Sonification of the Riemann Zeta Function
Author(s) -
Nick Collins
Publication year - 2019
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.21785/icad2019.003
Subject(s) - riemann zeta function , riemann hypothesis , number theory , mathematics , prime (order theory) , riemann xi function , riemann surface , arithmetic zeta function , function (biology) , pure mathematics , prime number , critical line , sonification , line (geometry) , prime zeta function , complex plane , mathematical analysis , discrete mathematics , combinatorics , geometry , physics , biology , thermodynamics , evolutionary biology , statistics
The Riemann zeta function is one of the great wonders of mathematics, with a deep and still not fully solved connection to the prime numbers. It is defined via an infinite sum analogous to Fourier additive synthesis, and can be calculated in various ways. It was Riemann who extended the consideration of the series to complex number arguments, and the famous Riemann hypothesis states that the non-trivial zeroes of the function all occur on the critical line 0:5 + ti, and what is more, hold a deep correspondence with the prime numbers. For the purposes of sonification, the rich set of mathematical ideas to analyse the zeta function provide strong resources for sonic experimentation. The positions of the zeroes on the critical line can be directly sonified, as can values of the zeta function in the complex plane, approximations to the prime spectrum of prime powers and the Riemann spectrum of the zeroes rendered; more abstract ideas concerning the function also provide interesting scope.
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