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#1 |
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Jun 2005
lehigh.edu
100000000002 Posts |
Anyone heard anything about this one? Serious (elementary) analytic
number theory, by an Indian mathematician I haven't heard of. http://arxiv.org/archive/math then NT --> recent, then march 14 for Title: The Riemann Hypothesis Authors: Tribikram Pati -bd |
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#2 |
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May 2003
110000010112 Posts |
I saw this. As with all preprints (but more especially with ones which claim to answer hard questions) one must wait for the experts to analyze the proof.
It would have been nice if he had computed an explicit bound within which there was a zero off of the line. Glancing through the proof, such a bound doesn't seem unreasonably hard to obtain (although some of the absolute constants involved in the proof may not be constructible). |
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#3 |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
2×3×13×83 Posts |
How many hours of maths goes down the pan if he's right?
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#4 |
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Jun 2005
lehigh.edu
20008 Posts |
Not sure that anyone would imagine the RH going down .... well, there's
that, just to start. But if the unthinkable happened, the Generalized RH on L-functions and on Dedekind zeta functions would seem to be in question; which I don't think it is, again, not so much imaginable. There's also the Clay problem on generalized Peterson, and large chunks of the rest of automorphic forms. I tried google on zeta functions and got: http://secamlocal.ex.ac.uk/people/st...afunctions.htm How about 45% of math foundations, about what we (most mathematicians) believe to be true? More, maybe. -bd Last fiddled with by bdodson on 2007-03-17 at 13:45 Reason: correction: most number theorists |
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#5 |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
145128 Posts |
45% of maths foundations.
That sounds incredibly precise. Wonder what David Hilbert would make of this. Last fiddled with by davieddy on 2007-03-18 at 13:06 |
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#6 | |
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Jun 2005
lehigh.edu
210 Posts |
Quote:
statistics are entirely made-up. The usage of "foundations" isn't the one in the nature/validity of proof, sorry. More like what we'd like to be able to prove, but then going on from there to what would be next. Hilbert is a good point of reference for the first question though. While he's (very!) well known for his own list of problems (the ones from the previous millenium), he's supposed to have said that if he were able to come back after 100 years, and ask one question, the one he'd want to know was whether RH had been proven yet (iirc). I'd be very surprised if the supposed disproof were to actually supply info on finding a zero off the critical line. Seems much more likely that there's an error; but there's probably someone here with expertise in analytic number theory able to offer a more authoritative view. -Bruce |
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#7 | |
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Jun 2005
lehigh.edu
210 Posts |
Quote:
they don't seem to have any new info --- two of the posts being from the person that sent the question to me (of all unlikely people). I even tried google on RH (something often recommended by posters in this forum), from which I found another link on (what seems to be) the same site as above http://secamlocal.ex.ac.uk/people/st...a/RHproofs.htm a long page of proofs and/or disproofs of RH. We may not be able to get an expert opinion unless the evaluation of the argument falls within his/her job description. (sigh!) -bd |
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