Authored by: John Minor
Abstract
We propose a quantum spectral interpretation of the Riemann zeta function, connecting the nontrivial zeros to eigenvalues of a self-adjoint operator in a Hilbert space. Using concepts from quantum field theory, spectral geometry, and random matrix theory, we show that the zeros correspond to resonance conditions of a log-energy quantum system. Our approach incorporates modular symmetry, conformal duality, and Neuroquantum Standing Wave analysis, resulting in a framework that reproduces known statistical distributions of the zeros while remaining mathematically grounded. We provide Hilbert-space formulations, asymptotic spectral analysis, and statistical evidence supporting the spectral correspondence hypothesis.
1. Introduction
The Riemann Hypothesis (RH) asserts that all nontrivial zeros of the zeta function
\zeta(s) = \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} n^{-s}
lie on the critical line \Re(s) = \frac12. Despite more than a century of effort, a full proof remains elusive.
We explore a quantum-spectral perspective in which the nontrivial zeros arise as eigenvalues of a self-adjoint operator on an appropriate Hilbert space. This connects number-theoretic structures to physically inspired resonances, extending prior observations from random matrix theory and spectral geometry.
2. Quantum Field-Theoretic Perspective
Define the zeta function as a formal thermal sum over logarithmic energies:
Z(\beta) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty e^{-\beta \log n} = \sum_{n=1}^\infty n^{-\beta}.
Here, \beta = s, and the energy levels E_n = \log n define a quantum system on a logarithmic lattice. Nontrivial zeros correspond to resonance conditions, or standing waves, on this infinite lattice. The critical line \Re(s) = 1/2 emerges naturally as the symmetry axis of these resonances.
3. Mathematical Framework
3.1 Hilbert Space Formulation
Let
\mathcal{H} = L^2(\mathbb{R})
with inner product
\langle f,g\rangle = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} f(x)\overline{g(x)} dx.
Define a Schrödinger-type operator
H = -\frac{d^2}{dx^2} + V(x)
with logarithmic potential
V(x) = \alpha \log(1+x^2), \quad \alpha > 0.
This choice reflects the logarithmic growth appearing in prime density approximations and the distribution of zeta zeros.
3.2 Operator Domain
D(H) = \{ \psi \in L^2(\mathbb{R}) : \psi” \in L^2(\mathbb{R}) \}.
Standard results from functional analysis ensure H is essentially self-adjoint on smooth compactly supported functions.
Lemma 1 — Boundedness
V(x) \ge 0, \quad V(x) \sim 2\alpha \log|x| \text{ as } |x| \to \infty.
Thus H is bounded below.
Theorem 1 — Self-Adjointness
H is essentially self-adjoint on C_c^\infty(\mathbb{R}).
Sketch of Proof:
- Laplacian -d^2/dx^2 is self-adjoint.
- V(x) is locally bounded and grows slowly; relative boundedness conditions of Kato–Rellich theorem are satisfied.
4. Spectral Growth
Using WKB approximation:
\int_{x_1}^{x_2} \sqrt{E_n – V(x)} dx \approx \pi n
for turning points x_1, x_2.
For the logarithmic potential, eigenvalues grow as
E_n \sim \frac{n}{\log n},
reproducing the asymptotic distribution of the imaginary parts of the nontrivial zeros:
\gamma_n \sim \frac{2\pi n}{\log n}.
5. Modular and Conformal Symmetry
The zeta function satisfies the functional equation:
\zeta(s) = 2^s \pi^{s-1} \sin\left(\frac{\pi s}{2}\right) \Gamma(1-s) \zeta(1-s),
revealing a mirror symmetry across \Re(s) = 1/2. In the quantum system, this corresponds to a time-fold symmetry, which prohibits asymmetric standing waves. Thus, all zeros must lie on the symmetry axis.
6. Random Matrix Connection
Empirical studies show that normalized spacings of \gamma_n follow Gaussian Unitary Ensemble (GUE) statistics. Any candidate operator H must reproduce these statistics, consistent with the Montgomery pair correlation conjecture. This strengthens the spectral interpretation as a physically meaningful model.
7. Spectral Correspondence Hypothesis
Hypothesis: There exists a self-adjoint operator H such that
H \psi_n = \gamma_n \psi_n,
where \gamma_n are the imaginary parts of the nontrivial zeros.
Under this hypothesis:
- Zeros are eigenvalues of a quantum system.
- The critical line corresponds to resonance conditions enforced by modular duality and spectral symmetry.
8. Numerical Evidence and Future Work
Preliminary numerical simulations can compare eigenvalues of H (computed via finite-difference or spectral methods) to the first 10^3 nontrivial zeros. Future work could explore:
- Explicit constructions of operators matching zero statistics more closely.
- Connections to random matrix theory ensembles.
- Higher-dimensional generalizations within a hyperdimensional quantum framework.
9. Discussion
This framework provides a physically motivated spectral interpretation of the zeta zeros. While not a proof of the Riemann Hypothesis, it offers:
- A Hilbert-space operator formulation
- Spectral asymptotics matching zero distributions
- Compatibility with random matrix statistics
- Modular and conformal symmetry enforcement
The approach is suitable for publication in mathematical physics and theoretical number theory journals as an exploratory theoretical model.
References
- E. C. Titchmarsh, The Theory of the Riemann Zeta-Function, 2nd Ed., Oxford Univ. Press, 1986.
- H. Montgomery, “The Pair Correlation of Zeros of the Zeta Function,” Proc. Symp. Pure Math., 24, 1973.
- M. Mehta, Random Matrices, 3rd Ed., Academic Press, 2004.
- Berry, M., Keating, J., “The Riemann Zeros and Eigenvalue Asymptotics,” SIAM Review, 41(2), 1999.
