Analyzing Riemann's hypothesis
Mercedes Orus-Lacort, Roman Orus, Christophe Jouis

TL;DR
This paper provides a detailed analytical and numerical investigation supporting the hypothesis that all non-trivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function have real part 1/2, offering a new perspective on this longstanding conjecture.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analytical approach combining complex analysis and numerical methods to support the Riemann hypothesis.
Findings
Supports the hypothesis that zeros have real part 1/2
Identifies conditions for zeros on the critical line
Provides numerical evidence consistent with the hypothesis
Abstract
In this paper we perform a detailed analysis of Riemann's hypothesis, dealing with the zeros of the analytically-extended zeta function. We use the functional equation for complex numbers such that and the reduction to the absurd method where we use an analytical study based on a complex function and its modulus as a real function of two real variables in combination with a deep numerical analysis to show that the real part of the non-trivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function is equal to to the best of our resources. This is done in two steps. Firstly, we show what would happen if we assumed that the real part of has a value between and but different from arriving at a possible contradiction for the zeros. Secondly assuming that there is no real value such…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnalytic Number Theory Research · Advanced Mathematical Identities · History and Theory of Mathematics
