Throughout, suppose that $\mathbb {K}$ is a number field such that $\mathbb {K}\neq \mathbb {Q}$ with ring of integers ${\mathcal {O}}_{\mathbb {K}}$ , degree $n_{\mathbb {K}}$ and discriminant $\Delta _{\mathbb {K}}$ . Moreover, let $\mathfrak {a}\subset {\mathcal {O}}_{\mathbb {K}}$ denote integral ideals, $\mathfrak {p}\subset {\mathcal {O}}_{\mathbb {K}}$ denote prime ideals, $N(\mathfrak {p})$ be the norm of $\mathfrak {p}$ and $\kappa _{\mathbb {K}}$ be the residue of the simple pole at $s=1$ of the Dedekind zeta-function $\zeta _{\mathbb {K}}(s)$ associated to $\mathbb {K}$ . In what follows, we summarise the contributions of the author’s PhD thesis [Reference Lee8].
To study the distribution of prime ideals in a number field, it is desirable to study the asymptotic behaviour of certain counting functions. In particular, we need the prime ideal theorem and Mertens’ theorems for number fields; these are natural generalisations of the famous prime number theorem and Mertens’ theorems. Landau originally proved the former in [Reference Landau7] and Rosen originally proved the latter in [Reference Rosen11]. In what follows, we introduce all five of the results that this thesis proves; a conditional version (assuming the generalised Riemann hypothesis) of each result is also established to complement these unconditional results.
Explicit results. Das established the latest explicit prime ideal theorem in [Reference Das1] by building upon earlier work from Lagarias and Odlyzko [Reference Lagarias, Odlyzko and Fröhlich6]. Throughout, an explicit result completely describes the order of growth of the error term therein and the associated implied constants. Without assuming conditions, there are significant technicalities in their results; the result only holds for an impractical range and an exceptional (or Landau–Siegel) zero may be present. Moreover, one can use the explicit prime ideal theorem to obtain explicit Mertens’ theorems for number fields, although this approach would embed the same technical obstructions into the outcome. On the other hand, we were able to prove explicit Mertens’ theorems for number fields with no technical obstructions, by making the steps in [Reference Rosen11] completely explicit; this was joint work with Garcia (see [Reference Garcia and Lee2]) and the main result of the thesis.
Theorem 1. If $x\geq 2$ and $\mathbb {K}\neq \mathbb {Q}$ , then there is a computable constant $\Upsilon _{\mathbb {K}}$ depending on $n_{\mathbb {K}}$ and $\Delta _{\mathbb {K}}$ only, such that
in which we have $|A_{\mathbb {K}}(x)| \leq \Upsilon _{\mathbb {K}}$ , $|B_{\mathbb {K}}(x)| \leq {2 \Upsilon _{\mathbb {K}}}/{\log x}$ , $|C_{\mathbb {K}}(x)| \leq |E_{\mathbb {K}}(x)|e^{| E_{\mathbb {K}}(x)|}$ , $|E_{\mathbb {K}}(x)| \leq {n_{\mathbb {K}}}/{2(x-1)} + |B_{\mathbb {K}}(x)|$ and
satisfies $- n_{\mathbb {K}} \leq M_{\mathbb {K}} - \gamma - \log {\kappa _{\mathbb {K}}} \leq 0$ .
Arguably the most important ingredient in our proof of Theorem 1 is the following explicit estimate for the ideal-counting function $I_{\mathbb {K}}(x) = \#\{\mathfrak {a} : N(\mathfrak {a}) \leq x\}$ , which is the number fields generalisation of the floor function. This result was by far the most technical result in the thesis to prove, requiring an entire chapter, and it was adapted from the content of the author’s published paper [Reference Lee9].
Theorem 2. If $x> 0$ and $\mathbb {K}\neq \mathbb {Q}$ , then there is a computable constant $\Lambda _{\mathbb {K}}(n_{\mathbb {K}})$ depending on $n_{\mathbb {K}}$ only, such that
To prove Theorem 1, we applied Theorem 2, so the definition of $\Upsilon _{\mathbb {K}}$ will also depend on $\Lambda _{\mathbb {K}}(n_{\mathbb {K}})$ . The explicit description for the constant $\Lambda _{\mathbb {K}}(n_{\mathbb {K}})$ in Theorem 2 that we obtain significantly refines the previous best, which was established by Sunley in her thesis [Reference Sunley12, Theorem 3.3.5]. To see the margin of our improvement, refer to Table 1. Further, Theorem 2 is independently interesting, because it has potential applications in studying the zeros, size and value-distribution of L-functions defined over number fields.
Applications. By circumventing the technical issues that would be present in an explicit prime ideal theorem, Theorem 1 unlocks three new applications, which are presented below. Note that Corollary 3 is an explicit version of Bertrand’s postulate for number fields (which was originally established inexplicitly in [Reference Hulse and Murty5, Section 3]), Corollary 4 gives explicit versions of a result Nagell originally proved in [Reference Nagell10] and Corollary 5 was jointly established with Garcia, Suh and Yu in [Reference Garcia, Lee, Suh and Yu3].
Corollary 3. For $x\geq 2$ , there exists at least one prime ideal $\mathfrak {p}$ in $\mathbb {K}$ such that $N(\mathfrak {p}) \in [x, Ax]$ when $\log {A} \geq 2 \Upsilon _{\mathbb {K}}$ .
Corollary 4. Let $g\in \mathbb {Z}[X]$ be irreducible with degree $d \geq 1$ , leading coefficient c, discriminant $D_g$ and weighted discriminant $\mathbf {D}_g = |c|^{(d-1)(d-2)} |D_g|$ . If $x\geq \max \{2,\sqrt {\mathbf {D}_g}\}$ , then there are computable constants $Q_g = O(1)$ and $\widetilde {Q}_g(x) = o(1)$ which depend on c, d and $D_g$ such that
where $\omega _g(p)$ denotes the number of solutions to the congruence $g(X)\equiv 0\pmod {p}$ .
Corollary 5. Let $f = f_1f_2\cdots f_k \in \mathbb {Z}[X]$ be a product of distinct, irreducible non-constant polynomials $f_1,f_2,\ldots ,f_k \in \mathbb {Z}[X]$ such that f has degree $d \geq 1$ , leading coefficient c and discriminant $D_f$ . If $x\geq \max \{2, |D_f|, \sqrt {\mathbf {D}_f}\}$ , then there exist computable constants $\mathbf {A}_f = O(1)$ and $\mathbf {B}_f(x) = o(1)$ which depend on c, d and $D_f$ such that
The broad-strokes description of our proof of Corollary 4 is that we observed that each of the objective sums is approximately equal to one of the sums in (M1) or (M2), then applied Theorem 1. The significance of Corollary 4 is that $\omega _g$ is an important multiplicative function that arises in sieve methods. In particular, Halberstam and Richert tell us how to use the sums in Corollary 4 to give upper bounds on the number of primes representable by a polynomial in [Reference Halberstam and Richert4]. Corollary 5 is another consequence of Corollary 4; this result tells us that there is a finite list of primes that certifies the number of irreducible factors of a polynomial $f\in \mathbb {Z}[X]$ .