1. Introduction
Inspired by Lemma 8 in Ref.[1], we first establish Theorems 1–4 progressively (the proofs do not depend on Lemma 8). Thereafter, we prove the Extended, Generalized, and Grand Riemann Hypotheses within a unified framework built upon Theorem 4. For convenience, Lemma 8 and other related lemmas of Ref.[1] are listed in the Appendix of this paper.
It should be noted that in this article and Ref.[1], ’j’ is used to denote the imaginary unit (), while ’i’ serves as a natural number index.
In the following contents, we adopt the fact—guaranteed by Lemma 6 and Lemma 7 in the Appendix—that the unknown multiplicities of the zeros of any given entire function are finite, unique, and therefore invariant.
2. Four Theorems
As pointed out in Ref.[2] (p.57), the non-trivial zeros of the zeta function can be enumerated in order of increasing absolute value of their imaginary parts; where zeros whose imaginary parts have the same absolute value are arranged arbitrarily. Consequently, the same enumeration rule applies to the zeros of entire functions in the following contents. We therefore drop the default assumption as a condition hereafter for simplicity.
Theorem 1: Given an entire function
which converges absolutely on
and uniformly on every compact subset of
.
Here
and () are the complex-conjugate zeros of ,
is the common multiplicity of and ,
, , is a real constant.
Remark: It should be noted that is actually the multiplicity of quadruplets of zeros under the assumption .
Proof. Considering
we have from Eq.(1)
where the
factor appears
times in any order.
By the definition of divisibility of entire functions
[3][4] (or more specifically the definition that a polynomial divides an entire function expressed as infinite product of polynomial factors
[1]), Eq.(3) implies that each polynomial factor on either side divides the infinite product on the opposite side, i.e.,
where "∣" is the divisible sign,
.
Both polynomials
and
have discriminant
. Hence they are irreducible in
. By Lemma 5 (see Appendix for details), Eq.(4) yields:
For the special kind of polynomials in Eq.(5), "divisible" means "equal", which can be verified by comparing the like terms in the following equation to get
.
Further, due to the uniqueness of the multiplicity
, the only solution to Eq.(5) is
, otherwise, duplicated zeros (in quadruplets) 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. □
Theorem 2: Given an entire function
which converges absolutely on
and uniformly on every compact subset of
in the form of
Here
and () are the complex-conjugate zeros of ,
is the common multiplicity of and ,
, , is a real constant.
Proof. According to Theorem 1 and Lemma 10 (see Appendix), we have
That completes the proof of Theorem 2. □
Theorem 3: Given an entire function represented by its Hadamard product:
and that
Here denotes a mathematical object, is the dual of , is a real constant.
and () are the complex-conjugate zeros of ,
, ,
Then
where
is a complex number of absolute value 1.
Remark: For more details about , see Ref.[5], p.94.
Proof.
Noticing that
, then we have
. With further consideration of the multiplicity
of each zero, we obtain
Then we conclude that Theorem 3 is true according to Theorem 2, considering and (as units in the ring of entire functions) have no zeros, thus both of them have no effect on the complex zeros related divisibility in the functional equation . The condition guarantees the absolute and uniform convergence of related infinite products required in Theorem 2.
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 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 an entire function represented by its Hadamard product:
and that
Here denotes a mathematical object, is the dual of , is a real constant.
and () are the complex-conjugate zeros of ,
, ,
Then
where
is a complex number of absolute value 1.
i.e., all the zeros (both real and complex) of in the critical strip lie on the critical line .
Proof. By Theorem 3, to determine the distribution of the complex zeros of , it suffices to show that the newly introduced factors and do not affect the complex zeros related divisibility in the functional equation . This follows from the given condition , which implies that and are co-prime, and are co-prime, according to Ref.[3] (p.174, p.208) or 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 in
, then by Lemma 3 (see Appendix), Eq.(25) means
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
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: As pointed out in Ref.[5] (p.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.
3. The Applications of Theorem 4
We will make use of Theorem 4 to prove the Extended Riemann Hypothesis (for Dedekind zeta function), the Generalized Riemann Hypothesis (for Dirichlet L-function), and the Grand Riemann Hypothesis (for modular form L-Function, automorphic L-function, and etc.).
To facilitate the subsequent discussion, we give the details of the Extended Riemann Hypothesis, the Generalized Riemann Hypothesis, and the Grand Riemann Hypothesis. In the following contents, the critical line means: , or more generally, , is a constant real number.
The Generalized Riemann Hypothesis: The non-trivial zeros of Dirichlet L-functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line.
The Extended Riemann Hypothesis: The non-trivial zeros of Dedekind zeta functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line.
The Grand Riemann Hypothesis: The non-trivial zeros of all L-functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line.
Another version of Grand Riemann Hypothesis: The non-trivial zeros of all automorphic L-functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line.
To begin with, we provide a general property of L-functions, which was labeled Lemma 5.5 in Ref.[5], p.101.
Lemma 5.5[5]: Let
be an
L-function. All zeros
of
are in the critical strip
. For any
, we have
where,
is the completed
L-function corresponding to
,
is the real part of
, and
f is identical to
in this paper as a symbol representing a mathematical object (e.g., Dirichlet character, modular form, automorphic representation).
To adapt to the wider situation in this manuscript, i.e., , , Lemma 5.5 has been extended to Theorem 10.
Another general property of L-functions is as follows.
The zeros of are precisely the non-trivial zeros of , as the trivial zeros of are canceled by the poles of the Gamma factors in the completion process (see Ref.[5], p.96 for more details, with f therein replaced by ).
Thus, we can discuss the non trivial zeros of L-functions based on the zeros of the corresponding completed L-functions.
3.1. Dirichlet L-function
Definition: The Dirichlet
L-function associated with a Dirichlet character
modulo
q is defined for
by the series:
For the principal (or trivial) character
(where
if
and
otherwise), the
L-function is related to the Riemann zeta function by:
Completed L-function: The completed Dirichlet
L-function is defined as:
where
if
(even character) and
if
(odd character).
Functional Equation: The completed Dirichlet
L-function satisfies the functional equation:
where
is the Gauss sum:
and
is the Gauss sum associated with
.
Hadamard Product: For non-principal characters
, the completed
L-function
is an entire function of order 1 and has the Hadamard product:
where the product is over all zeros
of
, and
and
are constants depending on
. For principal (trivial) character
,
carries a simple pole at
(and also at
precisely when
). Then the Hadamard product is applied to
. But this (trivial) situation makes no difference to our concerned result under the symmetric functional equation, i.e.,
Thus this (trivial) situation is omitted in the proof of Theorem 5.
Next we prove the Generalized Riemann Hypothesis.
Theorem 5: The non-trivial zeros of Dirichlet L-functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line.
Remark: We only need to prove that all the zeros of the completed Dirichlet L-function in the critical strip have real part , i.e., all the zeros of lie on the critical line.
Proof. We conduct the proof in two cases.
CASE 1: (self-dual)
It suffices to verify that the properties of with , , , match the conditions of Theorem 4: 1) Functional equation; 2) Hadamard product; 3) The complex zeros appear in pairs ; 4) , ; 5)
Eq.(31) shows the functional equation; Hadamard product Eq.(33) is equivalent to Eq.(19) in Theorem 4 by separating all zeros into two sets and ; To restrict is to guarantee that the complex conjugate zeros of appear in pairs; The condition and can be assured by Lemma 5.5, considering that is a subseries of ; The condition holds because and are mutually exclusive sets, i.e., if , then ; if , then .
Therefore, by Theorem 4 with , , , we know that all zeros (real, if any, and complex) of in the critical strip lie on the critical line for .
CASE 2:
In this case, the complex conjugate zeros do not appear together in Eq.(33), because if is a zero of , then is a zero of .
Thus, we need to extend Eq.(31) to another form, i.e.,
Combining (34) with (31), we get a new functional equation
The product is an entire function of finite order , as this holds for the product of any two entire functions of order 1. This, by Lemma 5.5, implies that its zeros satisfy the conditions: and . Moreover, its zero set—being the union of the zeros of the individual factors—possesses the conjugate zeros paring property.
Further, based on Eq.(33), we have
where
.
The condition and condition hold for the same reasons as in CASE 1.
Therefore, by Theorem 4, all zeros (real, if any, and complex) of , and consequently of ), in the critical strip lie on the critical line for .
Combining CASE 1 and CASE 2, we conclude that Theorem 5 holds as a specific case of Theorem 4 with , , and is a subset of . □
Remark: Based on Theorem 4, we actually proved: The non-trivial zeros of Dirichlet L-functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line , which implies the non-existence of Landau-Siegel zeros. Hence, the Landau-Siegel zeros conjecture is justified.
3.2. Dedekind Zeta Function
Definition: For a number field
K with ring of integers
, the Dedekind zeta function is defined for
by:
where the sum is over all non-zero ideals
of
, and
is the norm of the ideal.
Completed Zeta Function: The completed Dedekind zeta function is defined as:
where
is the discriminant of
K,
is the number of real embeddings of
K,
is the number of pairs of complex embeddings of
K.
Functional Equation: The completed Dedekind zeta function satisfies:
where
for all number fields
K, showing the symmetry of the functional equation.
Hadamard Product: The completed Dedekind zeta function has a simple pole at
with residue
, where
is the class number,
is the regulator, and
is the number of roots of unity in
K. The function
is an entire function of order 1 and has the Hadamard product:
where the product is over all zeros
of
except
and
, and
and
are constants depending on
K.
For more details of the completed Dedekind zeta function, please be referred to Ref.[5] (Chapter 5.10) and Ref.[6] (Section 10.5.1).
Theorem 6: The non-trivial zeros of Dedekind zeta functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line.
Remark: We only need to prove that all the zeros of in the critical strip have real part , i.e., all the zeros of lie on the critical line.
Proof. It suffices to show that the properties of match the conditions of Theorem 4 with , , .
Actually, Functional equation Eq.(39) and Hadamard product Eq.(40) guarantee that
where
.
And that the complex conjugate zeros of appear in pairs since it is self-dual. The condition , and condition hold for the same reasons as in CASE 1 in the proof of Theorem 5.
Therefore, by Theorem 4 we know that all zeros (real, if any, and complex) of in the critical strip lie on the critical line. Thus, Theorem 6 holds as a specific case of Theorem 4 with , , , and is a subset of . □
3.3. Modular Form L-Function
Definition: For a modular form
of weight
k for a congruence subgroup
, the associated
L-function is defined for
by:
Completed L-function: For a cusp form
f of weight
k for
(level
N is any positive integer) with Nebentypus character
, the completed modular form
L-function is defined as:
Functional Equation: For a normalized Hecke eigenform
f of weight
k for
with Nebentypus character
, the completed modular form
L-function satisfies:
where
is the epsilon factor, which is the eigenvalue of
f under the Atkin-Lehner involution, and
is the modular form with Fourier coefficients
.
Hadamard Product: For a cusp form
f, the completed
L-function
is an entire function of order 1 and has the Hadamard product:
where the product is over all zeros
of
, and
and
are constants depending on
f.
For more details of the completed modular form L-function, please be referred to Refs.[5][7].
We have the following result about the non-trivial zero distribution of modular form L-Functions.
Theorem 7: The non-trivial zeros of modular form L-Functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line.
Remark: We only need to prove that all the zeros of in the critical strip have real part , i.e., all the zeros of lie on the critical line.
Proof. We conduct the proof in two cases.
CASE 1: (self-dual)
It suffices to show that the properties of with match the conditions of Theorem 4 with . Eq.(44) shows the functional equation; Hadamard product Eq.(45) is equivalent to Eq.(19) in Theorem 4 by separating all zeros into two sets and ; Actually, to restrict is to guarantee that the complex conjugate zeros of appear in pairs; The condition , is satisfied by Theorem 10. The condition hold for the same reasons as in CASE 1 in the proof of Theorem 5.
Therefore, by Theorem 4, we know that all zeros (real, if any, and complex) of in the critical strip lie on the critical line for .
CASE 2:
To deal with this case
, we need first to extend Eq.(44) to another form, i.e.,
Combining Eq.(46) with Eq.(44), we get a new functional equation
Both sides of Eq.(47) are the products of entire functions of order 1, thus they are still entire functions of order , with , , according to Theorem 10. And that the complex conjugate zeros of appear in pairs.
Further, based on Eq.(45), we have
where
.
The condition and condition hold for the same reasons as in CASE 1 in the proof of Theorem 5.
Therefore, by Theorem 4, all zeros (real, if any, and complex) of , and consequently of in the critical strip , lie on the critical line for .
Combining CASE 1 and CASE 2, we conclude that Theorem 7 holds as a specific case of Theorem 4 with , and is a subset of . □
3.4. Automorphic L-Function
Definition: For an automorphic representation
of
(
is the adele ring over the field of rational numbers
, see Ref.[7], p.5 for more details), the associated
L-function is defined for
by:
where
is the local
L-factor at the prime
p. For unramified
with Satake parameters
,
Completed L-function: The completed automorphic
L-function is defined as:
where
is the conductor of
,
are complex numbers determined by the
i-th local component of
, and
Functional Equation: The completed automorphic
L-function satisfies:
where
is the contragredient representation of
and
is the epsilon factor, a complex number of absolute value 1.
Hadamard Product: For a cuspidal automorphic representation
, the completed
L-function
is an entire function of order 1 and has the Hadamard product:
where the product is over all zeros
of
, and
and
are constants depending on
.
For more details of the completed automorphic L-function, please be referred to Refs.[5][7].
We have the following result about the non-trivial zero distribution of automorphic L-Functions.
Theorem 8: The non-trivial zeros of automorphic L-Functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line.
Remark: We only need to prove that all the zeros of in the critical strip have real part , i.e., all the zeros of lie on the critical line.
Proof. The proof procedure of Theorem 8 is similar to that of Theorem 7 with , f replaced by , and replaced by . Thus, the proof details are omitted for simplicity. □
Actually, from the above proofs of Theorem 5, Theorem 6, and Theorem 7, we can note that each proof does not depend on the specific definition of the L-function , but rather relies on the following general properties of and :
P1: Symmetric functional equation between and : ;
P2: Hadamard product expression of entire function or ;
P3: The complex zeros in the relevant Hadamard products appear in pairs ;
P4: All zeros in the relevant Hadamard products lie in the critical strip and satisfy ;
P5: The disjointness of real and complex non-trivial zero sets;
P6: The zeros of are precisely the non-trivial zeros of .
Therefore, we have the following result on the Grand Riemann Hypothesis.
Theorem 9: The non-trivial zeros of all L-functions in the critical strip lie on the critical line if only the properties P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, and P6 are satisfied.
Proof. It is not difficult to see that P1, P2, P3, P4, and P5 cover all the conditions in Theorem 4. Thus, we know by Theorem 4 that all the zeros, both real (if any) and complex, of in the critical strip lie on the critical line. Further, according to P6, we conclude that all the non-trivial zeros, both real (if any) and complex, of in the critical strip (as subset of ) lie on the critical line.
That completes the proof of Theorem 9. □
Remark: Conditions P1-P3 and P6 are established properties of the relevant L-functions, see Chapter 5 of Ref.[5]. Condition P4 follows from Theorem 10, which is an extended result of Lemma 5.5. Condition P5 is automatically satisfied by our definitions of (the set of zeros with ) and (the set of zeros with ). The sole purpose of P6 is to link the zeros of with the non-trivial zeros of ; further details can be found in Ref.[5], p.96, with f therein replaced by .
Theorem 10: Let
be an
L-function,
, the corresponding completed
L-function satisfying a functional equation of the form
, with
. Then all zeros
of
lie in the critical strip
. Moreover, for any
, we have
where
denotes a mathematical object,
is the dual of
;
is a complex number of absolute value 1, called the "root number" of
L-function
.
Proof. Defining
and
, the functional equation transforms as follows:
We thus obtain a new entire function with the standard functional equation , to which the classical Lemma 5.5 applies.
Let be a zero of . By definition, is then a zero of , and this correspondence is bijective. The classical Lemma 5.5 guarantees that , (for any ), which immediately implies , (for any ).
That completes the proof of Theorem 10. □
Acknowledgments
Special gratitude is extended to the preprint platform preprints.org for making this work permanently available and citable.
[1] Zhang, W. (2025). A Proof of the Riemann Hypothesis Based on a New Expression of
, Preprints,
https://doi.org/10.20944/ preprints202108.0146.v52
[2] Karatsuba A. A., Nathanson M. B. (1993), Basic Analytic Number Theory, Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg.
[3] Conway, J. B. (1978), Functions of One Complex Variable I, Second Edition, New York: Springer-Verlag.
[4] Olaf Helmer (1940), Divisibility properties of integral functions, Duke Mathematical Journal, 6(2): 345-356.
[5] Iwaniec, H., Kowalski, E. (2004). Analytic Number Theory, American Mathematical Society Colloquium Publications, Vol. 53.
[6] Cohen, Henri (2007), Number theory, Volume II: Analytic and modern tools, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 240, New York: Springer, doi:10.1007/978-0-387-49894-2, ISBN 978-0-387-49893-5
[7] Jianya Liu (Ed.).(2014) Automorphic forms and L-functions, Beijing: Higher Education Press, ISBN 978-7-04-039501-3
Appendix: Lemmas
Lemma 8[1]: Given that the entire function
converges absolutely on
and uniformly on every compact subset of
, where
and
are real numbers with
,
is the multiplicity of zero conjugates
,
.
Under the substitution
, we have
The other related lemmas in Ref.[1] are also provided in the following.
Lemma 1[1]: Non-trivial zeroes of , noted as , have the following properties
1) The number of non-trivial zeroes is infinity;
2) ;
3) ;
4) are all non-trivial zeroes.
Lemma 2[1]: The zeros of coincide with the non-trivial zeros of .
Lemma 3[1]: Let . If is irreducible (prime) and divides the product , then divides one of the polynomials .
Lemma 4[1]: Let . If is irreducible and is any polynomial, then either divides or .
Lemma 5[1]: Let be an entire function on . Suppose converges absolutely on and uniformly on every compact subset of , where each is irreducible in of degree . If is irreducible in of degree d and divides , then divides for some .
Lemma 6[1]: Let be a non-zero entire function, and let be a zero of . Then the multiplicity of is a finite positive integer.
Lemma 7[1]: Let be a non-zero entire function, and let be a zero of . Then the multiplicity of is unique.
Lemma 9[1]: The infinite product converges to a non-zero constant, given the conditions: , and is the multiplicity of zero .
Remark: Lemmas 1-4 are the well-known results summarized from related journal papers, or textbooks/monographs. Lemmas 5-9 are proved in Ref.[1].
Lemma 10: The infinite product converges to a non-zero constant, given the conditions: is a real constant, , and is the multiplicity of zero .
Proof: First of all, we know that
where in the right side expression,
factor appears
times.
Let , then .
Since and , we have: . Then (given condition) implies (absolute convergence).
Further, the absolute convergence of guarantees that the product converges to a non-zero constant.
That completes the proof of Lemma 10.
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