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The Riemann hypothesis: a million dollar problem

✍ Scribed by Craats, Jan van de; Veen, Roland van der


Publisher
Mathematical Association of America
Year
2015
Tongue
English
Leaves
157
Series
Anneli Lax new mathematical library 46
Category
Library

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✦ Table of Contents


Contents......Page 8
Preface......Page 10
1.1 Primes as elementary building blocks......Page 14
1.2 Counting primes......Page 16
1.3 Using the logarithm to count powers......Page 20
1.4 Approximations for Ο€(x)......Page 22
1.6 Counting prime powers logarithmically......Page 24
1.7 The Riemann hypothesisβ€”a look ahead......Page 27
1.8 Additional exercises......Page 29
2.1 Infinite sums......Page 34
2.2 Series for well-known functions......Page 39
2.3 Computation of ΞΆ(2)......Page 42
2.4 Euler’s product formula......Page 45
2.6 Additional exercises......Page 47
3.1 Euler’s discovery of the product formula......Page 54
3.2 Extending the domain of the zeta function......Page 56
3.3 A crash course on complex numbers......Page 58
3.4 Complex functions and powers......Page 60
3.5 The complex zeta function......Page 63
3.6 The zeroes of the zeta function......Page 64
3.7 The hunt for zeta zeroes......Page 67
3.8 Additional exercises......Page 68
4 Primes and the Riemann hypothesis......Page 72
4.1 Riemann’s functional equation......Page 73
4.2 The zeroes of the zeta function......Page 76
4.3 The explicit formula for ψ(x)......Page 79
4.4 Pairing up the non-trivial zeroes......Page 82
4.5 The prime number theorem......Page 85
4.6 A proof of the prime number theorem......Page 86
4.7 The music of the primes......Page 89
4.8 Looking back......Page 91
4.9 Additional exercises......Page 94
Appendix A. Why big primes are useful......Page 100
Appendix B. Computer support......Page 104
Appendix C. Further reading and internet surfing......Page 112
Appendix D. Solutions to the exercises......Page 114
Index......Page 156

✦ Subjects


Riemann hypothesis


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