20 research outputs found

    An alternative to Riemann-Siegel type formulas

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    Simple unsmoothed formulas to compute the Riemann zeta function, and Dirichlet LL-functions to a power-full modulus, are derived by elementary means (Taylor expansions and the geometric series). The formulas enable square-root of the analytic conductor complexity, up to logarithmic loss, and have an explicit remainder term that is easy to control. The formula for zeta yields a convexity bound of the same strength as that from the Riemann-Siegel formula, up to a constant factor. Practical parameter choices are discussed.Comment: 16 page

    Numerical study of the derivative of the Riemann zeta function at zeros

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    The derivative of the Riemann zeta function was computed numerically on several large sets of zeros at large heights. Comparisons to known and conjectured asymptotics are presented.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures; minor typos fixe

    Uniform asymptotics for the full moment conjecture of the Riemann zeta function

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    Conrey, Farmer, Keating, Rubinstein, and Snaith, recently conjectured formulas for the full asymptotics of the moments of LL-functions. In the case of the Riemann zeta function, their conjecture states that the 2k2k-th absolute moment of zeta on the critical line is asymptotically given by a certain 2k2k-fold residue integral. This residue integral can be expressed as a polynomial of degree k2k^2, whose coefficients are given in exact form by elaborate and complicated formulas. In this article, uniform asymptotics for roughly the first kk coefficients of the moment polynomial are derived. Numerical data to support our asymptotic formula are presented. An application to bounding the maximal size of the zeta function is considered.Comment: 53 pages, 1 figure, 2 table

    The zeta function on the critical line: Numerical evidence for moments and random matrix theory models

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    Results of extensive computations of moments of the Riemann zeta function on the critical line are presented. Calculated values are compared with predictions motivated by random matrix theory. The results can help in deciding between those and competing predictions. It is shown that for high moments and at large heights, the variability of moment values over adjacent intervals is substantial, even when those intervals are long, as long as a block containing 10^9 zeros near zero number 10^23. More than anything else, the variability illustrates the limits of what one can learn about the zeta function from numerical evidence. It is shown the rate of decline of extreme values of the moments is modelled relatively well by power laws. Also, some long range correlations in the values of the second moment, as well as asymptotic oscillations in the values of the shifted fourth moment, are found. The computations described here relied on several representations of the zeta function. The numerical comparison of their effectiveness that is presented is of independent interest, for future large scale computations.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figures, 19 table
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