Witten zeta function

From testwiki
Revision as of 11:42, 28 November 2024 by imported>Citation bot (Added bibcode. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Dominic3203 | Category:Algebra stubs | #UCB_Category 23/177)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description In mathematics, the Witten zeta function, is a function associated to a root system that encodes the degrees of the irreducible representations of the corresponding Lie group. These zeta functions were introduced by Don Zagier who named them after Edward Witten's study of their special values (among other things).[1][2] Note that in,[2] Witten zeta functions do not appear as explicit objects in their own right.

Definition

If G is a compact semisimple Lie group, the associated Witten zeta function is (the meromorphic continuation of) the series

ζG(s)=ρ1(dimρ)s,

where the sum is over equivalence classes of irreducible representations of G.

In the case where G is connected and simply connected, the correspondence between representations of G and of its Lie algebra, together with the Weyl dimension formula, implies that ζG(s) can be written as

m1,,mr>0αΦ+1α,m1λ1++mrλrs,

where Φ+ denotes the set of positive roots, {λi} is a set of simple roots and r is the rank.

Examples

  • ζSU(2)(s)=ζ(s), the Riemann zeta function.
  • ζSU(3)(s)=x=1y=11(xy(x+y)/2)s.

Abscissa of convergence

If G is simple and simply connected, the abscissa of convergence of ζG(s) is r/κ, where r is the rank and κ=|Φ+|. This is a theorem due to Alex Lubotzky and Michael Larsen.[3] A new proof is given by Jokke Häsä and Alexander Stasinski [4] which yields a more general result, namely it gives an explicit value (in terms of simple combinatorics) of the abscissa of convergence of any "Mellin zeta function" of the form

x1,,xr=11P(x1,,xr)s,

where P(x1,,xr) is a product of linear polynomials with non-negative real coefficients.

Singularities and values of the Witten zeta function associated to SU(3)

ζSU(3) is absolutely convergent in {s,(s)>2/3}, and it can be extended meromorphicaly in . Its singularities are in {23}{12k,k}, and all of those singularities are simple poles.[5] In particular, the values of ζSU(3)(s) are well defined at all integers, and have been computed by Kazuhiro Onodera.[6]

At s=0, we have ζSU(3)(0)=13, and ζSU(3)(0)=log(24/3π).

Let a* be a positive integer. We have

ζSU(3)(a)=2a+21+(1)a2k=0[a/2](2a2k1a1)ζ(2k)ζ(3ak).

If a is odd, then ζSU(3) has a simple zero at s=a, and

ζSU(3)(a)=2a+1(a!)2(2a+1)!ζ(3a1)+2a+2k=0(a1)/2(a2k)ζ(a2k)ζ(2a+2k).

If a is even, then ζSU(3) has a zero of order 2 at s=a, and

ζSU(3)(a)=2a+2k=0a/2(a2k)ζ(a2k)ζ(2a+2k).

References


Template:Algebra-stub