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In the cohomological incarnation, the Riemann hypothesis part of the Weil conjectures for a smooth proper scheme of finite type over a finite field with $q$ elements says that: the eigenvalues of Frobenius acting on the $H^i_\mathrm{et}(X, Q_\ell)$ are algebraic integers with complex absolute value $q^{i/2}$.

For smooth proper curve $ C$ over $F_q$ of genus g, the Riemann hypothesis is often stated in another way as $|N- q - 1| \leq 2g \sqrt(q)$ where $N$ is the number of rational points on $ C$.

Why are these two statements equivalent? Is (are) there any corresponding inequality(ies) which are equivalent to the Riemann hypothesis in higher dimensions?

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5 Answers 5

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The reason why that inequality is equivalent to RH (for curves) is the functional equation.

The polynomial $L(z)$ I speak about below would arise in practice as the numerator of the zeta-function of the curve, with $z = q^{-s}$ and the usual version of the Riemann hypothesis for $L(q^{-s})$ is equivalent to the statement that the reciprocal roots of $L(z)$ all have absolute value $\sqrt{q}$. That's the form of the Riemann hypothesis I will be referring to in what follows.

Suppose we have a polynomial $L(z)$ over the complex numbers with constant term 1 and degree $d$, factored over its reciprocal roots: $$ L(z) = (1 - \alpha_1z)\cdots(1-\alpha_dz), \ \ \ \alpha_j \not= 0. $$

Let $L^*(z)$ be the polynomial with complex-conjugate coefficients to those of $L(z)$, so $$ L^*(z) = (1 - \overline{\alpha_1}z)\cdots(1-\overline{\alpha_d}z). $$ Assume $L(z)$ and $L^*(z)$ are connected by the functional equation $$ L(1/qz) = \frac{W}{z^d}L^*(z) $$ for some constant $W$. If you compare coefficients of the same powers of $z$ on both sides, this functional equation implies the mapping $\alpha \mapsto q/\overline{\alpha}$ sends reciprocal roots of $L(z)$ to reciprocal roots of $L^*(z)$ (and $W$ has absolute value $q^{d/2}$).

Lemma 1. Granting the functional equation above, the following conditions are equivalent:

i$)$ the reciprocal roots of $L(z)$ have absolute value $\sqrt{q}$ (RH for $L(z)$),

ii$)$ the reciprocal roots of $L(z)$ have absolute value $\leq \sqrt{q}$.

Proof. We only need to show ii implies i. Assuming ii, let $\alpha$ be any reciprocal root of $L(z)$, so $|\alpha| \leq \sqrt{q}$. By the functional equation, $q/\overline{\alpha}$ is a reciprocal root of $L^*(z)$, so $q/\overline{\alpha} = \overline{\beta}$ for some reciprocal root $\beta$ of $L(z)$. Then $|q/\overline{\alpha}| = |\overline{\beta}| = |\beta| \leq \sqrt{q}$ and thus $\sqrt{q} \leq |\alpha|$. Therefore $|\alpha| = \sqrt{q}$ and i follows. QED

This lemma reduces the proof of the Riemann hypothesis for $L(z)$ from the equality $|\alpha_j| = \sqrt{q}$ for all $j$ to the upper bound $|\alpha_j| \leq \sqrt{q}$ for all $j$. Of course the functional equation was crucial in explaining why the superficially weaker inequality implies the equality.

Next we want to show the upper bound on the $|\alpha_j|$'s in part ii of Lemma 1 is equivalent to a $O$-estimate on sums of powers of the $\alpha_j$'s which superficially seems weaker.

We will be interested in the sums $$ \alpha_1^n + \cdots + \alpha_d^n, $$ which arise from the theory of zeta-functions as coefficients in an exponential generating function: since $L(z)$ has constant term 1, we can write (as formal power series over the complex numbers) $$L(z) = \exp\left(\sum_{n \geq 1}N_n z^n/n\right)$$ and then logarithmic differentiation shows $$ N_n = -(\alpha_1^n + \dots + \alpha_d^n) $$ for all $n \geq 1$.

Lemma 2. For nonzero complex numbers $\alpha_1,\dots,\alpha_d$ and a constant $B > 0$, the following are equivalent:

i$)$ For some $A > 0$, $|\alpha_1^n + \dots + \alpha_d^n| \leq AB^n$ for all $n \geq 1$.

ii$)$ For some $A > 0$ and positive integer $m$, $|\alpha_1^n + \dots + \alpha_d^n| \leq AB^n$ for all $n \geq 1$ with $n \equiv 0 \bmod m$.

iii$)$ $|\alpha_j| \leq B$ for all $j$.

Part ii is saying you only need to show part i when $n$ runs through the (positive) multiples of any particular positive integer to know it is true for all positive integers $n$. It is a convenient technicality in the proof of the Riemann hypothesis for curves, but the heart of things is the connection between parts i and iii. (We'd be interested in part iii with $B = \sqrt{q}$.) You could set $m = 1$ to make the proof below that ii implies iii into a proof that i implies iii. The passage from i to iii is what Dave is referring to in his answer when he cites the book by Iwaniec and Kowalski.

Proof. Easily i implies ii and (since $|\alpha_j| = |\overline{\alpha_j}|$) iii implies i. To show ii implies iii, we use a cute analytic trick. Assuming ii, the series $$ \sum_{n \equiv 0 \bmod m} (\alpha_1^n + \dots + \alpha_d^n)z^n $$ is absolutely convergent for $|z| < 1/B$, so the series defines a holomorphic function on this disc. (The sum is over positive multiples of $m$, of course.) When $|z| < 1/|\alpha_j|$ for all $j$, the series can be computed to be $$ \sum_{j=1}^{d} \frac{\alpha_j^mz^m}{1-\alpha_j^mz^m} = \sum_{j=1}^{d}\frac{1}{1-\alpha_j^mz^m} - d, $$ so the rational function $\sum_{j=1}^{d} 1/(1-\alpha_j^mz^m)$ is holomorphic on the disc $|z| < 1/B$. Therefore the poles of this rational function must have absolute value $\geq 1/B$. Each $1/\alpha_j$ is a pole, so $|\alpha_j| \leq B$ for all $j$. QED

Theorem. The following are equivalent:

i$)$ $L(z)$ satisfies the Riemann hypothesis ($|\alpha_j| = \sqrt{q}$ for all $j$),

ii$)$ $N_n = O(q^{n/2})$ as $n \rightarrow \infty$,

iii$)$ for some $m \geq 1$, $N_n = O(q^{n/2})$ as $n \rightarrow \infty$ through the multiples of $m$.

Proof. Easily i implies ii and ii implies iii. Assuming iii, we get $|\alpha_j| \leq \sqrt{q}$ for all $j$ by Lemma 2, and this inequality over all $j$ is equivalent to i by Lemma 1. QED

Brandon asked, after Rebecca's answer, if the inequality implies the Weil conjectures (for curves) and Dave also referred in his answer to the Weil conjectures following from the inequality. In this context at least, you should not say "Weil conjectures" when you mean "Riemann hypothesis" since we used the functional equation in the argument and that is itself part of the Weil conjectures. The inequality does not imply the Weil conjectures, but only the Riemann hypothesis (after the functional equation is established).

That the inequality is logically equivalent to RH, and not just a consequence of it, has some mathematical interest since this is one of the routes to a proof of the Weil conjectures for curves.

P.S. Brandon, if you have other questions about the Weil conjectures for curves, ask your thesis advisor if you could look at his senior thesis. You'll find the above arguments in there, along with applications to coding theory. :)

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks Keith, very good point about the functional equation, I only realized how it got used after I gave a talk on this stuff for some graduate students. $\endgroup$ Jan 17, 2010 at 18:04
  • $\begingroup$ Sorry for digging out this old answer, but why then is the classical RH (i.e. for the Riemann zeta function and related L-functions) not equivalent to the Ramanujan-Petersson conjecture which states that the Satake parameters at unramified primes have absolute value less or equal than $1$? $\endgroup$ Dec 24, 2020 at 19:32
  • $\begingroup$ @SylvainJULIEN the only reason i implies ii in the theorem is that $L(z)$ has finitely many zeros. That finiteness is where the $O$-constant comes from. Also note that you can't write the (completed) Riemann zeta-function in terms of $z = q^{-s}$ for some $q$. $\endgroup$
    – KConrad
    Dec 24, 2020 at 19:41
  • $\begingroup$ Thank you. The analogy seemed nice to me, all the more that I found years ago a criterion for the validity of RH in the form of an entire series whose radius of convergence was $1$. $\endgroup$ Dec 25, 2020 at 8:11
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The first step is to reformulate the zeta function in terms of l-adic cohomology. It is defined to be

$$Z(u) := \exp(\sum_m N_m u^m/m),$$ where $N_m$ is the number of points over $F_{q^m}.$ So $N_m$ is #{fixed points of $\mathrm{Frob}^m$}, and by the analogue of the Lefschetz fixed point theorem for l-adic cohomology, this implies $N_m = \sum_i (-1)^i \mathrm{Tr} \mathrm{Frob}^{m*}|H^i$. We can substitute this in the expression for Z(u) and rearrange to get

$$Z(u) = \prod_{i=0}^{2n} [\exp(\sum_m \mathrm{Tr} \mathrm{Frob}^{m*}|_{H^i} \frac{u^m}{m})]^{(-1)^i}$$

where $n$ is the dimension of the variety. The inner exponentials are actually $\det(1-u \mathrm{Frob}^*)|_{H^i}$, which relates zeros and poles of the zeta function to the eigenvalues of Frob* acting on $H^i$.

Both $H^0$ and $H^2n$ are 1-dimensional spaces, and we know the eigenvalues of Frob* acting on them: on $H^0$ Frob* acts as the identity, so the eigenvalue is 1, and on $H^{2n}$ Frob* is multiplication by $q^n$ because Frob is a finite map of degree $q^n$.

For curves, $n=1$ and the expression above for $Z(u)$ becomes $Z(u)=[(1-u)(1-qu)]^{-1} P(u)$, where $P(u)$ is a polynomial of degree $\dim H^1$ whose zeros $\alpha_i$ (the eigenvalues of Frob* acting on H^1) have absolute value $|\sqrt{q}|$. Then it's not hard to show (by logarithmically differentiating $Z(u)$ and rearranging) that $N_m = 1 + q - \sum_j \alpha_j^m$. If we assume $\dim H^1 = 2g$ (to prove this I guess you need some way to compare Zariski and etale cohomology), this shows that the bound on point counting is the same as the bound on the size of the eigenvalues of Frob on $H^1$.

For higher dimensions, you could play the same sorts of games, but the expressions wouldn't be as nice.

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  • $\begingroup$ This shows that Weil conjectures implies that bound but I don't see the reverse direction. Is the reverse direction true for curves? $\endgroup$ Oct 13, 2009 at 20:23
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Regarding the question about higher dimensions, Scholl showed that RH in all dimensions follows from the statement:

If $X$ is a smooth hypersurface in $\mathbb{P}^{d+1}$ over $\mathbb{F}_q$, then $X(\mathbb{F}_{q^n}) - \mathbb{P}^d(\mathbb{F}_{q^n}) = O(q^{dn/2})$.

Here the $O(\ )$ is as $n \to \infty$, with the constant depending on $X$.

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I believe a consequence of the Riemann hypothesis in terms of number of points is that an n-dimensional smooth projective variety X will have $q^n+O(q^{n-1/2})$ points over $\mathbb{F}_q$, and the constant in front of $q^{n-1/2}$ is bounded above by the dimension of the dimension of $H^{2n-1}(X)$. However, this is not equivalent; the Riemann hypothesis gives you much better information about the number of points in relation to the cohomology.

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Brandon,
The Weil conjecture can easily be deduced from the point-counting estimate by way of the following lemma: If $a(j)$ are some finite set of complex numbers such that $| \sum_{j} a(j)^n | \leq A*B^n$ for all $n$ large, then each $a(j)$ satisfies $|a(j)| \leq B$. A one-line proof of this is given in Iwaniec-Kowalski on page 288. Anyway, let the $a(j)$ be the roots of the characteristic polynomial on $H^1$ over $F_q$, and then take $B=2g$ and $A=\sqrt{q}$.

Cheers, Dave

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