TL;DR
The L-functions and Modular Forms Database (LMFDB) project systematically catalogs L-functions and modular forms to aid mathematicians in understanding their interconnections, testing conjectures, and discovering new properties through a collaborative open-source effort.
Contribution
This work introduces a comprehensive database of L-functions and modular forms, integrating theory, algorithms, and data visualization to facilitate research and understanding in number theory.
Findings
Organized a large collection of L-functions and modular forms data
Demonstrated interrelations between mathematical objects through the database
Enabled testing of fundamental conjectures using the database
Abstract
The Langlands Programme, formulated by Robert Langlands in the 1960s and since much developed and refined, is a web of interrelated theory and conjectures concerning many objects in number theory, their interconnections, and connections to other fields. At the heart of the Langlands Programme is the concept of an L-function. The most famous L-function is the Riemann zeta-function, and as well as being ubiquitous in number theory itself, L-functions have applications in mathematical physics and cryptography. Two of the seven Clay Mathematics Million Dollar Millennium Problems, the Riemann Hypothesis and the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture, deal with their properties. Many different mathematical objects are connected in various ways to L-functions, but the study of those objects is highly specialized, and most mathematicians have only a vague idea of the objects outside their…
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