2. Four Theorems
As pointed out in Ref.[2] (on page 57), we can enumerate the non-trivial zeros of the zeta function in order of the increasing absolute value of their imaginary parts, where zeros whose imaginary parts have the same absolute value are arranged arbitrarily. Thus we remove the default ordering of , , as condition hereafter for simplicity.
Theorem 1: Given two entire functions represented as absolutely convergent (on the whole complex plane) infinite products of polynomial factors
and
where
s is a complex variable,
and
are the complex conjugate zeros of
,
,
, and
are real numbers,
is the multiplicity of quadruplets of zeros
,
.
Proof. According to the definition of divisibility of entire
(or more specifically the definition that a polynomial divides an entire function expressed as infinite product of polynomial
), the functional equation
implies that each polynomial factor on either side divides the infinite product on the opposite side, i.e.,
where "∣" is the divisible sign.
Since
(with discriminant
) and
(with discriminant
) are irreducible over the real number field
, then by Lemma 5 (see Appendix) and considering
we have from Eq.(4):
where
l takes one value from
.
For the special kind of polynomials in Eq.(5), "divisible" means "equal", which can be verified by comparing the like terms in equation
to get
. Further, due to the uniqueness of the multiplicity
, the only solution to Eq.(5) is
, otherwise, duplicated zeros with
would be generated to change
. Therefore we have from Eq.(5):
By comparing the like terms in Eq.(7), we obtain
. Further, to ensure the uniqueness of
while
, we need limit the
values to be distinct, i.e.,
.
That completes the proof of Theorem 1. □
Remark: Theorem 1 extends the critical strip from to ( is a real constant), and Lemma 8 is a special case of Theorem 1 with .
Theorem 2: Given two entire functions represented as absolutely convergent (on the whole complex plane) infinite products of polynomial factors
and
where
s is a complex variable,
and
are the complex conjugate zeros of
,
,
, and
are real numbers,
is the multiplicity of quadruplets of zeros
,
.
Proof. According to Theorem 1 and Lemma 9 (see Appendix), we have
Then we know that
That completes the proof of Theorem 2. □
Theorem 3: Given two entire functions represented by their Hadamard products:
and
where
s is a complex variable,
denotes a mathematical object (e.g., Dirichlet character, modular form, automorphic representation),
is the dual of
,
and
are the complex conjugate zeros of
,
,
, and
are real numbers,
.
Then we have
where
is a complex number of absolute value 1, called the "root number" of
L-function
.
Remark: For more details about , see Ref.[5] on page 94.
Proof. First, we have
Noticing that
, then we have
. With further consideration of the multiplicity
of each zero, we obtain
Accordingly
Then we conclude that Theorem 3 is true according to Theorem 2, considering
and
have no zeros, thus both of them have no effect on the complex zeros related divisibility in the functional equation
.
That completes the proof of Theorem 3. □
In the following Theorem 4, we make further efforts to lay a foundation for the study of completed L-functions that possess both real and complex zeros, denoted by () and (), respectively. When these two zero sets have no common elements, we express their disjointness by: .
The reason we need to consider this case is that, so far, we cannot rule out the existence of exceptional zeros (or Landau-Siegel zeros), although their numbers are very limited even if they do exist.
Denote the set of real zeros in the critical strip as
where
N is a finite natural number. This finiteness follows from the Identity Theorem, which implies that any non-zero entire function cannot have infinitely many zeros in a bounded region.
Theorem 4: Given two entire functions represented by their Hadamard products:
and
where
s is a complex variable,
,
denotes a mathematical object,
is the dual of
,
and
are the complex conjugate zeros of
,
,
,
, and
are real numbers,
,
Then we have
i.e., all the zeros (both real and complex) of
lie on the critical line.
Proof. By Theorem 3, to determine the distribution of the complex zeros of , we only need to show that the newly added parts and do not affect the complex zeros related divisibility in the functional equation , which is an obvious fact since the given condition means that and are co-prime according to Ref.[3] (on pages 174, 208) and Ref.[4] (see its THEOREM 4).
Thus, we conclude by Theorem 3 that
Next, we consider the real zeros of .
By canceling the complex non-trivial zeros related polynomial factors on both sides of
, we have
Further Eq.(23) is equivalent to
where
.
Suppose the multiplicity of zero
is
(
) that is finite and unique although unknown. Then Eq.(24) becomes
where
.
Considering
and
are irreducible over
, then by Lemma 3 (see Appendix), Eq.(25) means
where
m takes one value from
.
The only solution to Eq.(26) is
, otherwise the uniqueness of
would be violated with
. To avoid changing the multiplicity of
while
, we need to limit
. Thus we get
where zero
with multiplicity
.
Putting Eq.(22) and Eq.(27) together, we proved Eq.(21).
That completes the proof of Theorem 4. □
Remark: If the completed L-function has poles at or with multiplicity , then the Hadamard product expression can only be applied to , not to itself. This adjustment does not affect the results of Theorem 4, since we have .
Remark: Theorem 4 effectively rules out the existence of Landau-Siegel zeros, thereby proving the Landau-Siegel zeros conjecture.
Remark: As pointed out in Ref.[5] (on page 102), if is a zero of , then is a zero of . Therefore, to use Theorem 4 while , we need to construct a new symmetric functional equation to ensure that the conjugate zeros appear together in the related Hadamard products. For more details, see the proofs of Theorem 5 and Theorem 7.