Selberg class

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Atle Selberg

In mathematics, the Selberg class is an axiomatic definition of a class of L-functions. The members of the class are Dirichlet series which obey four axioms that seem to capture the essential properties satisfied by most functions that are commonly called L-functions or zeta functions. Although the exact nature of the class is conjectural, the hope is that the definition of the class will lead to a classification of its contents and an elucidation of its properties, including insight into their relationship to automorphic forms and the Riemann hypothesis. The class was defined by Atle Selberg in Template:Harv, who preferred not to use the word "axiom" that later authors have employed.[1]

Definition

The formal definition of the class S is the set of all Dirichlet series

F(s)=n=1anns

absolutely convergent for Re(s) > 1 that satisfy four axioms (or assumptions as Selberg calls them):

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Comments on definition

The condition that the real part of μi be non-negative is because there are known L-functions that do not satisfy the Riemann hypothesis when μi is negative. Specifically, there are Maass forms associated with exceptional eigenvalues, for which the Ramanujan–Peterssen conjecture holds, and have a functional equation, but do not satisfy the Riemann hypothesis.

The condition that θ < 1/2 is important, as the θ = 1 case includes (12s)(121s) whose zeros are not on the critical line.

Without the condition anεnε there would be L(s+1/3,χ4)L(s1/3,χ4) which violates the Riemann hypothesis.

It is a consequence of 4. that the an are multiplicative and that

Fp(s)=n=0apnpns for Re(s)>0.

Examples

The prototypical example of an element in S is the Riemann zeta function.[2] Dirichlet L-functions associated with primitive characters modulo q2 belong to the Selberg class, too. Another example, is the L-function of the modular discriminant Δ

L(s,Δ)=n=1anns

where an=τ(n)/n11/2 and τ(n) is the Ramanujan tau function.[3]

All known examples are automorphic L-functions, and the reciprocals of Fp(s) are polynomials in ps of bounded degree.[4]

The best results on the structure of the Selberg class are due to Kaczorowski and Perelli, who show that the Dirichlet L-functions (including the Riemann zeta-function) are the only examples with degree less than 2.[5]

Basic properties

As with the Riemann zeta function, an element F of S has trivial zeroes that arise from the poles of the gamma factor γ(s). The other zeroes are referred to as the non-trivial zeroes of F. These will all be located in some strip Template:Nowrap. Denoting the number of non-trivial zeroes of F with Template:Nowrap by NF(T),[6] Selberg showed that

NF(T)=dFTlog(T+C)2π+O(logT).

An explicit version of the result was proven by Palojärvi.[7] Here, dF is called the degree (or dimension) of F. It is given by[8]

dF=2i=1kωi.

It can be shown that F = 1 is the only function in S whose degree is less than 1.

If F and G are in the Selberg class, then so is their product and

dFG=dF+dG.

A function Template:Nowrap in S is called primitive if whenever it is written as F = F1F2, with Fi in S, then F = F1 or F = F2. If dF = 1, then F is primitive. Every function Template:Nowrap of S can be written as a product of primitive functions. Selberg's conjectures, described below, imply that the factorization into primitive functions is unique.

Examples of primitive functions include the Riemann zeta function and Dirichlet L-functions of primitive Dirichlet characters. Assuming conjectures 1 and 2 below, L-functions of irreducible cuspidal automorphic representations that satisfy the Ramanujan conjecture are primitive.[9]

Selberg's conjectures

In Template:Harv, Selberg made conjectures concerning the functions in S:

  • Conjecture 1: For all F in S, there is an integer nF such that px|ap|2p=nFloglogx+O(1) and nF = 1 whenever F is primitive.
  • Conjecture 2: For distinct primitive FF′ ∈ S, pxapapp=O(1).
  • Conjecture 3: If F is in S with primitive factorization F=i=1mFi, χ is a primitive Dirichlet character, and the function Fχ(s)=n=1χ(n)anns is also in S, then the functions Fiχ are primitive elements of S (and consequently, they form the primitive factorization of Fχ).
  • Generalized Riemann hypothesis for S: For all F in S, the non-trivial zeroes of F all lie on the line Re(s) = 1/2.

Consequences of the conjectures

Conjectures 1 and 2 imply that if F has a pole of order m at s = 1, then F(s)/ζ(s)m is entire. In particular, they imply Dedekind's conjecture.[10]

M. Ram Murty showed in Template:Harv that conjectures 1 and 2 imply the Artin conjecture. In fact, Murty showed that Artin L-functions corresponding to irreducible representations of the Galois group of a solvable extension of the rationals are automorphic as predicted by the Langlands conjectures.[11]

Combined with the Generalized Riemann hypothesis, different versions of Conjectures 1 and 2 imply certain growth rates for the function and its logarithmic derivative.[12][13][14]

The functions in S also satisfy an analogue of the prime number theorem: F(s) has no zeroes on the line Re(s) = 1. As mentioned above, conjectures 1 and 2 imply the unique factorization of functions in S into primitive functions. Another consequence is that the primitivity of F is equivalent to nF = 1.[15]

See also

Notes

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References

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  1. The title of Selberg's paper is somewhat a spoof on Paul Erdős, who had many papers named (approximately) "(Some) Old and new problems and results about...". Indeed, the 1989 Amalfi conference was quite surprising in that both Selberg and Erdős were present, with the story being that Selberg did not know that Erdős was to attend.
  2. Template:Harvnb
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  6. The zeroes on the boundary are counted with half-multiplicity.
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  8. While the ωi are not uniquely defined by F, Selberg's result shows that their sum is well-defined.
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  10. A celebrated conjecture of Dedekind asserts that for any finite algebraic extension F of , the zeta function ζF(s) is divisible by the Riemann zeta function ζ(s). That is, the quotient ζF(s)/ζ(s) is entire. More generally, Dedekind conjectures that if K is a finite extension of F, then ζK(s)/ζF(s) should be entire. This conjecture is still open.
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  12. Template:Cite journal
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  15. Template:Harvnb