's product formula

In 1737, the connection between the zeta function and prime numbers was discovered by Euler, who proved the identity

 

where, by definition, the left hand side is ζ(s) and the infinite product on the right hand side extends over all prime numbers p (such expressions are called Euler products):

 

Both sides of the Euler product formula converge for Re(s) > 1. The proof of Euler's identity uses only the formula for the geometric series and the fundamental theorem of arithmetic. Since the harmonic series, obtained when s = 1, diverges, Euler's formula (which becomes Πp p/p − 1) implies that there are infinitely many primes.[5]

The Euler product formula can be used to calculate the asymptotic probability that s randomly selected integers are set-wise coprime. Intuitively, the probability that any single number is divisible by a prime (or any integer) p is 1/p. Hence the probability that s numbers are all divisible by this prime is 1/ps, and the probability that at least one of them is not is 1 − 1/ps. Now, for distinct primes, these divisibility events are mutually independent because the candidate divisors are coprime (a number is divisible by coprime divisors n and m if and only if it is divisible by nm, an event which occurs with probability 1/nm). Thus the asymptotic probability that s numbers are coprime is given by a product over all primes,

 

Riemann's functional equation

This zeta function satisfies the functional equation

 
where Γ(s) is the gamma function. This is an equality of meromorphic functions valid on the whole complex plane. The equation relates values of the Riemann zeta function at the points s and 1 − s, in particular relating even positive integers with odd negative integers. Owing to the zeros of the sine function, the functional equation implies that ζ(s) has a simple zero at each even negative integer s = −2n, known as the trivial zeros of ζ(s). When s is an even positive integer, the product sin(πs/2)Γ(1 − s) on the right is non-zero because Γ(1 − s) has a simple pole, which cancels the simple zero of the sine factor.
Proof of Riemann's functional equation

A proof of the functional equation proceeds as follows: We observe that if  , then

 

As a result, if   then

 
with the inversion of the limiting processes justified by absolute convergence (hence the stricter requirement on  ).

For convenience, let

 

Then

 

By the Poisson summation formula we have

 

so that

 

Hence

 

This is equivalent to

 
or
 

So

 

which is convergent for all s, so holds by analytic continuation. Furthermore, the RHS is unchanged if s is changed to 1 − s. Hence

 
which is the functional equation. E. C. Titchmarsh (1986). The Theory of the Riemann Zeta-function (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford Science Publications. pp. 21–22. ISBN 0-19-853369-1. Attributed to Bernhard Riemann.

The functional equation was established by Riemann in his 1859 paper "On the Number of Primes Less Than a Given Magnitude" and used to construct the analytic continuation in the first place. An equivalent relationship had been conjectured by Euler over a hundred years earlier, in 1749, for the Dirichlet eta function (the alternating zeta function):

 

Incidentally, this relation gives an equation for calculating ζ(s) in the region 0 < Re(s) < 1, i.e.

 
where the η-series is convergent (albeit non-absolutely) in the larger half-plane s > 0 (for a more detailed survey on the history of the functional equation, see e.g. Blagouchine[6][7]).

Riemann also found a symmetric version of the functional equation applying to the xi-function:

 
which satisfies:
 

(Riemann's original ξ(t) was slightly different.)

The   factor was not well-understood at the time of Riemann, until John Tate's (1950) thesis, in which it was shown that this so-called "Gamma factor" is in fact the local L-factor corresponding to the Archimedean place, the other factors in the Euler product expansion being the local L-factors of the non-Archimedean places.

Zeros, the critical line, and the Riemann hypothesis

 
The Riemann zeta function has no zeros to the right of σ = 1 or (apart from the trivial zeros) to the left of σ = 0 (nor can the zeros lie too close to those lines). Furthermore, the non-trivial zeros are symmetric about the real axis and the line σ = 1/2 and, according to the Riemann hypothesis, they all lie on the line σ = 1/2.
 
This image shows a plot of the Riemann zeta function along the critical line for real values of t running from 0 to 34. The first five zeros in the critical strip are clearly visible as the place where the spirals pass through the origin.
 
The real part (red) and imaginary part (blue) of the Riemann zeta function along the critical line Re(s) = 1/2. The first non-trivial zeros can be seen at Im(s) = ±14.135, ±21.022 and ±25.011.

The functional equation shows that the Riemann zeta function has zeros at −2, −4,.... These are called the trivial zeros. They are trivial in the sense that their existence is relatively easy to prove, for example, from sin πs/2 being 0 in the functional equation. The non-trivial zeros have captured far more attention because their distribution not only is far less understood but, more importantly, their study yields important results concerning prime numbers and related objects in number theory. It is known that any non-trivial zero lies in the open strip  , which is called the critical strip. The set   is called the critical line. The Riemann hypothesis, considered one of the greatest unsolved problems in mathematics, asserts that all non-trivial zeros are on the critical line. In 1989, Conrey proved that more than 40% of the non-trivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function are on the critical line.[8]

For the Riemann zeta function on the critical line, see Z-function.

First few nontrivial zeros[9][10]
Zero
1/2 ± 14.134725 i
1/2 ± 21.022040 i
1/2 ± 25.010858 i
1/2 ± 30.424876 i
1/2 ± 32.935062 i
1/2 ± 37.586178 i

Number of zeros in the critical strip

Let   be the number of zeros of   in the critical strip  , whose imaginary parts are in the interval  . Trudgian proved that, if  , then[11]

 .

The Hardy–Littlewood conjectures

In 1914, Godfrey Harold Hardy proved that ζ (1/2 + it) has infinitely many real zeros.[12]

Hardy and John Edensor Littlewood formulated two conjectures on the density and distance between the zeros of ζ (1/2 + it) on intervals of large positive real numbers. In the following, N(T) is the total number of real zeros and N0(T) the total number of zeros of odd order of the function ζ (1/2 + it) lying in the interval (0, T].

  1. For any ε > 0, there exists a T0(ε) > 0 such that when
     
    the interval (T, T + H] contains a zero of odd order.
  2. For any ε > 0, there exists a T0(ε) > 0 and cε > 0 such that the inequality
     
    holds when
     

These two conjectures opened up new directions in the investigation of the Riemann zeta function.

Zero-free region

The location of the Riemann zeta function's zeros is of great importance in number theory. The prime number theorem is equivalent to the fact that there are no zeros of the zeta function on the Re(s) = 1 line.[13] A better result[14] that follows from an effective form of Vinogradov's mean-value theorem is that ζ (σ + it) ≠ 0 whenever   and |t| ≥ 3.


In 2015, Mossinghoff and Trudgian proved[15] that zeta has no zeros in the region

 

for |t| ≥ 2. This is the largest known zero-free region in the critical strip for  .

The strongest result of this kind one can hope for is the truth of the Riemann hypothesis, which would have many profound consequences in the theory of numbers.

Other results

It is known that there are infinitely many zeros on the critical line. Littlewood showed that if the sequence (γn) contains the imaginary parts of all zeros in the upper half-plane in ascending order, then

 

The critical line theorem asserts that a positive proportion of the nontrivial zeros lies on the critical line. (The Riemann hypothesis would imply that this proportion is 1.)

In the critical strip, the zero with smallest non-negative imaginary part is 1/2 + 14.13472514...i (OEISA058303). The fact that

 

for all complex s ≠ 1 implies that the zeros of the Riemann zeta function are symmetric about the real axis. Combining this symmetry with the functional equation, furthermore, one sees that the non-trivial zeros are symmetric about the critical line Re(s) = 1/2.

It is also known that no zeros lie on a line with real part 1.

Specific values

For any positive even integer 2n,

 
where B2n is the 2n-th Bernoulli number. For odd positive integers, no such simple expression is known, although these values are thought to be related to the algebraic K-theory of the integers; see Special values of L-functions.

For nonpositive integers, one has

 
for n ≥ 0 (using the convention that B1 = −1/2). In particular, ζ vanishes at the negative even integers because Bm = 0 for all odd m other than 1. These are the so-called "trivial zeros" of the zeta function.

Via analytic continuation, one can show that

 
This gives a pretext for assigning a finite value to the divergent series 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + ⋯, which has been used in certain contexts (Ramanujan summation) such as string theory.[16] Analogously, the particular value
 
can be viewed as assigning a finite result to the divergent series 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + ⋯.

The value

 
is employed in calculating kinetic boundary layer problems of linear kinetic equations.[17][18]

Although

 
diverges, its Cauchy principal value
 
exists and is equal to the Euler–Mascheroni constant γ = 0.5772....[19]

The demonstration of the particular value

 
is known as the Basel problem. The reciprocal of this sum answers the question: What is the probability that two numbers selected at random are relatively prime?[20] The value
 
is Apéry's constant.

Taking the limit   through the real numbers, one obtains  . But at complex infinity on the Riemann sphere the zeta function has an essential singularity.[2]

Various properties

For sums involving the zeta function at integer and half-integer values, see rational zeta series.

Reciprocal

The reciprocal of the zeta function may be expressed as a Dirichlet series over the Möbius function μ(n):

 

for every complex number s with real part greater than 1. There are a number of similar relations involving various well-known multiplicative functions; these are given in the article on the Dirichlet series.

The Riemann hypothesis is equivalent to the claim that this expression is valid when the real part of s is greater than 1/2.

Universality

The critical strip of the Riemann zeta function has the remarkable property of universality. This zeta function universality states that there exists some location on the critical strip that approximates any holomorphic function arbitrarily well. Since holomorphic functions are very general, this property is quite remarkable. The first proof of universality was provided by Sergei Mikhailovitch Voronin in 1975.[21] More recent work has included effective versions of Voronin's theorem[22] and extending it to Dirichlet L-functions.[23][24]

Estimates of the maximum of the modulus of the zeta function

Let the functions F(T;H) and G(s0;Δ) be defined by the equalities

 

Here T is a sufficiently large positive number, 0 < H ≪ log log T, s0 = σ0 + iT, 1/2σ0 ≤ 1, 0 < Δ < 1/3. Estimating the values F and G from below shows, how large (in modulus) values ζ(s) can take on short intervals of the critical line or in small neighborhoods of points lying in the critical strip 0 ≤ Re(s) ≤ 1.

The case H ≫ log log T was studied by Kanakanahalli Ramachandra; the case Δ > c, where c is a sufficiently large constant, is trivial.

Anatolii Karatsuba proved,[25][26] in particular, that if the values H and Δ exceed certain sufficiently small constants, then the estimates

 

hold, where c1 and c2 are certain absolute constants.

The argument of the Riemann zeta function

The function

 

is called the argument of the Riemann zeta function. Here arg ζ(1/2 + it) is the increment of an arbitrary continuous branch of arg ζ(s) along the broken line joining the points 2, 2 + it and 1/2 + it.

There are some theorems on properties of the function S(t). Among those results[27][28] are the mean value theorems for S(t) and its first integral

 

on intervals of the real line, and also the theorem claiming that every interval (T, T + H] for

 

contains at least

 

points where the function S(t) changes sign. Earlier similar results were obtained by Atle Selberg for the case

 

Representations

Dirichlet series

An extension of the area of convergence can be obtained by rearranging the original series.[29] The series

 

converges for Re(s) > 0, while

 

converges even for Re(s) > −1. In this way, the area of convergence can be extended to Re(s) > −k for any negative integer k.

Mellin-type integrals

The Mellin transform of a function f(x) is defined as[30]

 

in the region where the integral is defined. There are various expressions for the zeta function as Mellin transform-like integrals. If the real part of s is greater than one, we have

  and  ,

where Γ denotes the gamma function. By modifying the contour, Riemann showed that

 

for all s (where H denotes the Hankel contour).

We can also find expressions which relate to prime numbers and the prime number theorem. If π(x) is the prime-counting function, then

 

for values with Re(s) > 1.

A similar Mellin transform involves the Riemann function J(x), which counts prime powers pn with a weight of 1/n, so that

 

Now

 

These expressions can be used to prove the prime number theorem by means of the inverse Mellin transform. Riemann's prime-counting function is easier to work with, and π(x) can be recovered from it by Möbius inversion.

Theta functions

The Riemann zeta function can be given by a Mellin transform[31]

 

in terms of Jacobi's theta function

 

However, this integral only converges if the real part of s is greater than 1, but it can be regularized. This gives the following expression for the zeta function, which is well defined for all s except 0 and 1:

 

Laurent series

The Riemann zeta function is meromorphic with a single pole of order one at s = 1. It can therefore be expanded as a Laurent series about s = 1; the series development is then[32]

 

The constants γn here are called the Stieltjes constants and can be defined by the limit

 

The constant term γ0 is the Euler–Mascheroni constant.

Integral

For all sC, s ≠ 1, the integral relation (cf. Abel–Plana formula)

 

holds true, which may be used for a numerical evaluation of the zeta function.

Rising factorial

Another series development using the rising factorial valid for the entire complex plane is[citation needed]

 

This can be used recursively to extend the Dirichlet series definition to all complex numbers.

The Riemann zeta function also appears in a form similar to the Mellin transform in an integral over the Gauss–Kuzmin–Wirsing operator acting on xs − 1; that context gives rise to a series expansion in terms of the falling factorial.[33]

Hadamard product

On the basis of Weierstrass's factorization theorem, Hadamard gave the infinite product expansion

 

where the product is over the non-trivial zeros ρ of ζ and the letter γ again denotes the Euler–Mascheroni constant. A simpler infinite product expansion is

 

This form clearly displays the simple pole at s = 1, the trivial zeros at −2, −4, ... due to the gamma function term in the denominator, and the non-trivial zeros at s = ρ. (To ensure convergence in the latter formula, the product should be taken over "matching pairs" of zeros, i.e. the factors for a pair of zeros of the form ρ and 1 − ρ should be combined.)

Globally convergent series

A globally convergent series for the zeta function, valid for all complex numbers s except s = 1 + i/ln 2n for some integer n, was conjectured by Konrad Knopp in 1926 [34] and proven by Helmut Hasse in 1930[35] (cf. Euler summation):

 

The series appeared in an appendix to Hasse's paper, and was published for the second time by Jonathan Sondow in 1994.[36]

Hasse also proved the globally converging series

 

in the same publication.[35] Research by Iaroslav Blagouchine[37][34] has found that a similar, equivalent series was published by Joseph Ser in 1926.[38]

Peter Borwein has developed an algorithm that applies Chebyshev polynomials to the Dirichlet eta function to produce a very rapidly convergent series suitable for high precision numerical calculations.[39]

Series representation at positive integers via the primorial

 

Here pn# is the primorial sequence and Jk is Jordan's totient function.[40]

Series representation by the incomplete poly-Bernoulli numbers

The function ζ can be represented, for Re(s) > 1, by the infinite series

 

where k ∈ {−1, 0}, Wk is the kth branch of the Lambert W-function, and B(μ)
n, ≥2
is an incomplete poly-Bernoulli number.[41]

The Mellin transform of the Engel map

The function   is iterated to find the coefficients appearing in Engel expansions.[42]

The Mellin transform of the map   is related to the Riemann zeta function by the formula

 

Thue-Morse sequence

Certain linear combinations of Dirichlet series whose coefficients are terms of the Thue-Morse sequence give rise to identities involving the Riemann Zeta function (Tóth, 2022 [43]). For instance:

 

where   is the   term of the Thue-Morse sequence. In fact, for all   with real part greater than  , we have

 

Numerical algorithms

A classical algorithm, in use prior to about 1930, proceeds by applying the Euler-Maclaurin formula to obtain, for n and m positive integers,

 

where, letting   denote the indicated Bernoulli number,

 

and the error satisfies

 

with σ = Re(s).[44]

A modern numerical algorithm is the Odlyzko–Schönhage algorithm.

Applications

The zeta function occurs in applied statistics (see Zipf's law and Zipf–Mandelbrot law).

Zeta function regularization is used as one possible means of regularization of divergent series and divergent integrals in quantum field theory. In one notable example, the Riemann zeta function shows up explicitly in one method of calculating the Casimir effect. The zeta function is also useful for the analysis of dynamical systems.[45]

Musical Tuning

In the theory of musical tunings, the zeta function can be used to find equal divisions of the octave (EDOs) that closely approximate the intervals of the harmonic series. For increasing values of  , the value of

 

peaks near integers that correspond to such EDOs.[46] Examples include popular choices such as 12, 19, and 53.[47]

Infinite series

The zeta function evaluated at equidistant positive integers appears in infinite series representations of a number of constants.[48]

  •  

In fact the even and odd terms give the two sums

  •  

and

  •  

Parametrized versions of the above sums are given by

  •  

and

  •  

with   and where   and   are the polygamma function and Euler's constant, respectively, as well as

  •  

all of which are continuous at  . Other sums include

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

where Im denotes the imaginary part of a complex number.

There are yet more formulas in the article Harmonic number.

Generalizations

There are a number of related zeta functions that can be considered to be generalizations of the Riemann zeta function. These include the Hurwitz zeta function

 

(the convergent series representation was given by Helmut Hasse in 1930,[35] cf. Hurwitz zeta function), which coincides with the Riemann zeta function when q = 1 (the lower limit of summation in the Hurwitz zeta function is 0, not 1), the Dirichlet L-functions and the Dedekind zeta function. For other related functions see the articles zeta function and L-function.

The polylogarithm is given by

 

which coincides with the Riemann zeta function when z = 1. The Clausen function Cls(θ) can be chosen as the real or imaginary part of Lis(e).

The Lerch transcendent is given by

 

which coincides with the Riemann zeta function when z = 1 and q = 1 (the lower limit of summation in the Lerch transcendent is 0, not 1).

The multiple zeta functions are defined by

 

One can analytically continue these functions to the n-dimensional complex space. The special values taken by these functions at positive integer arguments are called multiple zeta values by number theorists and have been connected to many different branches in mathematics and physics.

See also

Notes

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  3. ^ Bombieri, Enrico. "The Riemann Hypothesis – official problem description" (PDF). Clay Mathematics Institute. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
  4. ^ Devlin, Keith (2002). The Millennium Problems: The seven greatest unsolved mathematical puzzles of our time. New York: Barnes & Noble. pp. 43–47. ISBN 978-0-7607-8659-8.
  5. ^ Sandifer, Charles Edward (2007). How Euler Did It. Mathematical Association of America. p. 193. ISBN 978-0-88385-563-8.
  6. ^ Blagouchine, I.V. (1 March 2018). The history of the functional equation of the zeta-function. Seminar on the History of Mathematics. St. Petersburg, RU: Steklov Institute of Mathematics; "online PDF".
  7. ^ Blagouchine, I.V. (2014). "Rediscovery of Malmsten's integrals, their evaluation by contour integration methods and some related results". The Ramanujan Journal. 35 (1): 21–110. doi:10.1007/s11139-013-9528-5. S2CID 120943474.
    Blagouchine, I.V. (2017). "Addendum". The Ramanujan Journal. 42: 777–781. doi:10.1007/s11139-015-9763-z. S2CID 125198685.
  8. ^ Conrey, J. B. (1989). "More than two fifths of the zeros of the Riemann zeta function are on the critical line". J. Reine Angew. Math. 1989 (399): 1–26. doi:10.1515/crll.1989.399.1. MR 1004130. S2CID 115910600.
  9. ^ Eric Weisstein. "Riemann Zeta Function Zeros". Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  10. ^ The L-functions and Modular Forms Database. "Zeros of ζ(s)".
  11. ^ Trudgian, Timothy S. (2014). "An improved upper bound for the argument of the Riemann zeta function on the critical line II". J. Number Theory. 134: 280–292. arXiv:1208.5846. doi:10.1016/j.jnt.2013.07.017.
  12. ^ Hardy, G. H.; Fekete, M.; Littlewood, J. E. (1 September 1921). "The Zeros of Riemann's Zeta-Function on the Critical Line". Journal of the London Mathematical Society. s1-1: 15–19. doi:10.1112/jlms/s1-1.1.15.
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  16. ^ Polchinski, Joseph (1998). An Introduction to the Bosonic String. String Theory. Vol. I. Cambridge University Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-521-63303-1.
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  18. ^ Further digits and references for this constant are available at OEISA059750.
  19. ^ Sondow, Jonathan (1998). . Mathematics Magazine. 71 (3): 219–220. doi:10.1080/0025570X.1998.11996638. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 29 May 2006.
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  22. ^ Ramūnas Garunkštis; Antanas Laurinčikas; Kohji Matsumoto; Jörn Steuding; Rasa Steuding (2010). "Effective uniform approximation by the Riemann zeta-function". Publicacions Matemàtiques. 54 (1): 209–219. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-1975-0384673-1. JSTOR 43736941.
  23. ^ Bhaskar Bagchi (1982). "A Joint Universality Theorem for Dirichlet L-Functions". Mathematische Zeitschrift. 181 (3): 319–334. doi:10.1007/bf01161980. ISSN 0025-5874. S2CID 120930513.
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  28. ^ Karatsuba, A. A. (1996). "On the function S(t)". Izv. Ross. Akad. Nauk, Ser. Mat. 60 (5): 27–56.
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  33. ^ "A series representation for the Riemann Zeta derived from the Gauss-Kuzmin-Wirsing Operator" (PDF). Linas.org. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
  34. ^ a b Blagouchine, Iaroslav V. (2018). "Three Notes on Ser's and Hasse's Representations for the Zeta-functions". INTEGERS: The Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory. 18A: 1–45. arXiv:1606.02044. Bibcode:2016arXiv160602044B.
  35. ^ a b c Hasse, Helmut (1930). "Ein Summierungsverfahren für die Riemannsche ζ-Reihe" [A summation method for the Riemann ζ series]. Mathematische Zeitschrift (in German). 32 (1): 458–464. doi:10.1007/BF01194645. S2CID 120392534.
  36. ^ Sondow, Jonathan (1994). "Analytic continuation of Riemann's zeta function and values at negative integers via Euler's transformation of series" (PDF). Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. 120 (2): 421–424. doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-1994-1172954-7.
  37. ^ Blagouchine, Iaroslav V. (2016). "Expansions of generalized Euler's constants into the series of polynomials in π−2 and into the formal enveloping series with rational coefficients only". Journal of Number Theory. 158: 365–396. arXiv:1501.00740. doi:10.1016/j.jnt.2015.06.012.
  38. ^ Ser, Joseph (1926). "Sur une expression de la fonction ζ(s) de Riemann" [Upon an expression for Riemann's ζ function]. Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des Sciences (in French). 182: 1075–1077.
  39. ^ Borwein, Peter (2000). "An Efficient Algorithm for the Riemann Zeta Function" (PDF). In Théra, Michel A. (ed.). Constructive, Experimental, and Nonlinear Analysis. Conference Proceedings, Canadian Mathematical Society. Vol. 27. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society, on behalf of the Canadian Mathematical Society. pp. 29–34. ISBN 978-0-8218-2167-1.
  40. ^ Mező, István (2013). "The primorial and the Riemann zeta function". The American Mathematical Monthly. 120 (4): 321.
  41. ^ Komatsu, Takao; Mező, István (2016). "Incomplete poly-Bernoulli numbers associated with incomplete Stirling numbers". Publicationes Mathematicae Debrecen. 88 (3–4): 357–368. arXiv:1510.05799. doi:10.5486/pmd.2016.7361. S2CID 55741906.
  42. ^ "A220335 - OEIS". oeis.org. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
  43. ^ Tóth, László (2022). "Linear Combinations of Dirichlet Series Associated with the Thue-Morse Sequence". Integers. 22 (article 98).
  44. ^ Odlyzko, A. M.; Schönhage, A. (1988). "Fast algorithms for multiple evaluations of the Riemann zeta function". Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 309 (2): 797–809. doi:10.2307/2000939. JSTOR 2000939. MR 0961614..
  45. ^ "Work on spin-chains by A. Knauf, et. al". Empslocal.ex.ac.uk. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
  46. ^ Gene Ward Smith. "Nearest integer to locations of increasingly large peaks of abs(zeta(0.5 + i*2*Pi/log(2)*t)) for increasing real t". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. Retrieved 4 March 2022.
  47. ^ William A. Sethares (2005). Tuning, Timbre, Spectrum, Scale (2nd ed.). Springer-Verlag London. p. 74. ...there are many different ways to evaluate the goodness, reasonableness, fitness, or quality of a scale...Under some measures, 12-tet is the winner, under others 19-tet appears best, 53-tet often appears among the victors...
  48. ^ Most of the formulas in this section are from § 4 of J. M. Borwein et al. (2000)

References

  • Apostol, T. M. (2010). "Zeta and Related Functions". In Olver, Frank W. J.; Lozier, Daniel M.; Boisvert, Ronald F.; Clark, Charles W. (eds.). NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-19225-5. MR 2723248.
  • Borwein, Jonathan; Bradley, David M.; Crandall, Richard (2000). (PDF). J. Comput. Appl. Math. 121 (1–2): 247–296. Bibcode:2000JCoAM.121..247B. doi:10.1016/S0377-0427(00)00336-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2011.
  • Cvijović, Djurdje; Klinowski, Jacek (2002). "Integral Representations of the Riemann Zeta Function for Odd-Integer Arguments". J. Comput. Appl. Math. 142 (2): 435–439. Bibcode:2002JCoAM.142..435C. doi:10.1016/S0377-0427(02)00358-8. MR 1906742.
  • Cvijović, Djurdje; Klinowski, Jacek (1997). "Continued-fraction expansions for the Riemann zeta function and polylogarithms". Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 125 (9): 2543–2550. doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-97-04102-6.
  • Edwards, H. M. (1974). Riemann's Zeta Function. Academic Press. ISBN 0-486-41740-9. Has an English translation of Riemann's paper.
  • Hadamard, Jacques (1896). "Sur la distribution des zéros de la fonction ζ(s) et ses conséquences arithmétiques". Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France. 14: 199–220. doi:10.24033/bsmf.545.
  • Hardy, G. H. (1949). Divergent Series. Clarendon Press, Oxford.
  • Hasse, Helmut (1930). "Ein Summierungsverfahren für die Riemannsche ζ-Reihe". Math. Z. 32: 458–464. doi:10.1007/BF01194645. MR 1545177. S2CID 120392534. (Globally convergent series expression.)
  • Ivic, A. (1985). The Riemann Zeta Function. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-80634-X.
  • Motohashi, Y. (1997). Spectral Theory of the Riemann Zeta-Function. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521445205.
  • Karatsuba, A. A.; Voronin, S. M. (1992). The Riemann Zeta-Function. Berlin: W. de Gruyter.
  • Mező, István; Dil, Ayhan (2010). "Hyperharmonic series involving Hurwitz zeta function". Journal of Number Theory. 130 (2): 360–369. doi:10.1016/j.jnt.2009.08.005. hdl:2437/90539. MR 2564902. S2CID 122707401.
  • Montgomery, Hugh L.; Vaughan, Robert C. (2007). Multiplicative number theory. I. Classical theory. Cambridge tracts in advanced mathematics. Vol. 97. Cambridge University Press. Ch. 10. ISBN 978-0-521-84903-6.
  • Newman, Donald J. (1998). Analytic number theory. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 177. Springer-Verlag. Ch. 6. ISBN 0-387-98308-2.
  • Raoh, Guo (1996). "The Distribution of the Logarithmic Derivative of the Riemann Zeta Function". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. s3–72: 1–27. doi:10.1112/plms/s3-72.1.1.
  • Riemann, Bernhard (1859). "Über die Anzahl der Primzahlen unter einer gegebenen Grösse". Monatsberichte der Berliner Akademie.. In Gesammelte Werke, Teubner, Leipzig (1892), Reprinted by Dover, New York (1953).
  • Sondow, Jonathan (1994). "Analytic continuation of Riemann's zeta function and values at negative integers via Euler's transformation of series" (PDF). Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 120 (2): 421–424. doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-1994-1172954-7.
  • Titchmarsh, E. C. (1986). Heath-Brown (ed.). The Theory of the Riemann Zeta Function (2nd rev. ed.). Oxford University Press.
  • Whittaker, E. T.; Watson, G. N. (1927). A Course in Modern Analysis (4th ed.). Cambridge University Press. Ch. 13.
  • Zhao, Jianqiang (1999). "Analytic continuation of multiple zeta functions". Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 128 (5): 1275–1283. doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-99-05398-8. MR 1670846.

External links

  •   Media related to Riemann zeta function at Wikimedia Commons
  • "Zeta-function". Encyclopedia of Mathematics. EMS Press. 2001 [1994].
  • Riemann Zeta Function, in Wolfram Mathworld — an explanation with a more mathematical approach
  • Tables of selected zeros
  • A general, non-technical description of the significance of the zeta function in relation to prime numbers.
  • X-Ray of the Zeta Function Visually oriented investigation of where zeta is real or purely imaginary.
  • Formulas and identities for the Riemann Zeta function functions.wolfram.com
  • Riemann Zeta Function and Other Sums of Reciprocal Powers, section 23.2 of Abramowitz and Stegun
  • Frenkel, Edward. "Million Dollar Math Problem" (video). Brady Haran. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  • Mellin transform and the functional equation of the Riemann Zeta function—Computational examples of Mellin transform methods involving the Riemann Zeta Function
  • Visualizing the Riemann zeta function and analytic continuation a video from 3Blue1Brown

riemann, zeta, function, euler, denoted, greek, letter, zeta, mathematical, function, complex, variable, defined, asthe, plotted, with, domain, coloring, pole, displaystyle, zeros, critical, line, displaystyle, zeta, infty, frac, frac, frac, frac, cdots, displ. The Riemann zeta function or Euler Riemann zeta function denoted by the Greek letter z zeta is a mathematical function of a complex variable defined asThe Riemann zeta function z z plotted with domain coloring 1 The pole at z 1 displaystyle z 1 and two zeros on the critical line z s n 1 1 n s 1 1 s 1 2 s 1 3 s displaystyle zeta s sum n 1 infty frac 1 n s frac 1 1 s frac 1 2 s frac 1 3 s cdots for Re s gt 1 displaystyle operatorname Re s gt 1 and its analytic continuation elsewhere 2 The Riemann zeta function plays a pivotal role in analytic number theory and has applications in physics probability theory and applied statistics Leonhard Euler first introduced and studied the function over the reals in the first half of the eighteenth century Bernhard Riemann s 1859 article On the Number of Primes Less Than a Given Magnitude extended the Euler definition to a complex variable proved its meromorphic continuation and functional equation and established a relation between its zeros and the distribution of prime numbers This paper also contained the Riemann hypothesis a conjecture about the distribution of complex zeros of the Riemann zeta function that is considered by many mathematicians to be the most important unsolved problem in pure mathematics 3 The values of the Riemann zeta function at even positive integers were computed by Euler The first of them z 2 provides a solution to the Basel problem In 1979 Roger Apery proved the irrationality of z 3 The values at negative integer points also found by Euler are rational numbers and play an important role in the theory of modular forms Many generalizations of the Riemann zeta function such as Dirichlet series Dirichlet L functions and L functions are known Contents 1 Definition 2 Euler s product formula 3 Riemann s functional equation 4 Zeros the critical line and the Riemann hypothesis 4 1 Number of zeros in the critical strip 4 2 The Hardy Littlewood conjectures 4 3 Zero free region 4 4 Other results 5 Specific values 6 Various properties 6 1 Reciprocal 6 2 Universality 6 3 Estimates of the maximum of the modulus of the zeta function 6 4 The argument of the Riemann zeta function 7 Representations 7 1 Dirichlet series 7 2 Mellin type integrals 7 3 Theta functions 7 4 Laurent series 7 5 Integral 7 6 Rising factorial 7 7 Hadamard product 7 8 Globally convergent series 7 9 Series representation at positive integers via the primorial 7 10 Series representation by the incomplete poly Bernoulli numbers 7 11 The Mellin transform of the Engel map 7 12 Thue Morse sequence 8 Numerical algorithms 9 Applications 9 1 Musical Tuning 9 2 Infinite series 10 Generalizations 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksDefinition Edit Bernhard Riemann s article On the number of primes below a given magnitude The Riemann zeta function z s is a function of a complex variable s s it The notation s s and t is used traditionally in the study of the zeta function following Riemann When Re s s gt 1 the function can be written as a converging summation or integral z s n 1 1 n s 1 G s 0 x s 1 e x 1 d x displaystyle zeta s sum n 1 infty frac 1 n s frac 1 Gamma s int 0 infty frac x s 1 e x 1 mathrm d x where G s 0 x s 1 e x d x displaystyle Gamma s int 0 infty x s 1 e x mathrm d x is the gamma function The Riemann zeta function is defined for other complex values via analytic continuation of the function defined for s gt 1 Leonhard Euler considered the above series in 1740 for positive integer values of s and later Chebyshev extended the definition to Re s gt 1 displaystyle operatorname Re s gt 1 4 The above series is a prototypical Dirichlet series that converges absolutely to an analytic function for s such that s gt 1 and diverges for all other values of s Riemann showed that the function defined by the series on the half plane of convergence can be continued analytically to all complex values s 1 For s 1 the series is the harmonic series which diverges to andlim s 1 s 1 z s 1 displaystyle lim s to 1 s 1 zeta s 1 Thus the Riemann zeta function is a meromorphic function on the whole complex plane which is holomorphic everywhere except for a simple pole at s 1 with residue 1 Euler s product formula EditIn 1737 the connection between the zeta function and prime numbers was discovered by Euler who proved the identity n 1 1 n s p prime 1 1 p s displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac 1 n s prod p text prime frac 1 1 p s where by definition the left hand side is z s and the infinite product on the right hand side extends over all prime numbers p such expressions are called Euler products p prime 1 1 p s 1 1 2 s 1 1 3 s 1 1 5 s 1 1 7 s 1 1 11 s 1 1 p s displaystyle prod p text prime frac 1 1 p s frac 1 1 2 s cdot frac 1 1 3 s cdot frac 1 1 5 s cdot frac 1 1 7 s cdot frac 1 1 11 s cdots frac 1 1 p s cdots Both sides of the Euler product formula converge for Re s gt 1 The proof of Euler s identity uses only the formula for the geometric series and the fundamental theorem of arithmetic Since the harmonic series obtained when s 1 diverges Euler s formula which becomes Pp p p 1 implies that there are infinitely many primes 5 The Euler product formula can be used to calculate the asymptotic probability that s randomly selected integers are set wise coprime Intuitively the probability that any single number is divisible by a prime or any integer p is 1 p Hence the probability that s numbers are all divisible by this prime is 1 ps and the probability that at least one of them is not is 1 1 ps Now for distinct primes these divisibility events are mutually independent because the candidate divisors are coprime a number is divisible by coprime divisors n and m if and only if it is divisible by nm an event which occurs with probability 1 nm Thus the asymptotic probability that s numbers are coprime is given by a product over all primes p prime 1 1 p s p prime 1 1 p s 1 1 z s displaystyle prod p text prime left 1 frac 1 p s right left prod p text prime frac 1 1 p s right 1 frac 1 zeta s Riemann s functional equation EditThis zeta function satisfies the functional equationz s 2 s p s 1 sin p s 2 G 1 s z 1 s displaystyle zeta s 2 s pi s 1 sin left frac pi s 2 right Gamma 1 s zeta 1 s where G s is the gamma function This is an equality of meromorphic functions valid on the whole complex plane The equation relates values of the Riemann zeta function at the points s and 1 s in particular relating even positive integers with odd negative integers Owing to the zeros of the sine function the functional equation implies that z s has a simple zero at each even negative integer s 2n known as the trivial zeros of z s When s is an even positive integer the product sin ps 2 G 1 s on the right is non zero because G 1 s has a simple pole which cancels the simple zero of the sine factor Proof of Riemann s functional equation A proof of the functional equation proceeds as follows We observe that if s gt 0 displaystyle sigma gt 0 then 0 x 1 2 s 1 e n 2 p x d x G s 2 n s p s 2 displaystyle int 0 infty x 1 over 2 s 1 e n 2 pi x dx Gamma left s over 2 right over n s pi s over 2 As a result if s gt 1 displaystyle sigma gt 1 thenG s 2 z s p s 2 n 1 0 x s 2 1 e n 2 p x d x 0 x s 2 1 n 1 e n 2 p x d x displaystyle frac Gamma left frac s 2 right zeta s pi s 2 sum n 1 infty int 0 infty x s over 2 1 e n 2 pi x dx int 0 infty x s over 2 1 sum n 1 infty e n 2 pi x dx with the inversion of the limiting processes justified by absolute convergence hence the stricter requirement on s displaystyle sigma For convenience letps x n 1 e n 2 p x displaystyle psi x sum n 1 infty e n 2 pi x Thenz s p s 2 G s 2 0 x 1 2 s 1 ps x d x displaystyle zeta s pi s over 2 over Gamma s over 2 int 0 infty x 1 over 2 s 1 psi x dx By the Poisson summation formula we have n e n 2 p x 1 x n e n 2 p x displaystyle sum n infty infty e n 2 pi x 1 over sqrt x sum n infty infty e n 2 pi over x so that2 ps x 1 1 x 2 ps 1 x 1 displaystyle 2 psi x 1 1 over sqrt x left 2 psi left 1 over x right 1 right Hencep s 2 G s 2 z s 0 1 x s 2 1 ps x d x 1 x s 2 1 ps x d x displaystyle pi s over 2 Gamma left s over 2 right zeta s int 0 1 x s over 2 1 psi x dx int 1 infty x s over 2 1 psi x dx This is equivalent to 0 1 x s 2 1 1 x ps 1 x 1 2 x 1 2 d x 1 x s 2 1 ps x d x displaystyle int 0 1 x s over 2 1 left 1 over sqrt x psi left 1 over x right 1 over 2 sqrt x 1 over 2 right dx int 1 infty x s over 2 1 psi x dx or 1 s 1 1 s 0 1 x s 2 3 2 ps 1 x d x 1 x s 2 1 ps x d x displaystyle 1 over s 1 1 over s int 0 1 x s over 2 3 over 2 psi left 1 over x right dx int 1 infty x s over 2 1 psi x dx Sop s 2 G s 2 z s 1 s s 1 1 x s 2 1 2 x s 2 1 ps x d x displaystyle pi s over 2 Gamma left s over 2 right zeta s 1 over s s 1 int 1 infty left x s over 2 1 over 2 x s over 2 1 right psi x dx which is convergent for all s so holds by analytic continuation Furthermore the RHS is unchanged if s is changed to 1 s Hencep s 2 G s 2 z s p 1 2 s 2 G 1 2 s 2 z 1 s displaystyle pi s over 2 Gamma left s over 2 right zeta s pi 1 over 2 s over 2 Gamma left 1 over 2 s over 2 right zeta 1 s which is the functional equation E C Titchmarsh 1986 The Theory of the Riemann Zeta function 2nd ed Oxford Oxford Science Publications pp 21 22 ISBN 0 19 853369 1 Attributed to Bernhard Riemann The functional equation was established by Riemann in his 1859 paper On the Number of Primes Less Than a Given Magnitude and used to construct the analytic continuation in the first place An equivalent relationship had been conjectured by Euler over a hundred years earlier in 1749 for the Dirichlet eta function the alternating zeta function h s n 1 1 n 1 n s 1 2 1 s z s displaystyle eta s sum n 1 infty frac 1 n 1 n s left 1 2 1 s right zeta s Incidentally this relation gives an equation for calculating z s in the region 0 lt Re s lt 1 i e z s 1 1 2 1 s n 1 1 n 1 n s displaystyle zeta s frac 1 1 2 1 s sum n 1 infty frac 1 n 1 n s where the h series is convergent albeit non absolutely in the larger half plane s gt 0 for a more detailed survey on the history of the functional equation see e g Blagouchine 6 7 Riemann also found a symmetric version of the functional equation applying to the xi function 3 s 1 2 p s 2 s s 1 G s 2 z s displaystyle xi s frac 1 2 pi frac s 2 s s 1 Gamma left frac s 2 right zeta s which satisfies 3 s 3 1 s displaystyle xi s xi 1 s Riemann s original 3 t was slightly different The p s 2 G s 2 displaystyle pi s 2 Gamma s 2 factor was not well understood at the time of Riemann until John Tate s 1950 thesis in which it was shown that this so called Gamma factor is in fact the local L factor corresponding to the Archimedean place the other factors in the Euler product expansion being the local L factors of the non Archimedean places Zeros the critical line and the Riemann hypothesis EditMain article Riemann hypothesis The Riemann zeta function has no zeros to the right of s 1 or apart from the trivial zeros to the left of s 0 nor can the zeros lie too close to those lines Furthermore the non trivial zeros are symmetric about the real axis and the line s 1 2 and according to the Riemann hypothesis they all lie on the line s 1 2 This image shows a plot of the Riemann zeta function along the critical line for real values of t running from 0 to 34 The first five zeros in the critical strip are clearly visible as the place where the spirals pass through the origin The real part red and imaginary part blue of the Riemann zeta function along the critical line Re s 1 2 The first non trivial zeros can be seen at Im s 14 135 21 022 and 25 011 The functional equation shows that the Riemann zeta function has zeros at 2 4 These are called the trivial zeros They are trivial in the sense that their existence is relatively easy to prove for example from sin ps 2 being 0 in the functional equation The non trivial zeros have captured far more attention because their distribution not only is far less understood but more importantly their study yields important results concerning prime numbers and related objects in number theory It is known that any non trivial zero lies in the open strip s C 0 lt Re s lt 1 displaystyle s in mathbb C 0 lt operatorname Re s lt 1 which is called the critical strip The set s C Re s 1 2 displaystyle s in mathbb C operatorname Re s 1 2 is called the critical line The Riemann hypothesis considered one of the greatest unsolved problems in mathematics asserts that all non trivial zeros are on the critical line In 1989 Conrey proved that more than 40 of the non trivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function are on the critical line 8 For the Riemann zeta function on the critical line see Z function First few nontrivial zeros 9 10 Zero1 2 14 134725 i1 2 21 022040 i1 2 25 010858 i1 2 30 424876 i1 2 32 935062 i1 2 37 586178 iNumber of zeros in the critical strip Edit Let N T displaystyle N T be the number of zeros of z s displaystyle zeta s in the critical strip 0 lt Re s lt 1 displaystyle 0 lt operatorname Re s lt 1 whose imaginary parts are in the interval 0 lt Im s lt T displaystyle 0 lt operatorname Im s lt T Trudgian proved that if T gt e displaystyle T gt e then 11 N T T 2 p log T 2 p e 0 112 log T 0 278 log log T 3 385 0 2 T displaystyle N T frac T 2 pi log frac T 2 pi e leq 0 112 log T 0 278 log log T 3 385 frac 0 2 T The Hardy Littlewood conjectures Edit In 1914 Godfrey Harold Hardy proved that z 1 2 it has infinitely many real zeros 12 Hardy and John Edensor Littlewood formulated two conjectures on the density and distance between the zeros of z 1 2 it on intervals of large positive real numbers In the following N T is the total number of real zeros and N0 T the total number of zeros of odd order of the function z 1 2 it lying in the interval 0 T For any e gt 0 there exists a T0 e gt 0 such that when T T 0 e and H T 1 4 e displaystyle T geq T 0 varepsilon quad text and quad H T frac 1 4 varepsilon the interval T T H contains a zero of odd order For any e gt 0 there exists a T0 e gt 0 and ce gt 0 such that the inequality N 0 T H N 0 T c e H displaystyle N 0 T H N 0 T geq c varepsilon H holds when T T 0 e and H T 1 2 e displaystyle T geq T 0 varepsilon quad text and quad H T frac 1 2 varepsilon These two conjectures opened up new directions in the investigation of the Riemann zeta function Zero free region Edit The location of the Riemann zeta function s zeros is of great importance in number theory The prime number theorem is equivalent to the fact that there are no zeros of the zeta function on the Re s 1 line 13 A better result 14 that follows from an effective form of Vinogradov s mean value theorem is that z s it 0 whenever s 1 1 57 54 log t 2 3 log log t 1 3 displaystyle sigma geq 1 frac 1 57 54 log t frac 2 3 log log t frac 1 3 and t 3 In 2015 Mossinghoff and Trudgian proved 15 that zeta has no zeros in the region s 1 1 5 573412 log t displaystyle sigma geq 1 frac 1 5 573412 log t for t 2 This is the largest known zero free region in the critical strip for 3 06 10 10 lt t lt exp 10151 5 5 5 10 4408 displaystyle 3 06 cdot 10 10 lt t lt exp 10151 5 approx 5 5 cdot 10 4408 The strongest result of this kind one can hope for is the truth of the Riemann hypothesis which would have many profound consequences in the theory of numbers Other results Edit It is known that there are infinitely many zeros on the critical line Littlewood showed that if the sequence gn contains the imaginary parts of all zeros in the upper half plane in ascending order then lim n g n 1 g n 0 displaystyle lim n rightarrow infty left gamma n 1 gamma n right 0 The critical line theorem asserts that a positive proportion of the nontrivial zeros lies on the critical line The Riemann hypothesis would imply that this proportion is 1 In the critical strip the zero with smallest non negative imaginary part is 1 2 14 13472514 i OEIS A058303 The fact that z s z s displaystyle zeta s overline zeta overline s for all complex s 1 implies that the zeros of the Riemann zeta function are symmetric about the real axis Combining this symmetry with the functional equation furthermore one sees that the non trivial zeros are symmetric about the critical line Re s 1 2 It is also known that no zeros lie on a line with real part 1 Specific values EditMain article Particular values of the Riemann zeta function For any positive even integer 2n z 2 n 1 n 1 B 2 n 2 p 2 n 2 2 n displaystyle zeta 2n frac 1 n 1 B 2n 2 pi 2n 2 2n where B2n is the 2n th Bernoulli number For odd positive integers no such simple expression is known although these values are thought to be related to the algebraic K theory of the integers see Special values of L functions For nonpositive integers one hasz n 1 n B n 1 n 1 displaystyle zeta n 1 n frac B n 1 n 1 for n 0 using the convention that B1 1 2 In particular z vanishes at the negative even integers because Bm 0 for all odd m other than 1 These are the so called trivial zeros of the zeta function Via analytic continuation one can show thatz 1 1 12 displaystyle zeta 1 tfrac 1 12 This gives a pretext for assigning a finite value to the divergent series 1 2 3 4 which has been used in certain contexts Ramanujan summation such as string theory 16 Analogously the particular value z 0 1 2 displaystyle zeta 0 tfrac 1 2 can be viewed as assigning a finite result to the divergent series 1 1 1 1 The valuez 1 2 1 46035450880958681288 displaystyle zeta bigl tfrac 1 2 bigr 1 46035450880958681288 ldots is employed in calculating kinetic boundary layer problems of linear kinetic equations 17 18 Althoughz 1 1 1 2 1 3 displaystyle zeta 1 1 tfrac 1 2 tfrac 1 3 cdots diverges its Cauchy principal value lim e 0 z 1 e z 1 e 2 displaystyle lim varepsilon to 0 frac zeta 1 varepsilon zeta 1 varepsilon 2 exists and is equal to the Euler Mascheroni constant g 0 5772 19 The demonstration of the particular valuez 2 1 1 2 2 1 3 2 p 2 6 displaystyle zeta 2 1 frac 1 2 2 frac 1 3 2 cdots frac pi 2 6 is known as the Basel problem The reciprocal of this sum answers the question What is the probability that two numbers selected at random are relatively prime 20 The value z 3 1 1 2 3 1 3 3 1 202056903159594285399 displaystyle zeta 3 1 frac 1 2 3 frac 1 3 3 cdots 1 202056903159594285399 is Apery s constant Taking the limit s displaystyle s rightarrow infty through the real numbers one obtains z 1 displaystyle zeta infty 1 But at complex infinity on the Riemann sphere the zeta function has an essential singularity 2 Various properties EditFor sums involving the zeta function at integer and half integer values see rational zeta series Reciprocal Edit The reciprocal of the zeta function may be expressed as a Dirichlet series over the Mobius function m n 1 z s n 1 m n n s displaystyle frac 1 zeta s sum n 1 infty frac mu n n s for every complex number s with real part greater than 1 There are a number of similar relations involving various well known multiplicative functions these are given in the article on the Dirichlet series The Riemann hypothesis is equivalent to the claim that this expression is valid when the real part of s is greater than 1 2 Universality Edit The critical strip of the Riemann zeta function has the remarkable property of universality This zeta function universality states that there exists some location on the critical strip that approximates any holomorphic function arbitrarily well Since holomorphic functions are very general this property is quite remarkable The first proof of universality was provided by Sergei Mikhailovitch Voronin in 1975 21 More recent work has included effective versions of Voronin s theorem 22 and extending it to Dirichlet L functions 23 24 Estimates of the maximum of the modulus of the zeta function Edit Let the functions F T H and G s0 D be defined by the equalities F T H max t T H z 1 2 i t G s 0 D max s s 0 D z s displaystyle F T H max t T leq H left zeta left tfrac 1 2 it right right qquad G s 0 Delta max s s 0 leq Delta zeta s Here T is a sufficiently large positive number 0 lt H log log T s0 s0 iT 1 2 s0 1 0 lt D lt 1 3 Estimating the values F and G from below shows how large in modulus values z s can take on short intervals of the critical line or in small neighborhoods of points lying in the critical strip 0 Re s 1 The case H log log T was studied by Kanakanahalli Ramachandra the case D gt c where c is a sufficiently large constant is trivial Anatolii Karatsuba proved 25 26 in particular that if the values H and D exceed certain sufficiently small constants then the estimates F T H T c 1 G s 0 D T c 2 displaystyle F T H geq T c 1 qquad G s 0 Delta geq T c 2 hold where c1 and c2 are certain absolute constants The argument of the Riemann zeta function Edit The function S t 1 p arg z 1 2 i t displaystyle S t frac 1 pi arg zeta left tfrac 1 2 it right is called the argument of the Riemann zeta function Here arg z 1 2 it is the increment of an arbitrary continuous branch of arg z s along the broken line joining the points 2 2 it and 1 2 it There are some theorems on properties of the function S t Among those results 27 28 are the mean value theorems for S t and its first integral S 1 t 0 t S u d u displaystyle S 1 t int 0 t S u mathrm d u on intervals of the real line and also the theorem claiming that every interval T T H for H T 27 82 e displaystyle H geq T frac 27 82 varepsilon contains at least H ln T 3 e c ln ln T displaystyle H sqrt 3 ln T e c sqrt ln ln T points where the function S t changes sign Earlier similar results were obtained by Atle Selberg for the case H T 1 2 e displaystyle H geq T frac 1 2 varepsilon Representations EditDirichlet series Edit An extension of the area of convergence can be obtained by rearranging the original series 29 The series z s 1 s 1 n 1 n n 1 s n s n s displaystyle zeta s frac 1 s 1 sum n 1 infty left frac n n 1 s frac n s n s right converges for Re s gt 0 while z s 1 s 1 n 1 n n 1 2 2 n 3 s n 1 s 2 2 n 1 s n s 2 displaystyle zeta s frac 1 s 1 sum n 1 infty frac n n 1 2 left frac 2n 3 s n 1 s 2 frac 2n 1 s n s 2 right converges even for Re s gt 1 In this way the area of convergence can be extended to Re s gt k for any negative integer k Mellin type integrals Edit The Mellin transform of a function f x is defined as 30 0 f x x s d x x displaystyle int 0 infty f x x s frac mathrm d x x in the region where the integral is defined There are various expressions for the zeta function as Mellin transform like integrals If the real part of s is greater than one we have G s z s 0 x s 1 e x 1 d x displaystyle Gamma s zeta s int 0 infty frac x s 1 e x 1 mathrm d x quad and G s z s 1 2 s 0 x s cosh x 1 d x displaystyle quad Gamma s zeta s frac 1 2s int 0 infty frac x s cosh x 1 mathrm d x where G denotes the gamma function By modifying the contour Riemann showed that 2 sin p s G s z s i H x s 1 e x 1 d x displaystyle 2 sin pi s Gamma s zeta s i oint H frac x s 1 e x 1 mathrm d x for all s where H denotes the Hankel contour We can also find expressions which relate to prime numbers and the prime number theorem If p x is the prime counting function then ln z s s 0 p x x x s 1 d x displaystyle ln zeta s s int 0 infty frac pi x x x s 1 mathrm d x for values with Re s gt 1 A similar Mellin transform involves the Riemann function J x which counts prime powers pn with a weight of 1 n so that J x p x 1 n n displaystyle J x sum frac pi left x frac 1 n right n Now ln z s s 0 J x x s 1 d x displaystyle ln zeta s s int 0 infty J x x s 1 mathrm d x These expressions can be used to prove the prime number theorem by means of the inverse Mellin transform Riemann s prime counting function is easier to work with and p x can be recovered from it by Mobius inversion Theta functions Edit The Riemann zeta function can be given by a Mellin transform 31 2 p s 2 G s 2 z s 0 8 i t 1 t s 2 1 d t displaystyle 2 pi frac s 2 Gamma left frac s 2 right zeta s int 0 infty bigl theta it 1 bigr t frac s 2 1 mathrm d t in terms of Jacobi s theta function 8 t n e p i n 2 t displaystyle theta tau sum n infty infty e pi in 2 tau However this integral only converges if the real part of s is greater than 1 but it can be regularized This gives the following expression for the zeta function which is well defined for all s except 0 and 1 p s 2 G s 2 z s 1 s 1 1 s 1 2 0 1 8 i t t 1 2 t s 2 1 d t 1 2 1 8 i t 1 t s 2 1 d t displaystyle pi frac s 2 Gamma left frac s 2 right zeta s frac 1 s 1 frac 1 s frac 1 2 int 0 1 left theta it t frac 1 2 right t frac s 2 1 mathrm d t frac 1 2 int 1 infty bigl theta it 1 bigr t frac s 2 1 mathrm d t Laurent series Edit The Riemann zeta function is meromorphic with a single pole of order one at s 1 It can therefore be expanded as a Laurent series about s 1 the series development is then 32 z s 1 s 1 n 0 g n n 1 s n displaystyle zeta s frac 1 s 1 sum n 0 infty frac gamma n n 1 s n The constants gn here are called the Stieltjes constants and can be defined by the limit g n lim m k 1 m ln k n k ln m n 1 n 1 displaystyle gamma n lim m rightarrow infty left left sum k 1 m frac ln k n k right frac ln m n 1 n 1 right The constant term g0 is the Euler Mascheroni constant Integral Edit For all s C s 1 the integral relation cf Abel Plana formula z s 1 s 1 1 2 2 0 sin s arctan t 1 t 2 s 2 e 2 p t 1 d t displaystyle zeta s frac 1 s 1 frac 1 2 2 int 0 infty frac sin s arctan t left 1 t 2 right s 2 left e 2 pi t 1 right mathrm d t holds true which may be used for a numerical evaluation of the zeta function Rising factorial Edit Another series development using the rising factorial valid for the entire complex plane is citation needed z s s s 1 n 1 z s n 1 s s 1 s n 1 n 1 displaystyle zeta s frac s s 1 sum n 1 infty bigl zeta s n 1 bigr frac s s 1 cdots s n 1 n 1 This can be used recursively to extend the Dirichlet series definition to all complex numbers The Riemann zeta function also appears in a form similar to the Mellin transform in an integral over the Gauss Kuzmin Wirsing operator acting on xs 1 that context gives rise to a series expansion in terms of the falling factorial 33 Hadamard product Edit On the basis of Weierstrass s factorization theorem Hadamard gave the infinite product expansion z s e log 2 p 1 g 2 s 2 s 1 G 1 s 2 r 1 s r e s r displaystyle zeta s frac e left log 2 pi 1 frac gamma 2 right s 2 s 1 Gamma left 1 frac s 2 right prod rho left 1 frac s rho right e frac s rho where the product is over the non trivial zeros r of z and the letter g again denotes the Euler Mascheroni constant A simpler infinite product expansion is z s p s 2 r 1 s r 2 s 1 G 1 s 2 displaystyle zeta s pi frac s 2 frac prod rho left 1 frac s rho right 2 s 1 Gamma left 1 frac s 2 right This form clearly displays the simple pole at s 1 the trivial zeros at 2 4 due to the gamma function term in the denominator and the non trivial zeros at s r To ensure convergence in the latter formula the product should be taken over matching pairs of zeros i e the factors for a pair of zeros of the form r and 1 r should be combined Globally convergent series Edit A globally convergent series for the zeta function valid for all complex numbers s except s 1 2pi ln 2 n for some integer n was conjectured by Konrad Knopp in 1926 34 and proven by Helmut Hasse in 1930 35 cf Euler summation z s 1 1 2 1 s n 0 1 2 n 1 k 0 n n k 1 k k 1 s displaystyle zeta s frac 1 1 2 1 s sum n 0 infty frac 1 2 n 1 sum k 0 n binom n k frac 1 k k 1 s The series appeared in an appendix to Hasse s paper and was published for the second time by Jonathan Sondow in 1994 36 Hasse also proved the globally converging series z s 1 s 1 n 0 1 n 1 k 0 n n k 1 k k 1 s 1 displaystyle zeta s frac 1 s 1 sum n 0 infty frac 1 n 1 sum k 0 n binom n k frac 1 k k 1 s 1 in the same publication 35 Research by Iaroslav Blagouchine 37 34 has found that a similar equivalent series was published by Joseph Ser in 1926 38 Peter Borwein has developed an algorithm that applies Chebyshev polynomials to the Dirichlet eta function to produce a very rapidly convergent series suitable for high precision numerical calculations 39 Series representation at positive integers via the primorial Edit z k 2 k 2 k 1 r 2 p r 1 k J k p r k 2 3 displaystyle zeta k frac 2 k 2 k 1 sum r 2 infty frac p r 1 k J k p r qquad k 2 3 ldots Here pn is the primorial sequence and Jk is Jordan s totient function 40 Series representation by the incomplete poly Bernoulli numbers Edit The function z can be represented for Re s gt 1 by the infinite series z s n 0 B n 2 s W k 1 n n displaystyle zeta s sum n 0 infty B n geq 2 s frac W k 1 n n where k 1 0 Wk is the k th branch of the Lambert W function and B m n 2 is an incomplete poly Bernoulli number 41 The Mellin transform of the Engel map Edit The function g x x 1 x 1 1 displaystyle g x x left 1 left lfloor x 1 right rfloor right 1 is iterated to find the coefficients appearing in Engel expansions 42 The Mellin transform of the map g x displaystyle g x is related to the Riemann zeta function by the formula 0 1 g x x s 1 d x n 1 1 n 1 1 n x n 1 1 x s 1 d x n 1 n s s 1 n 1 s 1 n 2 2 n 1 n s 1 s n 1 s s 1 s n 1 z s 1 s 1 1 s s 1 displaystyle begin aligned int 0 1 g x x s 1 dx amp sum n 1 infty int frac 1 n 1 frac 1 n x n 1 1 x s 1 dx 6pt amp sum n 1 infty frac n s s 1 n 1 s 1 n 2 2n 1 n s 1 s n 1 s s 1 s n 1 6pt amp frac zeta s 1 s 1 frac 1 s s 1 end aligned Thue Morse sequence Edit Certain linear combinations of Dirichlet series whose coefficients are terms of the Thue Morse sequence give rise to identities involving the Riemann Zeta function Toth 2022 43 For instance n 1 5 t n 1 3 t n n 2 4 z 2 2 p 2 3 n 1 9 t n 1 7 t n n 3 8 z 3 displaystyle begin aligned sum n geq 1 frac 5t n 1 3t n n 2 amp 4 zeta 2 frac 2 pi 2 3 sum n geq 1 frac 9t n 1 7t n n 3 amp 8 zeta 3 end aligned where t n n 0 displaystyle t n n geq 0 is the n t h displaystyle n rm th term of the Thue Morse sequence In fact for all s displaystyle s with real part greater than 1 displaystyle 1 we have 2 s 1 n 1 t n 1 n s 2 s 1 n 1 t n n s 2 s z s displaystyle 2 s 1 sum n geq 1 frac t n 1 n s 2 s 1 sum n geq 1 frac t n n s 2 s zeta s Numerical algorithms EditA classical algorithm in use prior to about 1930 proceeds by applying the Euler Maclaurin formula to obtain for n and m positive integers z s j 1 n 1 j s 1 2 n s n 1 s s 1 k 1 m T k n s E m n s displaystyle zeta s sum j 1 n 1 j s tfrac 1 2 n s frac n 1 s s 1 sum k 1 m T k n s E m n s where letting B 2 k displaystyle B 2k denote the indicated Bernoulli number T k n s B 2 k 2 k n 1 s 2 k j 0 2 k 2 s j displaystyle T k n s frac B 2k 2k n 1 s 2k prod j 0 2k 2 s j and the error satisfies E m n s lt s 2 m 1 s 2 m 1 T m 1 n s displaystyle E m n s lt left frac s 2m 1 sigma 2m 1 T m 1 n s right with s Re s 44 A modern numerical algorithm is the Odlyzko Schonhage algorithm Applications EditThe zeta function occurs in applied statistics see Zipf s law and Zipf Mandelbrot law Zeta function regularization is used as one possible means of regularization of divergent series and divergent integrals in quantum field theory In one notable example the Riemann zeta function shows up explicitly in one method of calculating the Casimir effect The zeta function is also useful for the analysis of dynamical systems 45 Musical Tuning Edit In the theory of musical tunings the zeta function can be used to find equal divisions of the octave EDOs that closely approximate the intervals of the harmonic series For increasing values of t R displaystyle t in mathbb R the value of z 1 2 2 p i ln 2 t displaystyle left vert zeta left frac 1 2 frac 2 pi i ln 2 t right right vert peaks near integers that correspond to such EDOs 46 Examples include popular choices such as 12 19 and 53 47 Infinite series Edit The zeta function evaluated at equidistant positive integers appears in infinite series representations of a number of constants 48 n 2 z n 1 1 displaystyle sum n 2 infty bigl zeta n 1 bigr 1 In fact the even and odd terms give the two sums n 1 z 2 n 1 3 4 displaystyle sum n 1 infty bigl zeta 2n 1 bigr frac 3 4 and n 1 z 2 n 1 1 1 4 displaystyle sum n 1 infty bigl zeta 2n 1 1 bigr frac 1 4 Parametrized versions of the above sums are given by n 1 z 2 n 1 t 2 n t 2 t 2 1 1 2 1 p t cot t p displaystyle sum n 1 infty zeta 2n 1 t 2n frac t 2 t 2 1 frac 1 2 left 1 pi t cot t pi right and n 1 z 2 n 1 1 t 2 n t 2 t 2 1 1 2 ps 0 t ps 0 t g displaystyle sum n 1 infty zeta 2n 1 1 t 2n frac t 2 t 2 1 frac 1 2 left psi 0 t psi 0 t right gamma with t lt 2 displaystyle t lt 2 and where ps displaystyle psi and g displaystyle gamma are the polygamma function and Euler s constant respectively as well as n 1 z 2 n 1 n t 2 n log 1 t 2 sinc p t displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac zeta 2n 1 n t 2n log left dfrac 1 t 2 operatorname sinc pi t right all of which are continuous at t 1 displaystyle t 1 Other sums include n 2 z n 1 n 1 g displaystyle sum n 2 infty frac zeta n 1 n 1 gamma n 2 z n 1 n 3 2 n 1 1 1 3 ln p displaystyle sum n 2 infty frac zeta n 1 n left left tfrac 3 2 right n 1 1 right frac 1 3 ln pi n 1 z 4 n 1 7 8 p 4 e 2 p 1 e 2 p 1 displaystyle sum n 1 infty bigl zeta 4n 1 bigr frac 7 8 frac pi 4 left frac e 2 pi 1 e 2 pi 1 right n 2 z n 1 n Im 1 i n 1 i n p 4 displaystyle sum n 2 infty frac zeta n 1 n operatorname Im bigl 1 i n 1 i n bigr frac pi 4 where Im denotes the imaginary part of a complex number There are yet more formulas in the article Harmonic number Generalizations EditThere are a number of related zeta functions that can be considered to be generalizations of the Riemann zeta function These include the Hurwitz zeta function z s q k 0 1 k q s displaystyle zeta s q sum k 0 infty frac 1 k q s the convergent series representation was given by Helmut Hasse in 1930 35 cf Hurwitz zeta function which coincides with the Riemann zeta function when q 1 the lower limit of summation in the Hurwitz zeta function is 0 not 1 the Dirichlet L functions and the Dedekind zeta function For other related functions see the articles zeta function and L function The polylogarithm is given by Li s z k 1 z k k s displaystyle operatorname Li s z sum k 1 infty frac z k k s which coincides with the Riemann zeta function when z 1 The Clausen function Cls 8 can be chosen as the real or imaginary part of Lis ei8 The Lerch transcendent is given by F z s q k 0 z k k q s displaystyle Phi z s q sum k 0 infty frac z k k q s which coincides with the Riemann zeta function when z 1 and q 1 the lower limit of summation in the Lerch transcendent is 0 not 1 The multiple zeta functions are defined by z s 1 s 2 s n k 1 gt k 2 gt gt k n gt 0 k 1 s 1 k 2 s 2 k n s n displaystyle zeta s 1 s 2 ldots s n sum k 1 gt k 2 gt cdots gt k n gt 0 k 1 s 1 k 2 s 2 cdots k n s n One can analytically continue these functions to the n dimensional complex space The special values taken by these functions at positive integer arguments are called multiple zeta values by number theorists and have been connected to many different branches in mathematics and physics See also Edit1 2 3 4 Arithmetic zeta function Generalized Riemann hypothesis Lehmer pair Prime zeta function Riemann Xi function Renormalization Riemann Siegel theta function ZetaGridNotes Edit Jupyter Notebook Viewer Nbviewer ipython org Retrieved 4 January 2017 a b Steuding Jorn Suriajaya Ade Irma 1 November 2020 Value Distribution of the Riemann Zeta Function Along Its Julia Lines Computational Methods and Function Theory 20 3 389 401 doi 10 1007 s40315 020 00316 x ISSN 2195 3724 S2CID 216323223 Theorem 2 implies that z has an essential singularity at infinity Bombieri Enrico The Riemann Hypothesis official problem description PDF Clay Mathematics Institute Retrieved 8 August 2014 Devlin Keith 2002 The Millennium Problems The seven greatest unsolved mathematical puzzles of our time New York Barnes amp Noble pp 43 47 ISBN 978 0 7607 8659 8 Sandifer Charles Edward 2007 How Euler Did It Mathematical Association of America p 193 ISBN 978 0 88385 563 8 Blagouchine I V 1 March 2018 The history of the functional equation of the zeta function Seminar on the History of Mathematics St Petersburg RU Steklov Institute of Mathematics online PDF Blagouchine I V 2014 Rediscovery of Malmsten s integrals their evaluation by contour integration methods and some related results The Ramanujan Journal 35 1 21 110 doi 10 1007 s11139 013 9528 5 S2CID 120943474 Blagouchine I V 2017 Addendum The Ramanujan Journal 42 777 781 doi 10 1007 s11139 015 9763 z S2CID 125198685 Conrey J B 1989 More than two fifths of the zeros of the Riemann zeta function are on the critical line J Reine Angew Math 1989 399 1 26 doi 10 1515 crll 1989 399 1 MR 1004130 S2CID 115910600 Eric Weisstein Riemann Zeta Function Zeros Retrieved 24 April 2021 The L functions and Modular Forms Database Zeros of z s Trudgian Timothy S 2014 An improved upper bound for the argument of the Riemann zeta function on the critical line II J Number Theory 134 280 292 arXiv 1208 5846 doi 10 1016 j jnt 2013 07 017 Hardy G H Fekete M Littlewood J E 1 September 1921 The Zeros of Riemann s Zeta Function on the Critical Line Journal of the London Mathematical Society s1 1 15 19 doi 10 1112 jlms s1 1 1 15 Diamond Harold G 1982 Elementary methods in the study of the distribution of prime numbers Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 7 3 553 89 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 1982 15057 1 MR 0670132 Ford K 2002 Vinogradov s integral and bounds for the Riemann zeta function Proc London Math Soc 85 3 565 633 arXiv 1910 08209 doi 10 1112 S0024611502013655 S2CID 121144007 Mossinghoff Michael J Trudgian Timothy S 2015 Nonnegative trigonometric polynomials and a zero free region for the Riemann zeta function J Number Theory 157 329 349 arXiv 1410 3926 doi 10 1016 J JNT 2015 05 010 S2CID 117968965 Polchinski Joseph 1998 An Introduction to the Bosonic String String Theory Vol I Cambridge University Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 521 63303 1 Kainz A J Titulaer U M 1992 An accurate two stream moment method for kinetic boundary layer problems of linear kinetic equations J Phys A Math Gen 25 7 1855 1874 Bibcode 1992JPhA 25 1855K doi 10 1088 0305 4470 25 7 026 Further digits and references for this constant are available at OEIS A059750 Sondow Jonathan 1998 An antisymmetric formula for Euler s constant Mathematics Magazine 71 3 219 220 doi 10 1080 0025570X 1998 11996638 Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 29 May 2006 Ogilvy C S Anderson J T 1988 Excursions in Number Theory Dover Publications pp 29 35 ISBN 0 486 25778 9 Voronin S M 1975 Theorem on the Universality of the Riemann Zeta Function Izv Akad Nauk SSSR Ser Matem 39 475 486 Reprinted in Math USSR Izv 1975 9 443 445 Ramunas Garunkstis Antanas Laurincikas Kohji Matsumoto Jorn Steuding Rasa Steuding 2010 Effective uniform approximation by the Riemann zeta function Publicacions Matematiques 54 1 209 219 doi 10 1090 S0025 5718 1975 0384673 1 JSTOR 43736941 Bhaskar Bagchi 1982 A Joint Universality Theorem for Dirichlet L Functions Mathematische Zeitschrift 181 3 319 334 doi 10 1007 bf01161980 ISSN 0025 5874 S2CID 120930513 Steuding Jorn 2007 Value Distribution of L Functions Lecture Notes in Mathematics Vol 1877 Berlin Springer p 19 arXiv 1711 06671 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 44822 8 ISBN 978 3 540 26526 9 Karatsuba A A 2001 Lower bounds for the maximum modulus of z s in small domains of the critical strip Mat Zametki 70 5 796 798 Karatsuba A A 2004 Lower bounds for the maximum modulus of the Riemann zeta function on short segments of the critical line Izv Ross Akad Nauk Ser Mat 68 8 99 104 Bibcode 2004IzMat 68 1157K doi 10 1070 IM2004v068n06ABEH000513 S2CID 250796539 Karatsuba A A 1996 Density theorem and the behavior of the argument of the Riemann zeta function Mat Zametki 60 448 449 Karatsuba A A 1996 On the function S t Izv Ross Akad Nauk Ser Mat 60 5 27 56 Knopp Konrad 1947 Theory of Functions Part Two New York Dover publications pp 51 55 Riemann Bernhard 1859 On the number of primes less than a given magnitude Monatsberichte der Koniglich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin translated and reprinted in Edwards H M 1974 Riemann s Zeta Function New York Academic Press ISBN 0 12 232750 0 Zbl 0315 10035 Neukirch Jurgen 1999 Algebraic number theory Springer p 422 ISBN 3 540 65399 6 Hashimoto Yasufumi Iijima Yasuyuki Kurokawa Nobushige Wakayama Masato 2004 Euler s constants for the Selberg and the Dedekind zeta functions Bulletin of the Belgian Mathematical Society Simon Stevin 11 4 493 516 doi 10 36045 bbms 1102689119 MR 2115723 A series representation for the Riemann Zeta derived from the Gauss Kuzmin Wirsing Operator PDF Linas org Retrieved 4 January 2017 a b Blagouchine Iaroslav V 2018 Three Notes on Ser s and Hasse s Representations for the Zeta functions INTEGERS The Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory 18A 1 45 arXiv 1606 02044 Bibcode 2016arXiv160602044B a b c Hasse Helmut 1930 Ein Summierungsverfahren fur die Riemannsche z Reihe A summation method for the Riemann z series Mathematische Zeitschrift in German 32 1 458 464 doi 10 1007 BF01194645 S2CID 120392534 Sondow Jonathan 1994 Analytic continuation of Riemann s zeta function and values at negative integers via Euler s transformation of series PDF Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society 120 2 421 424 doi 10 1090 S0002 9939 1994 1172954 7 Blagouchine Iaroslav V 2016 Expansions of generalized Euler s constants into the series of polynomials in p 2 and into the formal enveloping series with rational coefficients only Journal of Number Theory 158 365 396 arXiv 1501 00740 doi 10 1016 j jnt 2015 06 012 Ser Joseph 1926 Sur une expression de la fonction z s de Riemann Upon an expression for Riemann s z function Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des seances de l Academie des Sciences in French 182 1075 1077 Borwein Peter 2000 An Efficient Algorithm for the Riemann Zeta Function PDF In Thera Michel A ed Constructive Experimental and Nonlinear Analysis Conference Proceedings Canadian Mathematical Society Vol 27 Providence RI American Mathematical Society on behalf of the Canadian Mathematical Society pp 29 34 ISBN 978 0 8218 2167 1 Mezo Istvan 2013 The primorial and the Riemann zeta function The American Mathematical Monthly 120 4 321 Komatsu Takao Mezo Istvan 2016 Incomplete poly Bernoulli numbers associated with incomplete Stirling numbers Publicationes Mathematicae Debrecen 88 3 4 357 368 arXiv 1510 05799 doi 10 5486 pmd 2016 7361 S2CID 55741906 A220335 OEIS oeis org Retrieved 17 April 2019 Toth Laszlo 2022 Linear Combinations of Dirichlet Series Associated with the Thue Morse Sequence Integers 22 article 98 Odlyzko A M Schonhage A 1988 Fast algorithms for multiple evaluations of the Riemann zeta function Trans Amer Math Soc 309 2 797 809 doi 10 2307 2000939 JSTOR 2000939 MR 0961614 Work on spin chains by A Knauf et al Empslocal ex ac uk Retrieved 4 January 2017 Gene Ward Smith Nearest integer to locations of increasingly large peaks of abs zeta 0 5 i 2 Pi log 2 t for increasing real t The On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences Retrieved 4 March 2022 William A Sethares 2005 Tuning Timbre Spectrum Scale 2nd ed Springer Verlag London p 74 there are many different ways to evaluate the goodness reasonableness fitness or quality of a scale Under some measures 12 tet is the winner under others 19 tet appears best 53 tet often appears among the victors Most of the formulas in this section are from 4 of J M Borwein et al 2000 References EditApostol T M 2010 Zeta and Related Functions In Olver Frank W J Lozier Daniel M Boisvert Ronald F Clark Charles W eds NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 19225 5 MR 2723248 Borwein Jonathan Bradley David M Crandall Richard 2000 Computational Strategies for the Riemann Zeta Function PDF J Comput Appl Math 121 1 2 247 296 Bibcode 2000JCoAM 121 247B doi 10 1016 S0377 0427 00 00336 8 Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2011 Cvijovic Djurdje Klinowski Jacek 2002 Integral Representations of the Riemann Zeta Function for Odd Integer Arguments J Comput Appl Math 142 2 435 439 Bibcode 2002JCoAM 142 435C doi 10 1016 S0377 0427 02 00358 8 MR 1906742 Cvijovic Djurdje Klinowski Jacek 1997 Continued fraction expansions for the Riemann zeta function and polylogarithms Proc Amer Math Soc 125 9 2543 2550 doi 10 1090 S0002 9939 97 04102 6 Edwards H M 1974 Riemann s Zeta Function Academic Press ISBN 0 486 41740 9 Has an English translation of Riemann s paper Hadamard Jacques 1896 Sur la distribution des zeros de la fonction z s et ses consequences arithmetiques Bulletin de la Societe Mathematique de France 14 199 220 doi 10 24033 bsmf 545 Hardy G H 1949 Divergent Series Clarendon Press Oxford Hasse Helmut 1930 Ein Summierungsverfahren fur die Riemannsche z Reihe Math Z 32 458 464 doi 10 1007 BF01194645 MR 1545177 S2CID 120392534 Globally convergent series expression Ivic A 1985 The Riemann Zeta Function John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 80634 X Motohashi Y 1997 Spectral Theory of the Riemann Zeta Function Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521445205 Karatsuba A A Voronin S M 1992 The Riemann Zeta Function Berlin W de Gruyter Mezo Istvan Dil Ayhan 2010 Hyperharmonic series involving Hurwitz zeta function Journal of Number Theory 130 2 360 369 doi 10 1016 j jnt 2009 08 005 hdl 2437 90539 MR 2564902 S2CID 122707401 Montgomery Hugh L Vaughan Robert C 2007 Multiplicative number theory I Classical theory Cambridge tracts in advanced mathematics Vol 97 Cambridge University Press Ch 10 ISBN 978 0 521 84903 6 Newman Donald J 1998 Analytic number theory Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 177 Springer Verlag Ch 6 ISBN 0 387 98308 2 Raoh Guo 1996 The Distribution of the Logarithmic Derivative of the Riemann Zeta Function Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society s3 72 1 27 doi 10 1112 plms s3 72 1 1 Riemann Bernhard 1859 Uber die Anzahl der Primzahlen unter einer gegebenen Grosse Monatsberichte der Berliner Akademie In Gesammelte Werke Teubner Leipzig 1892 Reprinted by Dover New York 1953 Sondow Jonathan 1994 Analytic continuation of Riemann s zeta function and values at negative integers via Euler s transformation of series PDF Proc Amer Math Soc 120 2 421 424 doi 10 1090 S0002 9939 1994 1172954 7 Titchmarsh E C 1986 Heath Brown ed The Theory of the Riemann Zeta Function 2nd rev ed Oxford University Press Whittaker E T Watson G N 1927 A Course in Modern Analysis 4th ed Cambridge University Press Ch 13 Zhao Jianqiang 1999 Analytic continuation of multiple zeta functions Proc Amer Math Soc 128 5 1275 1283 doi 10 1090 S0002 9939 99 05398 8 MR 1670846 External links Edit Media related to Riemann zeta function at Wikimedia Commons Zeta function Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Riemann Zeta Function in Wolfram Mathworld an explanation with a more mathematical approach Tables of selected zeros Prime Numbers Get Hitched A general non technical description of the significance of the zeta function in relation to prime numbers X Ray of the Zeta Function Visually oriented investigation of where zeta is real or purely imaginary Formulas and identities for the Riemann Zeta function functions wolfram com Riemann Zeta Function and Other Sums of Reciprocal Powers section 23 2 of Abramowitz and Stegun Frenkel Edward Million Dollar Math Problem video Brady Haran Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 11 March 2014 Mellin transform and the functional equation of the Riemann Zeta function Computational examples of Mellin transform methods involving the Riemann Zeta Function Visualizing the Riemann zeta function and analytic continuation a video from 3Blue1Brown Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Riemann zeta function amp oldid 1127458416, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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