Elementary Version of Riemann Hypothesis

July 3rd, 2005 by Walt

I was looking at the Wikipedia entry for Harmonic number, where I spotted a rather surprising reformulation of the Riemann hypothesis.

The Riemann hypothesis was already known to be equivalent to a not-very-complicated statement about the distribution of primes. Let π be the number of primes less than n. Then the Riemann hypothesis is equivalent to:

for all ε > 0. This fact, which goes back at least to Riemann, is the main reason why the Riemann hypothesis is of interest. In 2002, Jeffrey Lagarias found an even more elementary statement.:

where Hn is the nth Harmonic number (the sum of reciprocals less than or equal to n). It almost looks you could solve it, doesn’t it?

3 Responses to “Elementary Version of Riemann Hypothesis”

  1. michael Says:

    I am not suprised I have never heard of it, but I do find myself asking the question (yes, I realize I could read the paper, but I figure you aready have :) ) How sharp is that?

  2. Walt Says:

    I imagine the bound is pretty sharp. The Riemann hypothesis is supposed to be a best possible kind of result, and I’d think that applies here. Most numbers won’t be close to the bound (for example, for primes the left-hand side is n+1), but for a strictly-increasing right-hand side, it’s probably the best you can do.

  3. Ars Mathematica » Blog Archive » Why the Riemann Hypothesis? Says:

    [...] back when, I had a post about explaining the Riemann hypothesis in elementary terms. I thought I’d go into some more [...]

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