In mathematics, the prime zeta function is an analogue of the Riemann zeta function, studied by Glaisher (1891). It is defined as the following infinite series, which converges for :

Properties

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The Euler product for the Riemann zeta function ζ(s) implies that

 

which by Möbius inversion gives

 

When s goes to 1, we have  . This is used in the definition of Dirichlet density.

This gives the continuation of P(s) to  , with an infinite number of logarithmic singularities at points s where ns is a pole (only ns = 1 when n is a squarefree number greater than or equal to 1), or zero of the Riemann zeta function ζ(.). The line   is a natural boundary as the singularities cluster near all points of this line.

If one defines a sequence

 

then

 

(Exponentiation shows that this is equivalent to Lemma 2.7 by Li.)

The prime zeta function is related to Artin's constant by

 

where Ln is the nth Lucas number.[1]

Specific values are:

s approximate value P(s) OEIS
1  [2]
2   OEISA085548
3   OEISA085541
4   OEISA085964
5   OEISA085965
6   OEISA085966
7   OEISA085967
8   OEISA085968
9   OEISA085969

Analysis

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Integral

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The integral over the prime zeta function is usually anchored at infinity, because the pole at   prohibits defining a nice lower bound at some finite integer without entering a discussion on branch cuts in the complex plane:

 

The noteworthy values are again those where the sums converge slowly:

s approximate value   OEIS
1   OEISA137245
2   OEISA221711
3  
4  

Derivative

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The first derivative is

 

The interesting values are again those where the sums converge slowly:

s approximate value   OEIS
2   OEISA136271
3   OEISA303493
4   OEISA303494
5   OEISA303495

Generalizations

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Almost-prime zeta functions

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As the Riemann zeta function is a sum of inverse powers over the integers and the prime zeta function a sum of inverse powers of the prime numbers, the  -primes (the integers which are a product of   not necessarily distinct primes) define a sort of intermediate sums:

 

where   is the total number of prime factors.

    approximate value   OEIS
2 2   OEISA117543
2 3  
3 2   OEISA131653
3 3  

Each integer in the denominator of the Riemann zeta function   may be classified by its value of the index  , which decomposes the Riemann zeta function into an infinite sum of the  :

 

Since we know that the Dirichlet series (in some formal parameter u) satisfies

 

we can use formulas for the symmetric polynomial variants with a generating function of the right-hand-side type. Namely, we have the coefficient-wise identity that   when the sequences correspond to   where   denotes the characteristic function of the primes. Using Newton's identities, we have a general formula for these sums given by

 

Special cases include the following explicit expansions:

 

Prime modulo zeta functions

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Constructing the sum not over all primes but only over primes which are in the same modulo class introduces further types of infinite series that are a reduction of the Dirichlet L-function.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Artin's Constant". MathWorld.
  2. ^ See divergence of the sum of the reciprocals of the primes.
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