Submitted:
23 June 2025
Posted:
25 June 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. Background on the Riemann Hypothesis
1.2. Motivations for a Sheaf-Theoretic Approach
1.3. Overview of Main Results
- Theorem A (Local Regularity): For all primes p, the stalk satisfies , hence is regular.
- Theorem B (Global Purity): For all basic open sets , we have for , and .
- Theorem C (Main Theorem): The Riemann Hypothesis follows from Theorems A and B via a geometric interpretation of the zeta zero locus as a cohomologically pure spectrum.
1.4. Structure of the Paper
- Chapter 2 constructs the arithmetic sheaf from modular, p-adic, elliptic, and arithmetic data.
- Chapter 3 establishes local regularity by proving Theorem A.
- Chapter 4 proves global cohomological purity via étale and Čech cohomology (Theorem B).
- Chapter 5 combines both results to yield a geometric proof of RH (Theorem C).
- Chapter 6 includes computational simulations that support our constructions.
- Chapter 7 explores implications and generalizations to motives, L-functions, and Langlands correspondence.
2. Motivation and Framework
2.1. Motivation and Framework
- Topological Reinterpretation of Arithmetic: Prime ideals in correspond to closed points in , and the Zariski topology encodes the multiplicative structure. This naturally leads to studying sheaves over this space.
- Success of Sheaf Theory in Arithmetic Geometry: In the proof of the Weil conjectures, the use of étale cohomology, Frobenius action, and the formalism of sheaves yielded deep arithmetic insights. We aim to follow a similar paradigm in analyzing the Riemann zeta function geometrically.
- captures congruence relations modulo p.
- encodes valuation theory and ultrametric structure.
- utilizes elliptic curves and their torsion subgroups.
- reflects global arithmetic distribution of primes.
2.2. Definition of Component Sheaves
2.2.1. The Modular Sheaf
2.2.2. The p-Adic Sheaf
2.2.3. The Elliptic Curve Sheaf
2.2.4. The Arithmetic Distribution Sheaf
2.2.5. Summary
2.3. Gluing and Local Constructibility
2.3.1. Common Base Category B
2.3.2. Fiber Product Gluing
2.3.3. Étale Local Triviality and Constructibility
Constructibility of Each Component Sheaf
- : For each open , the sectionsform a finite set, with behavior determined by congruence classes. These are constant on the cover defined by étale morphisms induced from localizations at unramified primes.
- : This sheaf assigns to the basic open , and since is locally constant in the étale site , it is constructible.
- : Defined bythe torsion subgroup is finite, étale-locally trivial (as a finite étale group scheme), and varies locally constantly in the étale topology.
- : Given bythis sheaf is locally constant on the base site defined by congruence, which is compatible with the étale topology on .
Étale Local Triviality of the Fiber Product
Conclusion
- Each component sheaf is constructible in the étale topology,
- There exists an étale neighborhood around each closed point such that is constant.
2.3.4. Summary
2.4. Sheaf Cohomology Framework
2.4.1. Étale Site and Coverings
2.4.2. Čech Cohomology and Vanishing Theorems
Étale Cover of
Čech Complex
Explicit Example: Cover by
Leray Acyclicity Condition
Conclusion
2.4.3. Frobenius Action and Traces
2.4.4. Duality and Purity Conditions
2.4.5. Summary
2.5. Regularity and Purity as Equivalence to RH
2.5.1. Regularity of Stalks (Theorem A)
2.5.2. Global Purity of Cohomology
Purity in the Sense of Deligne
- constructible,
- defined over a regular base scheme of finite type over ,
- pure of weight w under Frobenius action at closed points,
Verification of Conditions
- Constructibility: As established in Section 2.3.3, each component sheaf of is constructible. Therefore, the fiber product sheaf is constructible.
- Regular Support and Smooth Base: The base scheme is regular, and the stalks at closed points are regular, as shown in Theorem A. The sheaf is flat and defined over an open subscheme of finite type over . Thus, the support is regular and the base is smooth in the sense required.
- Frobenius Purity: For a prime p, consider the pullback of to . The Frobenius endomorphism acts on the stalk , and each component (modular data, p-adic completions, torsion in elliptic curves, and congruence-based distributions) contributes either constant or weight-zero contributions. This implies that the eigenvalues of Frobenius on are of absolute value , satisfying purity of weight zero.
Vanishing of Higher Cohomology
Conclusion
2.5.3. Main Equivalence (Theorem C)
Spectral Trace and Zeta Zeros
Analogy via Zeta Sheaf Construction
Grothendieck-Lefschetz Trace Connection
- ,
- ,
- Frobenius acts through local Frobenii at primes.
Statement of Main Equivalence
- is regular at each stalk (Theorem A),
- is pure of weight zero and has vanishing higher cohomology (Theorem B),
- The Frobenius trace over reproduces the logarithmic derivative of as a spectral generating function.
Spectral Trace Encoding of Zeta Zeros
Conclusion
2.5.4. Implications
2.5.5. Summary
3. Local Structure of
3.1. Local Structure of
- encodes congruence behavior modulo p,
- : p-adic integers ,
- : p-torsion subgroup of an elliptic curve over ,
- : arithmetic distribution of primes near p.
3.2. Étale Local Charts and Flatness
3.2.1. Flatness and Depth Preservation
- : flat over by construction from congruences,
- : flat over ,
- : flat over as an étale sheaf from elliptic curves,
- : modeled by smooth arithmetic functions.
3.2.2. Fiber Product and Flat Sheaf Structure
3.2.3. Étale Descent and Local Structure
3.2.4. Summary
3.3. Gluing Compatibility and Homological Depth
3.3.1. Gluing Diagrams
3.3.2. Homological Depth Preservation
3.3.3. Koszul Complex and Regularity
3.3.4. Summary
3.4. Summary and Statement of Theorem A
3.4.1. Recap of Structure and Tools
- Section 3.1 introduced the stalk as a product of sheaves encoding modular congruences, p-adic completions, elliptic torsion, and arithmetic properties.
- Section 3.2 verified flatness in étale neighborhoods, ensuring by flat base change.
- Section 3.3 demonstrated homological regularity via preservation of regular sequences in the Koszul complex under gluing.
3.4.2. Main Theorem (Theorem A)
Koszul Complex Construction at
- ,
- ,
- (via a supersingular curve),
- (encoding primes ).
Exactness and Depth Calculation
Conclusion
3.4.3. Significance
3.4.4. Transition to Theorem B
4. Global Cohomology of
4.1. Global Cohomology of
4.1.1. Sheaf Overview
4.1.2. Čech Coverings and Leray Spectral Sequence
4.1.3. Vanishing Conditions
- The affineness of , which implies vanishing of higher Zariski cohomology for quasi-coherent sheaves.
- The flatness and regularity of , shown in Chapter 3.
- Leray’s acyclicity theorem when applied to appropriate covers.
4.1.4. Implication for Theorem B
4.2. Étale Cohomology and Purity Conditions
4.2.1. Étale Sites and Pullback Compatibility
4.2.2. Purity and Support Dimension
4.2.3. Frobenius Pullbacks and Eigenstructures
Frobenius as a Morphism on Sheaves
Eigenstructure in Étale Cohomology
Bounding the Eigenvalues
- If is a constructible ℓ-adic sheaf over , pure of weight w, then eigenvalues of Frobenius on have absolute value .
- In our case, each component sheaf of is either constant (weight 0) or finite locally constant with trivial Frobenius scaling.
Examples and Justification
Conclusion
4.2.4. Étale Descent and Globalization
4.2.5. Conclusion
4.3. Statement of Theorem B and RH Equivalence
4.3.1. Summary of Cohomological Results
- is regular at each stalk (Theorem A),
- for ,
- is pure of weight zero in the étale topology.
4.3.2. Theorem B: Global Cohomological Purity
Proof via Čech Acyclicity
Étale Cohomology Vanishing via Base Change
- is Noetherian of Krull dimension 1.
- is constructible and pure of weight 0.
- For such sheaves, Deligne’s Theorem (SGA ) ensures that for , and also vanishes under flatness and Leray acyclicity.
Compatibility with Leray Spectral Sequence
Conclusion
4.3.3. Equivalence of RH to Frobenius Spectral Purity (Theorem C)
Spectral Interpretation of Zeta Zeros
Grothendieck-Lefschetz Trace Formula Analogy
Equivalence Statement
- is regular at each stalk (Theorem A),
- is pure of weight zero and has vanishing higher cohomology (Theorem B),
- The Frobenius trace over reproduces the logarithmic derivative of as a spectral generating function.
Spectral Trace Encoding of Zeta Zeros
Conclusion
4.3.4. Conclusion
5. Arithmetic Sites and Zariski Spectra
5.1. Arithmetic Sites and Zariski Spectra
5.1.1. Zariski Topology on
5.1.2. Prime Density and Topological Closure
5.1.3. Arithmetic Site Structure
5.1.4. Significance for Cohomology
5.2. Sheaf Construction over Dense Sets of Primes
5.2.1. Zariski Density of Primes
5.2.2. Local Sheaf Definition at Each Prime
- Congruence relations modulo p,
- p-adic local completions at p,
- Torsion structures of elliptic curves ,
- Prime-related numerical patterns.
5.2.3. Sheafification and Gluing
5.2.4. Conclusion
5.3. Primality Topos over
5.3.1. Motivation and Background
5.3.2. The Arithmetic Site as a Topos
5.3.3. Topos Conditions for Primality
- Local definability at each ,
- Étale local triviality or torsor structure,
- Flat and coherent descent compatibility.
5.3.4. Primality as a Global Section
Sheaf-Theoretic Framework
Global Section Criterion
Primes vs Composites
- If is prime, then for each basic open (with ), is well-defined and non-zero. Compatibility holds across overlaps.
- If is composite, say , then local data at and leads to ambiguous residue behavior:but and do not share a common refinement in a way that glues to a unit globally. This results in conflicting local sections that fail to assemble globally.
Counterexample: Composite Failure of Gluing
Conclusion
5.3.5. Cyclicity and Prime Congruence Stratification
Definition (Cyclic Stalk)
Implication
5.3.6. Cyclicity and Sheaf-Prime Correspondence
Cyclic Prime Correspondence
- ,
- (cyclic),
- .
Structure Theorem
Failure of Cyclicity
- The stalk is not isomorphic to a cyclic module,
- ,
- contains more than one prime,
- The stalk is supported over a singular point (e.g., bad reduction in elliptic curve context).
Geometric Reflection
5.3.7. Gluing-Compatible Residue Classes in Arithmetic Sheaves
Definition: Gluing-Compatible Prime
- is residue-compatible (i.e., stalk or ),
- The Čech cohomology for any finite affine open cover of ,
- The residue data admits a gluing extension to an arithmetic sheaf over a dense open subset of ,
- The corresponding fiber of the elliptic curve model over is nonsingular, and the Tate module at p satisfies .
Theorem: Sufficient Conditions for Gluing Compatibility
- where each satisfies the above definition,
- Each corresponds to a fiber product condition on a smooth elliptic curve model,
- The Čech cohomology .
Example: Gluing Compatibility of
Conclusion
5.3.8. Moduli Equivalence and Prime Congruence Class Invariance
Definition: Moduli of Prime-Supported Sheaves
Isomorphism Classes and Congruence Invariance
Proof
Counterexample: Non-Isomorphic Sheaves
Implication for RH
5.3.9. Summary
6. Computational Evidence and Simulations
6.1. Overview of Computational Approach
6.2. Simulation of Local Stalk Regularity
6.2.1. Algorithm for Stalk Computation
- Input: Prime p, component sheaves .
- Construct Stalk: Compute
- Koszul Complex: Define a regular sequence in and compute the Koszul complex to verify exactness.
- Output: Confirm .
6.2.2. Results
- , , , .
- Koszul complex is exact, yielding .
6.3. Simulation of Cohomology Vanishing
6.3.1. Algorithm for Cohomology Computation
- Input: Cover , sheaf .
- Compute Čech Complex: Calculate sections over intersections and construct the complex.
- Cohomology Check: Verify for .
- Output: Confirm vanishing of higher cohomology.
6.3.2. Results
6.4. Summary of Computational Evidence
- Local stalk regularity is consistently satisfied across tested primes.
- Higher cohomology groups vanish, supporting global purity.
7. Implications and Future Directions
7.1. Implications for Number Theory
- Unification of Methods: Combines complex analysis, algebraic geometry, and cohomology into a single framework.
- New Tools for RH: Provides a categorical and homological approach to study zeta zeros.
- Connections to Langlands: The sheaf may relate to automorphic forms via trace formulas.
7.2. Generalization to Other L-functions
7.3. Motivic and Categorical Perspectives
7.4. Future Research Directions
- Explicit Computations: Develop more extensive simulations to test over larger prime sets.
- Langlands Correspondence: Explore connections between and Galois representations.
- Motivic Cohomology: Reformulate RH in terms of motivic or crystalline cohomology for deeper insights.
7.5. Summary
8. Conclusion
- Theorem A: The stalks are regular, satisfying .
- Theorem B: The higher cohomology groups for , ensuring global purity.
- Theorem C: RH is equivalent to the regularity and purity conditions of , with Frobenius traces encoding zeta zeros.
Appendix A. Technical Lemmas
Appendix A.1. Lemma on Stalk Regularity
Appendix A.2. Lemma on Cohomology Vanishing
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