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Generalized Riemann Hypothesis

Updated 8 February 2026
  • Generalized Riemann Hypothesis is a conjecture that all nontrivial zeros of Dirichlet and Dedekind L-functions lie on the line Re(s)=1/2.
  • It links analytic properties such as functional equations and Euler products to prime distribution in arithmetic progressions.
  • The hypothesis is supported by criteria including universality, zero-free regions, and explicit formulae that guide both theoretical and numerical investigations.

The Generalized Riemann Hypothesis (GRH) is a central conjecture in analytic number theory extending the classical Riemann Hypothesis (RH) to a broad class of LL-functions, most notably the Dirichlet LL-functions and Dedekind zeta functions. It asserts that the nontrivial zeros of these functions all lie on a specific vertical line in the complex plane, exerting deep control over arithmetic phenomena such as the distribution of primes in arithmetic progressions and the behavior of arithmetic L-functions over number fields and algebraic varieties.

1. Formulation and Scope of the GRH

The GRH for Dirichlet LL-functions states that for every primitive Dirichlet character χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}, the nontrivial zeros of the analytically continued Dirichlet LL-function

L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}

all satisfy (s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2} (Schipani, 2010). The hypothesis extends further:

  • The Extended Riemann Hypothesis (ERH) refers to the assertion that all "standard" LL-functions attached to automorphic or arithmetic data (such as Dedekind zeta functions ζK(s)\zeta_K(s) of number fields KK) have all nontrivial zeros on their respective "central lines" (Dixit et al., 2022, Gutiérrez, 2014).
  • In more general frameworks, GRH is extended to LL0-functions associated with Hecke characters, Artin representations, and automorphic forms.

For the Dedekind zeta function LL1 of a number field LL2, the GRH posits that every nontrivial zero LL3 has LL4 (Dixit et al., 2022).

2. Analytic Properties of Dirichlet LL5-Functions

Functional Equation and Analytic Continuation

For a primitive Dirichlet character LL6 of conductor LL7, LL8 extends to the entire complex plane (with at most a simple pole at LL9 for the principal character). The completed LL0-function

LL1

satisfies the functional equation

LL2

with LL3 (Schipani, 2010). This symmetry is the analytic backbone of the conjecture, ensuring the critical strip LL4 is invariant under LL5.

Euler Product

For LL6, the Dirichlet LL7-function admits the Euler product

LL8

showing its deep connection with prime numbers (LeClair et al., 2018).

3. Sufficient and Equivalent Criteria for GRH

Numerous equivalent reformulations and sufficient conditions for GRH have been established:

  • Universality of the Derivative: The strong universality of LL9 in certain subregions implies GRH. If, on any compact set in χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}0 or vertical segments on the critical line, the translates of χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}1 are dense, then all nontrivial zeros must lie on χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}2 (Schipani, 2010).
  • Non-Vanishing of Partial Sums: GRH for χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}3 is equivalent to the property that, for every closed disk χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}4 in χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}5, there exists χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}6 such that the partial sums χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}7 do not vanish on χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}8 for infinitely many χ(modq)\chi \pmod{q}9.
  • Zero-Free Regions: Explicit unconditional regions exist near the edges of the strip where LL0, so off-line zeros are excluded in these wedges (Schipani, 2010).

These criteria offer both theoretical leverage for proving GRH and practical mechanisms for numerical verification (Hiary et al., 2024).

4. Connections to Zero Statistics and Explicit Formulae

The deep links between the distribution of zeros of LL1-functions and prime number theory are formalized through explicit formulae, such as the Guinand–Weil explicit formula (Quesada-Herrera, 2024): LL2 where LL3 is an even test function. Under GRH, the spectral side (zero sum) is nonnegative for suitable LL4.

Recent research has leveraged explicit formulas and Fourier-optimization (via admissible test-functions) to derive strong conditional bounds on arithmetic objects. For instance, under GRH, the maximal gap between consecutive primes represented by a quadratic form is controlled to within explicit LL5 terms (Quesada-Herrera, 2024).

5. GRH and the Distribution of Primes in Arithmetic Progressions

The prime number theorem in arithmetic progressions,

LL6

is refined under GRH. Chebyshev's bias—the tendency for primes to favor certain residue classes—can be regularized using Robin's LL7-function,

LL8

where LL9 is the generalized Chebyshev function (Alamadhi et al., 2011). The statement

L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}0

(with L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}1 quadratic residue and L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}2 non-residue) is equivalent to GRH modulo L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}3.

6. GRH, Zero Distributions, and Reduction to Zeta Zeros

Recently, it has been shown that GRH for all Dirichlet L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}4-functions is logically equivalent to certain uniform distributional constraints on the zeros of the Riemann zeta function itself. For example, under the Riemann Hypothesis (RH): L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}5 for every rational L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}6 and smooth test function L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}7, is equivalent to the full GRH (Banks, 2023, Banks, 2022). This suggests a "single-L-function" or even "single-zeta" perspective on the full conjecture (Banks, 2023).

7. Extensions and Noncommutative Generalizations

The framework has been further abstracted:

  • For number fields, the Dedekind zeta function L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}8 enjoys a completed functional equation:

L(s,χ)=n=1χ(n)nsL(s, \chi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \chi(n)\, n^{-s}9

with (s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2}0 (Dixit et al., 2022). Modular relations and Riesz-type criteria for the vanishing rate of certain transforms are equivalent to GRH for (s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2}1.

  • In noncommutative geometry, GRH has been formulated for "noncommutative (s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2}2-functions" attached to dg-categories representing geometric noncommutative schemes. The noncommutative GRH asserts that all zeros of the "even" and "odd" noncommutative (s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2}3-functions lie on the respective central lines (Tabuada, 2021). These conjectures are shown to be invariant under derived equivalences and homological projective duality.
  • Geometric reformulations for special (s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2}4-functions (e.g., Epstein zeta functions) express GRH as a statement about the intersection patterns of certain equimodular and equiargument contours of associated ratios of MacDonald function double sums (McPhedran, 2016).

8. Methodologies for GRH Verification and Numerical Evidence

Verification strategies for GRH include:

  • One-Value Checks: Extending Riemann’s method, the sum over zeros

(s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2}5

(and higher moments) can rigorously constrain the existence of off-line zeros in finite windows (Hiary et al., 2024).

  • Explicit Bounds: Under GRH, extremal problems via Fourier optimization deliver explicit bounds on the least quadratic non-residue and prime gaps in special sequences (Quesada-Herrera, 2024).
  • Numerical investigation: Computational results for lattice sums and Epstein zeta functions correlate >70% of low-lying zeros with critical-line location via geometric contour-argument criteria (McPhedran, 2016).

9. Open Problems and Generalizations

Despite numerous equivalent criteria and reformulations, a proof of GRH remains elusive. Key open directions include:

  • Transfer of zero statistics from the zeta function to general (s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2}6-functions for finite height and fine-scale cancellation (Banks, 2023, Banks, 2022).
  • Extension of analytic and geometric arguments to automorphic (s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2}7-functions without known Euler products or higher-degree functional equations (Gutiérrez, 2014, Tabuada, 2021).
  • Development of frameworks for noncommutative and higher-dimensional analogues in the context of derived categories and motives (Tabuada, 2021).
  • Precise understanding of the correlation structure and universality classes (e.g., random matrix models) governing zeros of general (s)=12\Re(s) = \frac{1}{2}8-functions (LeClair et al., 2018).

The GRH continues to unify and motivate substantial portions of analytic, algebraic, and geometric number theory, serving as a foundational conjecture whose resolution would decisively advance the understanding of arithmetic phenomena.

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