Dirichlet eta function

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In mathematics, in the area of analytic number theory, the Dirichlet eta function is defined by the following Dirichlet series, which converges for any complex number having real part > 0:

Color representation of the Dirichlet eta function. It is generated as a Matplotlib plot using a version of the Domain coloring method.[1]

This Dirichlet series is the alternating sum corresponding to the Dirichlet series expansion of the Riemann zeta function, ζ(s) — and for this reason the Dirichlet eta function is also known as the alternating zeta function, also denoted ζ*(s). The following relation holds:

Both the Dirichlet eta function and the Riemann zeta function are special cases of polylogarithms.

While the Dirichlet series expansion for the eta function is convergent only for any complex number s with real part > 0, it is Abel summable for any complex number. This serves to define the eta function as an entire function. (The above relation and the facts that the eta function is entire and together show the zeta function is meromorphic with a simple pole at s = 1, and possibly additional poles at the other zeros of the factor , although in fact these hypothetical additional poles do not exist.)

Equivalently, we may begin by defining which is also defined in the region of positive real part ( represents the gamma function). This gives the eta function as a Mellin transform.

Hardy gave a simple proof of the functional equation for the eta function,[2] which is

From this, one immediately has the functional equation of the zeta function also, as well as another means to extend the definition of eta to the entire complex plane.

Zeros

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The zeros of the eta function include all the zeros of the zeta function: the negative even integers (real equidistant simple zeros); the zeros along the critical line, none of which are known to be multiple and over 40% of which have been proven to be simple, and the hypothetical zeros in the critical strip but not on the critical line, which if they do exist must occur at the vertices of rectangles symmetrical around the x-axis and the critical line and whose multiplicity is unknown. [citation needed] In addition, the factor   adds an infinite number of complex simple zeros, located at equidistant points on the line  , at   where n is any nonzero integer.

Under the Riemann hypothesis, the zeros of the eta function would be located symmetrically with respect to the real axis on two parallel lines  , and on the perpendicular half line formed by the negative real axis.

Landau's problem with ζ(s) = η(s)/0 and solutions

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In the equation η(s) = (1 − 21−s) ζ(s), "the pole of ζ(s) at s = 1 is cancelled by the zero of the other factor" (Titchmarsh, 1986, p. 17), and as a result η(1) is neither infinite nor zero (see § Particular values). However, in the equation   η must be zero at all the points  , where the denominator is zero, if the Riemann zeta function is analytic and finite there. The problem of proving this without defining the zeta function first was signaled and left open by E. Landau in his 1909 treatise on number theory: "Whether the eta series is different from zero or not at the points  , i.e., whether these are poles of zeta or not, is not readily apparent here."

A first solution for Landau's problem was published almost 40 years later by D. V. Widder in his book The Laplace Transform. It uses the next prime 3 instead of 2 to define a Dirichlet series similar to the eta function, which we will call the   function, defined for   and with some zeros also on  , but not equal to those of eta.

Indirect proof of η(sn) = 0 following Widder

 

If   is real and strictly positive, the series converges since the regrouped terms alternate in sign and decrease in absolute value to zero. According to a theorem on uniform convergence of Dirichlet series first proven by Cahen in 1894, the   function is then analytic for  , a region which includes the line  . Now we can define correctly, where the denominators are not zero,   or  

Since   is irrational, the denominators in the two definitions are not zero at the same time except for  , and the   function is thus well defined and analytic for   except at  . We finally get indirectly that   when  :  

An elementary direct and  -independent proof of the vanishing of the eta function at   was published by J. Sondow in 2003. It expresses the value of the eta function as the limit of special Riemann sums associated to an integral known to be zero, using a relation between the partial sums of the Dirichlet series defining the eta and zeta functions for  .

Direct proof of η(sn) = 0 by Sondow

With some simple algebra performed on finite sums, we can write for any complex s  

Now if   and  , the factor multiplying   is zero, and   where Rn(f(x), a, b) denotes a special Riemann sum approximating the integral of f(x) over [a, b]. For t = 0 i.e., s = 1, we get  

Otherwise, if  , then  , which yields  

Assuming  , for each point   where  , we can now define   by continuity as follows,  

The apparent singularity of zeta at   is now removed, and the zeta function is proven to be analytic everywhere in  , except at   where  

Integral representations

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A number of integral formulas involving the eta function can be listed. The first one follows from a change of variable of the integral representation of the Gamma function (Abel, 1823), giving a Mellin transform which can be expressed in different ways as a double integral (Sondow, 2005). This is valid for    

The Cauchy–Schlömilch transformation (Amdeberhan, Moll et al., 2010) can be used to prove this other representation, valid for  . Integration by parts of the first integral above in this section yields another derivation.

 

The next formula, due to Lindelöf (1905), is valid over the whole complex plane, when the principal value is taken for the logarithm implicit in the exponential.   This corresponds to a Jensen (1895) formula for the entire function  , valid over the whole complex plane and also proven by Lindelöf.   "This formula, remarquable by its simplicity, can be proven easily with the help of Cauchy's theorem, so important for the summation of series" wrote Jensen (1895). Similarly by converting the integration paths to contour integrals one can obtain other formulas for the eta function, such as this generalisation (Milgram, 2013) valid for   and all  :   The zeros on the negative real axis are factored out cleanly by making   (Milgram, 2013) to obtain a formula valid for  :  

Numerical algorithms

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Most of the series acceleration techniques developed for alternating series can be profitably applied to the evaluation of the eta function. One particularly simple, yet reasonable method is to apply Euler's transformation of alternating series, to obtain  

Note that the second, inside summation is a forward difference.

Borwein's method

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Peter Borwein used approximations involving Chebyshev polynomials to produce a method for efficient evaluation of the eta function.[3] If   then   where for   the error term γn is bounded by  

The factor of   in the error bound indicates that the Borwein series converges quite rapidly as n increases.

Particular values

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  • η(0) = 12, the Abel sum of Grandi's series 1 − 1 + 1 − 1 + · · ·.
  • η(−1) = 14, the Abel sum of 1 − 2 + 3 − 4 + · · ·.
  • For k an integer > 1, if Bk is the k-th Bernoulli number then  

Also:

  •  , this is the alternating harmonic series
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The general form for even positive integers is:  

Taking the limit  , one obtains  .

Derivatives

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The derivative with respect to the parameter s is for      

References

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  1. ^ "Jupyter Notebook Viewer".
  2. ^ Hardy, G. H. (1922). A new proof of the functional equation for the Zeta-function. Matematisk Tidsskrift. B, 71–73. http://www.jstor.org/stable/24529536
  3. ^ Borwein, Peter (2000). "An efficient algorithm for the Riemann zeta function". In Théra, Michel A. (ed.). Constructive, Experimental, and Nonlinear Analysis (PDF). 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. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2008-09-20.