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Is it possible for a gram point to be a zero of zeta function?I guess it would never happen,although I do not have much evidence.

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What is a gram point ? Which zeta function to you have in mind ? The Riemann zeta function ? – Damian Rössler Oct 4 2011 at 14:47
Yes,I mean Riemann zeta function.As for definition of gram point,you can google it. – zy Oct 4 2011 at 14:55
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@zy: a good way to NOT get answers is to be a jerk. For this, and for the malformed question, I am voting to close. @Damian: mathworld.wolfram.com/GramPoint.html – Igor Rivin Oct 4 2011 at 14:57
For the sake of completenes I would also like to add that as far as I know typically Gram point is a real number, and I strongly suspect that it is not about zeroes at the Gran point but rather at 1/2 + i g where g is a Gram point. – quid Oct 4 2011 at 15:02
@quid: in fact, it seems (according to the mathworld page) that the Gram point is ALWAYS a real number, and there is some discussion of your supposed question in the entry as well, but I am not inclined to do the OP's homework for him... – Igor Rivin Oct 4 2011 at 15:07
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closed as too localized by Igor Rivin, Simon Thomas, quid, Andres Caicedo, David Roberts Oct 4 2011 at 23:17

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