Recent Comments
-
Recent Posts
- What is mathematics (or at least, how it feels)
- Alef’s Corner
- To cheer you up in difficult times 22: some mathematical news! (Part 1)
- Cheerful News in Difficult Times: The Abel Prize is Awarded to László Lovász and Avi Wigderson
- Amazing: Feng Pan and Pan Zhang Announced a Way to “Spoof” (Classically Simulate) the Google’s Quantum Supremacy Circuit!
- To cheer you up in difficult times 21: Giles Gardam lecture and new result on Kaplansky’s conjectures
- Nostalgia corner: John Riordan’s referee report of my first paper
- At the Movies III: Picture a Scientist
- At the Movies II: Kobi Mizrahi’s short movie White Eye makes it to the Oscar’s short list.
Top Posts & Pages
- To cheer you up in difficult times 21: Giles Gardam lecture and new result on Kaplansky's conjectures
- To cheer you up in difficult times 5: A New Elementary Proof of the Prime Number Theorem by Florian K. Richter
- What is mathematics (or at least, how it feels)
- The Argument Against Quantum Computers - A Very Short Introduction
- Extremal Combinatorics VI: The Frankl-Wilson Theorem
- Answer: Lord Kelvin, The Age of the Earth, and the Age of the Sun
- Cheerful News in Difficult Times: The Abel Prize is Awarded to László Lovász and Avi Wigderson
- Yael Tauman Kalai's ICM2018 Paper, My Paper, and Cryptography
- 8866128975287528³+(-8778405442862239)³+(-2736111468807040)³
RSS
Tag Archives: Paul Turan
Dan Romik on the Riemann zeta function
This post, about the Riemann zeta function, which is among the most important and mysterious mathematical objects was kindly written by Dan Romik. It is related to his paper Orthogonal polynomial expansions for the Riemann xi function, that we mentioned … Continue reading
Posted in Combinatorics, Guest blogger, Number theory
Tagged Dan Romik, George Polya, Paul Turan, Riemann Hypothesis, Riemann zeta function
2 Comments