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Quantized Number Theory, Fractal Strings And The Riemann Hypothesis: From Spectral Operators To Phase Transitions And Universality [Kõva köide]

(Univ Of California, Riverside, Usa), (Santa Monica College, Usa)
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Studying the relationship between the geometry, arithmetic and spectra of fractals has been a subject of significant interest in contemporary mathematics. This book contributes to the literature on the subject in several different and new ways. In particular, the authors provide a rigorous and detailed study of the spectral operator, a map that sends the geometry of fractal strings onto their spectrum. To that effect, they use and develop methods from fractal geometry, functional analysis, complex analysis, operator theory, partial differential equations, analytic number theory and mathematical physics.Originally, M L Lapidus and M van Frankenhuijsen 'heuristically' introduced the spectral operator in their development of the theory of fractal strings and their complex dimensions, specifically in their reinterpretation of the earlier work of M L Lapidus and H Maier on inverse spectral problems for fractal strings and the Riemann hypothesis.One of the main themes of the book is to provide a rigorous framework within which the corresponding question 'Can one hear the shape of a fractal string?' or, equivalently, 'Can one obtain information about the geometry of a fractal string, given its spectrum?' can be further reformulated in terms of the invertibility or the quasi-invertibility of the spectral operator.The infinitesimal shift of the real line is first precisely defined as a differentiation operator on a family of suitably weighted Hilbert spaces of functions on the real line and indexed by a dimensional parameter c. Then, the spectral operator is defined via the functional calculus as a function of the infinitesimal shift. In this manner, it is viewed as a natural 'quantum' analog of the Riemann zeta function. More precisely, within this framework, the spectral operator is defined as the composite map of the Riemann zeta function with the infinitesimal shift, viewed as an unbounded normal operator acting on the above Hilbert space.It is shown that the quasi-invertibility of the spectral operator is intimately connected to the existence of critical zeros of the Riemann zeta function, leading to a new spectral and operator-theoretic reformulation of the Riemann hypothesis. Accordingly, the spectral operator is quasi-invertible for all values of the dimensional parameter c in the critical interval (0,1) (other than in the midfractal case when c =1/2) if and only if the Riemann hypothesis (RH) is true. A related, but seemingly quite different, reformulation of RH, due to the second author and referred to as an 'asymmetric criterion for RH', is also discussed in some detail: namely, the spectral operator is invertible for all values of c in the left-critical interval (0,1/2) if and only if RH is true.These spectral reformulations of RH also led to the discovery of several 'mathematical phase transitions' in this context, for the shape of the spectrum, the invertibility, the boundedness or the unboundedness of the spectral operator, and occurring either in the midfractal case or in the most fractal case when the underlying fractal dimension is equal to ½ or 1, respectively. In particular, the midfractal dimension c=1/2 is playing the role of a critical parameter in quantum statistical physics and the theory of phase transitions and critical phenomena.Furthermore, the authors provide a 'quantum analog' of Voronin's classical theorem about the universality of the Riemann zeta function. Moreover, they obtain and study quantized counterparts of the Dirichlet series and of the Euler product for the Riemann zeta function, which are shown to converge (in a suitable sense) even inside the critical strip.For pedagogical reasons, most of the book is devoted to the study of the quantized Riemann zeta function. However, the results obtained in this monograph are expected to lead to a quantization of most classic arithmetic zeta functions, hence, further 'naturally quantizing' various aspects of analytic number theory and arithmetic geometry.The book should be accessible to experts and non-experts alike, including mathematics and physics graduate students and postdoctoral researchers, interested in fractal geometry, number theory, operator theory and functional analysis, differential equations, complex analysis, spectral theory, as well as mathematical and theoretical physics. Whenever necessary, suitable background about the different subjects involved is provided and the new work is placed in its proper historical context. Several appendices supplementing the main text are also included.
Overview ix
Preface xiii
List of Figures
xxix
List of Tables
xxxiii
Conventions xxxv
1 Introduction
1(18)
2 Generalized Fractal Strings and Complex Dimensions
19(18)
2.1 Ordinary and generalized fractal strings
20(5)
2.2 Harmonic string and spectral measure
25(5)
2.3 Explicit formulas
30(7)
3 Direct and Inverse Spectral Problems for Fractal Strings
37(18)
3.1 Minkowski dimension and Minkowski measurability criteria
39(5)
3.2 Direct spectral problems and the (modified) Weyl-Berry conjecture
44(5)
3.3 Inverse spectral problems and the Riemann hypothesis
49(6)
4 The Heuristic Spectral Operator ac
55(10)
4.1 The heuristic multiplicative and additive spectral operators
56(3)
4.2 The heuristic spectral operator and its Euler product
59(6)
5 The Infinitesimal Shift δc
65(28)
5.1 The weighted Hilbert space Hc
66(5)
5.2 The domain of the differentiation operator δc
71(7)
5.3 Normality of the infinitesimal shift δc
78(15)
6 The Spectrum of the Infinitesimal Shift δc
93(56)
6.1 Characterization of the spectrum of an unbounded normal operator
95(12)
6.2 The spectrum of the differentiation operator δc
107(13)
6.3 The shift group {e-tδc}tεR and the infinitesimal shift dδ
120(6)
6.4 The truncated infinitesimal shifts δ(T)c,± and their spectra
126(23)
6.4.1 The continuous case
126(13)
6.4.2 The meromorphic case
139(10)
7 The Spectral Operator ac = Ζ(δc): Quantized Dirichlet Series, Euler Product, and Analytic Continuation
149(66)
7.1 Overview
152(3)
7.2 Rigorous definition of the spectral operator: ac =Ζ(δc)
155(3)
7.3 Quantized Dirichlet series (case c > l)
158(12)
7.4 Quantized Euler product (case c > 1)
170(10)
7.5 Further justification of the definition of ac: Operator-valued analytic continuation (case c > 0)
180(23)
7.5.1 Analytic continuation of the spectral operator
181(12)
7.5.2 Convergent quantized Dirichlet series and Euler product in the critical interval 0 < c <1
193(7)
7.5.3 Conjecture and open problem about ac (for 0 < c < 1)
200(3)
7.6 The global spectral operator Ac = Ζ(δc): Quantized analytic continuation (for c ε R) and functional equation
203(12)
7.6.1 The global Riemann zeta function Ζ = Ζ(s) (for s ε C)
203(3)
7.6.2 Definition and operator-valued analytic continuation of Ac = Ζ(δc) (for c ε R)
206(4)
7.6.3 Quantized functional equation
210(5)
8 Spectral Reformulation of the Riemann Hypothesis
215(20)
8.1 The truncated spectral operators ac(T)c,± = ζ(δ(T)c,±) and their spectra
217(3)
8.2 Quasi-invertibility of ac and the Riemann zeros
220(8)
8.3 Inverse spectral problems for fractal strings and a spectral reformulation of the Riemann hypothesis
228(2)
8.4 Almost invertibility of ac and an almost Riemann hypothesis
230(5)
9 Zeta Values, Riemann Zeros and Phase Transitions for ac = Ζ(δc)
235(44)
9.1 The spectrum of ac
237(3)
9.2 Invertibility of ac and zeta values
240(2)
9.3 Phase transitions of ac at c = 1/2 and c -- 1
242(11)
9.3.1 Phase transitions for the boundedness and invertibility of ac
243(2)
9.3.2 Phase transitions for the shape of the spectrum of ac
245(6)
9.3.3 Possible interpretations of the phase transitions
251(2)
9.4 An asymmetric criterion for the Riemann hypothesis: Invertibility of ac for 0 > c > 1/2
253(26)
10 A Quantum Analog of the Universality of Ζ(s)
279(18)
10.1 Universality of the Riemann zeta function Ζ = Ζ(s)
280(7)
10.1.1 Origins of universality
280(2)
10.1.2 Voronin's universality theorem
282(5)
10.2 Universality and an operator-valued extended Voronin theorem
287(10)
10.2.1 A first quantum analog of the universality theorem
287(5)
10.2.2 A more general version of quantized universality
292(5)
11 Concluding Comments and Future Research Directions
297(58)
A Riemann's Explicit Formula
305(6)
B Natural Boundary Conditions for δc
311(4)
C The Momentum Operator and Normality of δc
315(8)
D The Spectral Mapping Theorem
323(12)
E The Range and Growth of on Vertical Lines
335(14)
E.1 Estimates for the modulus of Ζ(s) along vertical lines within the critical strip
337(7)
E.2 The range of Ζ(s) and its Euler factors to the right of the critical strip
344(5)
F Further Extensions of the Universality of Ζ(x)
349(6)
F.1 A first extension of Voronin's original theorem
349(2)
F.2 Extensions to certain L-functions and other zeta functions
351(4)
Acknowledgments 355(2)
Bibliography 357(30)
Index of Symbols 387(12)
Author Index 399(10)
Subject Index 409