Perron's formula
In mathematics, and more particularly in analytic number theory, Perron's formula is a formula discovered by Oskar Perron to calculate the sum of an arithmetic function, by means of an inverse Mellin transform.[1]
Statement
Let be an arithmetic function, and let
be the corresponding Dirichlet series. Presume the Dirichlet series to be uniformly convergent for . Then Perron's formula is
Here, the prime on the summation indicates that the last term of the sum must be multiplied by 1/2 when x is an integer. The integral is not a convergent Lebesgue integral; it is understood as the Cauchy principal value. The formula requires that c > 0, c > σ, and x > 0.
Proof
An easy sketch of the proof comes from taking Abel's sum formula
This is nothing but a Laplace transform under the variable change Inverting it one gets Perron's formula.
Proofs of Perron's formula have been published by Tom M. Apostol[2] and by Gérald Tenenbaum.[3]
Examples
Because of its general relationship to Dirichlet series, the formula is commonly applied to many number-theoretic sums. Thus, for example, one has the famous integral representation for the Riemann zeta function:
and a similar formula for Dirichlet L-functions:
where
and is a Dirichlet character. Other examples appear in the articles on the Mertens function and the von Mangoldt function.
Generalizations
Perron's formula is a special case of the formula
where
and
the Mellin transform. The Perron formula is the special case of the test function for the Heaviside step function.
References
- ^ Perron, Oskar (1 July 1908). "Zur Theorie der Dirichletschen Reihen" [On the theory of Dirichlet series]. Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik (Crelles Journal) (in German). 1908 (134): 95–143. doi:10.1515/crll.1908.134.95. Retrieved 8 March 2026.
- ^ Apostol, Tom M. (1976). Introduction to analytic number theory. New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. 243–246. ISBN 978-0-387-90163-3. MR 0434929. Zbl 0335.10001.
- ^ Tenenbaum, Gérald (1995). Introduction to analytic and probabilistic number theory. Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics. Vol. 46. Cambridge ; New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 130–134. ISBN 0-521-41261-7. Zbl 0831.11001.
External links
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Perron's formula". MathWorld.
- Moreta, Jose Javier Garcia (2024), Discrete Mellin Convolution and its Extensions, Perron Formula and Explicit Formulae, General Science Journal, ISSN:1916-5382