1 Introduction
Let K be a number field of degree n with ring of integers $\mathcal O_K$ . Let $\mathfrak C$ be an ideal class of K. The ideal class zeta-function $\zeta _K({\mathfrak C;s})$ is defined by
for $\Re (s)>1$ , where the sum is taken over the nonzero integral ideals from the class $\mathfrak C$ . The sum of all such ideal class zeta-functions is equal to the Dedekind zeta-function $\zeta _{K}$ , a generalisation of the Riemann zeta-function $\zeta =\zeta _{\mathbb Q}$ . It is known that the Riemann zeta-function $\zeta $ divides the Dedekind zeta-function $\zeta _K$ for any quadratic number field K (in the sense that the quotient $\zeta _K/\zeta $ is an entire function). This fact is a particular case of the Dedekind conjecture [Reference Murty and Murty9] which states that if $K/L$ is an extension of number fields, then the quotient $\zeta _K/\zeta _L$ is entire. This conjecture has been proved when the number field $K/L$ is Galois [Reference Brauer2] or solvable [Reference Uchida15, Reference van der Waall16].
In this article, we shall consider a number field K of degree n. A complex variable is denoted by $s=\sigma + it$ , and a nontrivial zero of the Riemann zeta-function by ${\rho =\beta + i\gamma }$ . If the number field K is Galois or solvable over $\mathbb Q$ , then
where the sum is taken over all nontrivial zeros of the Riemann zeta-function. There are many similar results for the sum of the values of some functions over the nontrivial zeros of the Riemann zeta-function. For example, Steuding [Reference Steuding11] studied the sum of values of the Hurwitz zeta-function over the nontrivial zeros of the Riemann zeta-function. Garunkštis and Kalpokas [Reference Garunkštis and Kalpokas6] did the same for the periodic zeta-function associated with a rational parameter. Recently, Tongsomporn et al. [Reference Tongsomporn, Wananiyakul and Steuding14] did the same for an irrational parameter. The proof of these results (without assuming the Riemann hypothesis) made use of the method of Conrey et al. [Reference Conrey, Ghosh and Gonek5]. The basic idea is to interpret the sum in question as a sum of residues and then apply Cauchy’s residue theorem and the method of contour integration in combination with the functional equation of the zeta-function and Gonek’s lemma [Reference Gonek7, Lemma 2]. The following is our main result.
Theorem 1.1. Let K be a number field of degree n. Let $r_1$ and $r_2$ be the number of its real embeddings and pairs of complex conjugate embeddings, respectively, and d be the absolute value of its discriminant. Let $\mathfrak C$ be any ideal class of the number field K and $c^{\prime }_m$ be the number of integral ideals of norm m from the ideal class which is the complement of $\mathfrak {C}$ . Then, as T tends to infinity,
where the sum is taken over the nontrivial zeros $\rho =\beta + i\gamma $ of the Riemann zeta-function, $\Lambda $ denotes the von Mangoldt function and $\varepsilon>0$ is arbitrary but fixed. In particular,
A corresponding result for the Dedekind zeta-function is an immediate consequence.
Corollary 1.2. Let K be a number field of degree n. Then, as T tends to infinity,
where the sum is taken over the nontrivial zeros $\rho =\beta + i\gamma $ of the Riemann zeta-function.
In Section 2, we review some background and useful facts which are related to the Riemann zeta-function and the ideal class zeta-function. The proof of the main result (Theorem 1.1) is provided in Section 3. Finally, Section 4 contains a few concluding remarks.
2 Preliminaries
We first recall some useful facts about the Riemann zeta-function. Then we do the same for the ideal class zeta-function. Finally, we recall some techniques and state some lemmas that are useful in Section 2.3.
2.1 Riemann zeta-function
The Riemann zeta-function in the half-plane $\sigma>1$ is defined by
where the product runs through all primes. In this half-plane, the logarithmic derivative of the Riemann zeta-function can be written as a Dirichlet series,
where the von Mangoldt function is defined by
The Riemann zeta-function can be continued analytically to a meromorphic function on the whole complex plane with a single singularity at $s=1$ which is a simple pole. This continuation satisfies the functional equation
This implies that the logarithmic derivative of the Riemann zeta-function satisfies
where by Stirling’s formula,
for $t>1$ . Since the Riemann zeta-function has a simple pole at $s=1$ , so does its logarithmic derivative and in the neighbourhood of $s=1$ ,
It follows from the functional equation that any negative even integer is a zero for the Riemann zeta-function; these zeros are called trivial zeros. All further zeros lie in the strip $0\le t\le 1$ , and are called nontrivial zeros. Let $N(T)$ be the number of nontrivial zeros of the Riemann zeta-function whose positive imaginary part does not exceed the number T, that is,
The Riemann–von Mangoldt formula provides asymptotic formulae:
and
for any fixed positive real number h. (Here, every multiple zero is counted according to its multiplicity. For more details, see [Reference Titchmarsh13, Ch. 9]). By an approximation formula for the logarithmic derivative of the Riemann zeta-function [Reference Titchmarsh13, Theorem 9.6] together with the Riemann–von Mangoldt formula, in the strip $-1\le \sigma \le 2$ ,
for $\lvert t-\gamma \rvert \ge {c}/{\log t}$ , where c is a constant independent of t.
2.2 Ideal class zeta-function
Recall that the ideal class zeta-function associated to the ideal class $\mathfrak C$ in the half-plane $\sigma>1$ can be written as
where $c_m$ is the number of integral ideals of norm m from the class $\mathfrak C$ . According to [Reference Paul and Sankaranarayanan10], one can show that $c_m \ll m^\varepsilon $ and
where
and
Here, $r_1,r_2, R, w$ and d are the number of real embeddings, the number of pairs of complex conjugate embeddings, the regulator, the number of roots of unity and the absolute value of the discriminant of the number field K, respectively.
The ideal class zeta-function can also be continued analytically to a meromorphic function on the whole complex plane with only a simple pole at $s=1$ . This continuation satisfies the functional equation
where
and $\mathfrak C'$ is the ideal class of K which is the complement of $\mathfrak C$ (with respect to the trace) (see [Reference Lang8, Ch. 13] for more details). In addition, in a neighbourhood of $s=1$ ,
The functional equation, together with Stirling’s formula and the Phragmén–Lindelöf principle [Reference Titchmarsh12, Section 5.65] implies that
as t tends to infinity.
2.3 Some useful lemmas
As a preparation for the proof of the main result (Theorem 1.1), we state three useful lemmas.
Lemma 2.1 (Abel’s summation formula)
Let $a_1,a_2,\dots $ be a sequence of real (or complex) numbers and suppose $f(x)$ has a continuous derivative on the interval $[y,x]$ , where $0<y<x$ . Define
where $A(x)=0$ if $x<1$ . Then,
Proof. See [Reference Apostol1, Theorem 4.2].
Lemma 2.2 (The first derivative test)
Let $f(x)$ and $g(x)$ be real functions such that ${g(x)}/{f'(x)}$ is monotonic and ${f'(x)}/{g(x)}\ge m>0$ , or ${f'(x)}/{g(x)}\le -m<0$ . Then,
Proof. See [Reference Titchmarsh13, Lemma 4.3].
The following lemma is generalised from Gonek’s lemma [Reference Gonek7, Lemma 2].
Lemma 2.3 (Generalised Gonek lemma)
Let a be a fixed real number. For large T, let $\mathcal J$ be the unique positive integer such that $2^{-\mathcal J}T<1\le 2^{1-\mathcal J}T$ . Then,
with the characteristic function
and the error term
Proof. Substituting $t\mapsto t/n$ together with Gonek’s lemma [Reference Gonek7, Lemma 2] yields
for large A and $A<B\le 2A$ . Then,
3 Proof of Theorem 1.1
In this section, let $\mathfrak C$ be an ideal class of the class group, $\mathfrak C'$ the class containing the complements of the members of the class $\mathfrak C$ , and $c_m$ and $c^{\prime }_m$ the number of integral ideals of norm m from the class $\mathfrak C$ and $\mathfrak C'$ , respectively.
By the Riemann–von Mangoldt formula, for a given number $t_o\ge 3$ , there is a positive integer $t\in [t_o,t_o+1)$ such that
where $\gamma $ is any imaginary value of a nontrivial zero $\rho =\beta + i\gamma $ of the Riemann zeta-function and c is a constant (independent of t). Now, let $\varepsilon>0$ and $T\ge 3$ be such that
Note that the least imaginary value $\gamma $ of a nontrivial zero of the Riemann zeta-function $\rho =\beta + i\gamma $ in the upper half-plane is a little larger than $14$ and the logarithmic derivative ${\zeta '}/{\zeta }$ of the Riemann zeta-function has simple poles at the zeros of the Riemann zeta-function and is analytic elsewhere except for a simple pole at $s=1$ . By Cauchy’s theorem,
where the counter-clockwise oriented contour $\mathcal C$ is a rectangle with vertices $a+ i$ , $a+ iT, 1-a+ iT, 1-a+ i$ with
. We rewrite the contour integral as
First, we start with the lower horizontal integral. We obtain
since this integral is independent of T.
Next, we consider the vertical line segment on the right, which lies inside the half-plane of absolute convergence for the Dirichlet series. By interchanging integration and summation, it follows that
It is easy to see that the latter integral is bounded. By the Laurent expansion of the ideal class zeta-function and the logarithmic derivative of the Riemann zeta-function at $s=1$ ,
In view of the estimates for the logarithmic derivative of the Riemann zeta-function and the ideal class zeta-function, (2.1) and (2.4), we obtain the upper horizontal integral
by the trivial estimation.
It remains to consider the vertical integral on the left. By the functional equation (2.3) and substituting $s\mapsto 1-s$ ,
By the Schwarz reflection principle, the conjugate of this integral is
where the function $E_K({s})$ is defined by
for some integers $e_k$ with $e_n=1$ and $e_{-n}=({-1})^{r_1+r_2}$ . Observe that the ideal class zeta-function and logarithmic derivative of the Riemann zeta-function can be represented as absolutely convergent Dirichlet series. By Stirling’s formula, for $s=\sigma + it$ and a real number $\ell $ ,
Now, based on (3.4), we split $\overline {\mathcal I_{3}}$ into a sum of integrals and estimate each integral as follows.
Case I: $-n\le k< n$ . The integrals with $\exp ({ i\pi k{(1-s)}/2})$ contribute to the error term. More precisely,
since the integral is bounded and the last asymptotic formula follows from the Laurent expansion of the ideal class zeta-function at $s=1$ . In a similar way,
since the ideal class zeta-function and the logarithmic derivative of the Riemann zeta-function have a simple pole at $s=1$ .
Case II: $k=n$ . It remains to evaluate the integral with $\exp ({ i\pi n{(1-s)}/2})$ . We write the integral as the difference of one with ${\Delta '}/{\Delta }(s)$ and the other with ${\zeta '}/{\zeta }(s)$ , and estimate each of those integrals as follows.
Subcase I: the logarithmic derivative ${\Delta '}/{\Delta }({s})$ . By the fundamental theorem of calculus,
where the function $J(\tau )$ is defined by
for some real numbers $b_t$ (which are bounded as functions of t). Now, we consider the function $J(\tau )$ . It can be rewritten as
Applying the generalised Gonek lemma (Lemma 2.3), the function $J( \tau )$ is equal to
where $\mathcal J$ is the unique positive integer such that $2^{-\mathcal J}\tau <1\le 2^{1-\mathcal J}\tau $ , and the error term $O=O({\tau ^{n({a- 1/2)}}})$ can be estimated similarly to [Reference Gonek7, Lemma 4].
Now, the method of partial summation and the asymptotic formula for the number of nonzero integral ideals in the class $\mathfrak C'$ with norm up to a given number can be applied to evaluate the above series. For convenience, let $x=d({ \tau /{2\pi }})^n$ , $y=d({2^{-\mathcal J}\tau }/{2\pi })^n$ and
where $\alpha ,\beta $ are determined in (2.2). By Abel’s partial summation (Lemma 2.1),
Integration by parts yields
This implies that
where the last asymptotic estimate follows from the integral term by applying the first derivative test (Lemma 2.2). More precisely, let $f(t)=-2\pi n({ t/d})^{ 1/n}$ and $g(t)={1}/{t^{{(n-1)}/{2n}}}$ . Then for $y\le t\le x$ ,
By the first derivative test (Lemma 2.2),
Therefore,
Substituting $J({\tau })$ into (3.5),
Subcase II: the logarithmic derivative ${\zeta '}/{\zeta }({s})$ . By Stirling’s formula and the generalised Gonek lemma (Lemma 2.3),
where $\mathcal J$ is the unique positive integer such that $2^{-\mathcal J}T<1\le 2^{1-\mathcal J}T$ and the error term follows as in [Reference Gonek7, Lemma 4] together with the Laurent expansion of the logarithmic derivative of the Riemann zeta-function and the ideal class zeta-function at $s=1$ . After conjugation, we obtain the first desired result.
Next, we focus on (3.6). Applying the fact that $c^{\prime }_k\ll k^\varepsilon ,\Lambda (k)\ll k^\varepsilon $ and the number-of-divisors function $\sigma _o(k)\ll k^\varepsilon $ for any $\varepsilon>0$ ,
and then
by applying Abel’s summation formula (Lemma 2.1). Hence,
The same estimate holds for $\mathcal I_3$ . Summing up (3.1), (3.2), (3.3) and (3.7), we obtain
4 Concluding remarks
The results we have obtained are not trivial. To see this, we first deduce from Theorem 1.1 that
In fact, this estimate also implies the one given in Theorem 1.1. Note that the hypothetical zeros of the Riemann zeta-function off the critical line appear in pairs, that is, if $\rho =\beta + i\gamma $ is one, then $1-\beta + i\gamma $ is another (as follows from the functional equation). If now $\frac 12<\beta <1$ , then, in view of the bound (2.4), the contribution of this zero to the sum in question would be of size
for $\gamma \in (T,2T]$ . Multiplying this by the number of all zeros $\rho =\frac 12+ i\gamma $ with $T<\gamma \leq 2T$ yields
Comparing this with (4.1) shows that Theorem 1.1 gives a better bound. One should mention that there are techniques available to find unconditional bounds for $\zeta _K({\mathfrak {C};\frac 12+ it})$ which may improve (4.1); however, the authors are not aware of any such result in the literature and their derivation would not be too easy.
The proof of Theorem 1.1 is of interest also for another reason. It should be mentioned that, at least to the best knowledge of the authors, the above reasoning is the first application of the method of Conrey et al. to a zeta-function of degree $n>1$ (in the sense of the extended Selberg class). Note that Conrey et al. [Reference Conrey, Ghosh and Gonek3–Reference Conrey, Ghosh and Gonek5] rewrote the first derivative of a Dedekind zeta-function $\zeta _K(s)=\zeta (s)L({s,\psi })$ of a quadratic number field at $s=\rho $ as
where the symmetry of the zeros of the Dirichlet L-function $L({s,\psi })$ for a real character $\psi $ (by the functional equation) is used. This allowed them to evaluate the sum over the values $\zeta _K'({\rho })$ . Their reasoning is then based on an evaluation of the integral
or rather a variation of it after applying the functional equation. On both vertical sides of the path of integration, the integrand is of order $O({t^{1/2+\varepsilon }})$ (as for a degree-one element of the Selberg class on the left). The underlying symmetry, however, does not apply to our case in general.
In principle, the method can be extended further, for example, to consider the mean square. It is to be expected that, as in our note, the bound comes from the integral over the left vertical line segment.
Acknowledgement
The authors are grateful to the anonymous referee for valuable comments and corrections.