Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- Part I A quick look at various zeta functions
- Part II Ihara zeta function and the graph theory prime number theorem
- Part III Edge and path zeta functions
- Part IV Finite unramified Galois coverings of connected graphs
- 13 Finite unramified coverings and Galois groups
- 14 Fundamental theorem of Galois theory
- 15 Behavior of primes in coverings
- 16 Frobenius automorphisms
- 17 How to construct intermediate coverings using the Frobenius automorphism
- 18 Artin L-functions
- 19 Edge Artin L-functions
- 20 Path Artin L-functions
- 21 Non-isomorphic regular graphs without loops or multiedges having the same Ihara zeta function
- 22 Chebotarev density theorem
- 23 Siegel poles
- Part V Last look at the garden
- References
- Index
23 - Siegel poles
from Part IV - Finite unramified Galois coverings of connected graphs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- Part I A quick look at various zeta functions
- Part II Ihara zeta function and the graph theory prime number theorem
- Part III Edge and path zeta functions
- Part IV Finite unramified Galois coverings of connected graphs
- 13 Finite unramified coverings and Galois groups
- 14 Fundamental theorem of Galois theory
- 15 Behavior of primes in coverings
- 16 Frobenius automorphisms
- 17 How to construct intermediate coverings using the Frobenius automorphism
- 18 Artin L-functions
- 19 Edge Artin L-functions
- 20 Path Artin L-functions
- 21 Non-isomorphic regular graphs without loops or multiedges having the same Ihara zeta function
- 22 Chebotarev density theorem
- 23 Siegel poles
- Part V Last look at the garden
- References
- Index
Summary
Summary of Siegel pole results
In number theory there is a known zero-free region for a Dedekind zeta function, which can be given explicitly except for the possibility of a single first-order real zero within this region. This possible exceptional zero has come to be known as a Siegel zero and is closely connected with the Brauer–Siegel theorem on the growth of the class number times the regulator with the discriminant. See Lang [73] for more information on the implications of the non-existence of Siegel zeros. There is no known example of a Siegel zero for Dedekind zeta functions. In number fields, a Siegel zero (should it exist) “deserves” to arise already in a quadratic extension of the base field. This has now been proved in many cases (see Stark [116]).
The reciprocal of the Ihara zeta function, ζX(u)−1, is a polynomial with a finite number of zeros. Thus there is an ∈ > 0 such that any pole of ζX(u) in the region RX ≤ ∣u∣ < RX + ∈ must lie on the circle ∣u∣ = RX. This gives us the graph theoretic analog of a pole-free region, ∣u∣ < RX + ∈; the only exceptions lie on the circle ∣u∣ = RX. We will show that ζX(u) is a function of uδ with δ = δX a positive integer from Definition 23.2 below.
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- Zeta Functions of GraphsA Stroll through the Garden, pp. 200 - 208Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010