Abstract
We study three integrals related to the celebrated pair correlation conjecture of H. L. Montgomery. The first is the integral of Montgomery’s function
Funding source: National Science Foundation
Award Identifier / Grant number: DMS-2101806
Award Identifier / Grant number: DMS-2101912
Funding source: Simons Foundation
Award Identifier / Grant number: 712898
Funding source: Norges Forskningsråd
Award Identifier / Grant number: 275113
Funding statement: Emanuel Carneiro acknowledges support from FAPERJ – Brazil (grant E-26/202.693/2018). Vorrapan Chandee acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation (grant DMS-2101806), from an AMS-Simons Travel Grant, and from a Simons Foundation Collaboration Grant for Mathematicians. Andrés Chirre was supported by FAPERJ – Brazil and the Research Council of Norway (grant 275113). Micah B. Milinovich was supported by the Simons Foundation (award 712898) and the National Science Foundation (grant DMS-2101912).
A Minima of Dirichlet kernels
Complementing the discussion in Section 2.3.1, we present a brief proof of inequality (2.37). Let
Proposition 18.
For each
Proof.
We rewrite (2.34) as
Using the mean value theorem, we get, for
Therefore,
Let
Plugging
On the other hand, using the fact that
If
Finally, in the cases
B Hilbert spaces and pair correlation
B.1 Sharp equivalence of norms
We conclude by revisiting a result of [3], a paper that provides a study of the pair correlation of zeros of zeta via the framework of Hilbert spaces of entire functions. Let us first recall some basic terminology. For
Functions in
Write
for the pair correlation measure and denote by
Using the uncertainty principle for the Fourier transform, it was shown in [3, Lemma 12] that the vector spaces
whenever
Extremal Problem 8 (EP8).
Find
Remark.
We comment briefly on the equality between the infima above, as it relates to the class
Finding the sharp forms of embeddings between function spaces is usually a rich and non-trivial problem in analysis. As we shall see, extremal problem (EP8) has a particularly intriguing answer.
Theorem 19.
We have
where
Moreover, there is a unique (up to multiplication by a non-zero complex constant) extremal function
The proof we present here is based of functional analysis and variational calculus considerations. We first establish the existence of an extremizer and then study the corresponding Euler-Lagrange equation that arises on the Fourier side.[4] These methods are also applicable in determining the sharp embeddings between Hilbert spaces naturally associated to families of L-functions; see [6, Appendix].
B.2 Proof of Theorem 19
B.2.1 Existence of extremizers
The first step is to show that there exists
Let
as
and hence
for all
which implies that
B.2.2 Solving the Euler–Lagrange equation
For a generic
For instance, for
In what follows let us write
Similarly, for
We then conclude that
Since this holds for any function h with
as functions in
Hence
Since the left-hand side of (B.8) is continuous in
for all
The left-hand side of (B.10) is again differentiable in α, and an application of the fundamental theorem of calculus now yields
The general solution of this linear differential equation is
where
Since
that determines our η uniquely (
In sum, our extremal function is unique (up to multiplication by a complex number) and its Fourier transform, with the substitution
which, by Fourier inversion, leads us to (B.3).
Acknowledgements
Part of this paper was written while Andrés Chirre was a Visiting Researcher in Department of Mathematics at the University of Mississippi. He is grateful for their kind hospitality. We thank Oscar Quesada-Herrera for the design and implementation of the search algorithms in Section 2.4 and for the numerical computation of the constant in (3.2). We are also thankful to Jonathan Bober for an independent numerical computation of the constant in (3.2), and to Dan Goldston and Mateus Sousa for some helpful comments on an early draft of the paper.
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© 2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Simultaneous supersingular reductions of CM elliptic curves
- Almost all entries in the character table of the symmetric group are multiples of any given prime
- K-stability of cubic fourfolds
- Nguyen’s tridents and the classification of semigraphical translators for mean curvature flow
- A description of monodromic mixed Hodge modules
- The Lawson surfaces are determined by their symmetries and topology
- CMC hypersurfaces with bounded Morse index
- On Montgomery’s pair correlation conjecture: A tale of three integrals
- Kähler spaces with zero first Chern class: Bochner principle, Albanese map and fundamental groups
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Simultaneous supersingular reductions of CM elliptic curves
- Almost all entries in the character table of the symmetric group are multiples of any given prime
- K-stability of cubic fourfolds
- Nguyen’s tridents and the classification of semigraphical translators for mean curvature flow
- A description of monodromic mixed Hodge modules
- The Lawson surfaces are determined by their symmetries and topology
- CMC hypersurfaces with bounded Morse index
- On Montgomery’s pair correlation conjecture: A tale of three integrals
- Kähler spaces with zero first Chern class: Bochner principle, Albanese map and fundamental groups