Friday, 20 February 2009

polymath5 - Analytic continuation of Dirichlet series with completely multiplicative coefficients of modulus 1

As a matter of fact, it isn't hard to construct a multiplicative sequence an such that f(z) is an entire function without zeroes. Unfortunately, it is completely useless for the questions that you brought up as "motivation".



Here is the construction.



Claim 1: Let lambdajin[0,1] (j=0,dots,M). Assume that |aj|le1 and sumjajlambdapj=0 for all 0lepleP. Then, if P>2eT, we have left|sumjajelambdajzright|le(M+1)(eT/P)P



Proof: Taylor decomposition and a straightforward tail estimate.



Claim 2: Let P be large enough. Let Delta>0, M>P3 and (M+1)Delta<1. Let Ij (0lejleM) be M+1 adjacent intervals of length about Delta each arranged in the increasing order such that I0 contains 0=lambda0. Suppose that we choose one lambdaj in each interval Ij with jge1. Then for every |a0|le1, there exist ajinmathbbC such that |aj|le1 and sumjge0ajlambdapj=0 for 0lepleP.



Proof: By duality, we can restate it as the claim that sumjge1|Q(lambdaj)|ge|Q(0)| for every polynomial Q of degree P. Now, let I be the union of Ij. It is an interval of length about MDelta, so, by Markov's inequality, |Q|leCP2(MDelta)1AleCP1Delta1A where A=maxI|Q|ge|Q(0)|. But then on the 5 intervals Ij closest to the point where the maximum is attained, we have |Q|geA5DeltaCP1Delta1AgeA/2. The rest is obvious.



Claim 3: Suppose that a0 is fixed and aj (jge1) satisfy sumjge0ajlambdapj=0 for 0lepleP. Then we can change aj with jge1 so that all but P+1 of them are exactly 1 in absolute value and the identities still hold.



Proof: As long as we have more than P+1 small aj, we have a line of solutions of our set of P+1 linear equations. Moving along this line we can make one of small aj large. Repeating this as long as possible, we get the claim.



Now it is time to recall that the logarithm of the function f(z) is given by
L(z)=sumninLambdaanezlogn


where Lambda is the set of primes and prime powers and an=m1amp if n=pm. We are free to choose ap for prime p in any way we want but the rest an will be uniquely determined then. The key point is that we have much more primes than prime powers for unit length.



So, split big positive numbers into intervals from u to eDeltau where Delta is a slowly decaying function of u (we'll specify it later). Formally we define the sequence uk by u0=something large, uk+1=eDelta(uk)uk but to put all those backward apostrophes around formulae is too big headache, so I'll drop all indices. Choose also some slowly growing functions M=M(u) and P=P(u) to be specified later as well.



We need a few things:



1) Each interval should contain many primes. Since the classical prime number theorem has the error term uecsqrtlogu, this calls for Delta=explogfrac13u
Then we still have at least u4/5 primes in each interval (all we need is to beat u1/2 with some margin).



2) We should have MDeltall1, M>P3, and uleft(fraceTPright)Ple(2u)T3 for any fixed T>0 and all sufficiently large u. This can be easily achieved by choosing P=log2u and M=log6u.



3) At last, we'll need M(P+sqrtu)llu4/5, which is true for our choice.



Now it is time to run the main inductive construction. Suppose that an are already chosen for all n in the intervals up to (u,eDeltau) and we still have almost all primes in the intervals following the current interval free (we'll check this condition in the end). We want to assign ap for all p in our interval for which the choice hasn't been made yet or was made badly. We start with looking at all ap that are not assigned yet or assigned in a lame way, i.e., less than one in absolute value. Claim 3 (actually a small modification of it) allows us to upgrade all of them but P+1 to good ones (having absolute value 1) at the expense of adding an entire function that in the disk of radius T is bounded by (2u)Tuleft(fraceTPright)Pleu3 to L(z). Now we are left with at most sqrtu powers of primes and P+1 lame primes to take care of. We need the prime powers participate in small sums as they are and we need the small coefficients to be complemented by something participating in small sums too. For each of them, we choose M still free primes in the next M intervals (one in each) and apply Claim 2 to make a (lame) assignment so that the corresponding sum is again bounded by u3 in the disk of radius T. We have at most u such sums, so the total addition will be at most u2. This will finish the interval off. Now it remains to notice that we used only about sqrtu+P free primes in each next interval and went only M intervals ahead. This means that in each interval only M(sqrtu+P) free primes will ever be used for compensating the previous intervals, so we'll never run out of free primes. Also, the sum of the blocks we constructed will converge to an entire function. At last, when Rez>1, we can change the order of summation and exponentiate finally getting the Dirichlet series representation that we need.



The end.

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