Extention of the Laurinčikas–Matsumoto theorem
A. Vaiginytė Vilnius University, Lithuania
Abstract:
In 1975, S. M. Voronin discovered the remarkable universality property of the Riemann zeta-function
$\zeta(s)$. He proved that analytic functions from a wide class can be approximated with a given accuracy by shifts
$\zeta(s+i\tau)$,
$\tau \in \mathbb{R},$ of one and the
same function
$\zeta(s)$. The Voronin discovery inspired to continue investigations in the field. It turned out that some other zeta and
$L$-functions as well as certain classes of Dirichlet series are universal in the Voronin sense. Among them, Dirichlet
$L$-functions, Dedekind, Hurwitz and Lerch zeta-functions. In 2001, A. Laurinčikas and K. Matsumoto obtained the universality of zeta-functions
$\zeta(s, F)$ attached to certain cusp forms
$F$. In the paper, the extention of the Laurinčikas-Matsumoto theorem is given by using the shifts
$\zeta (s+i \varphi(\tau), F)$ for the approximation of analytic functions. Here
$\varphi(\tau)$ is a differentiable real-valued positive increasing function, having, for
$\tau \geqslant \tau_0,$ the monotonic continuous positive derivative, satisfying, for
$\tau \rightarrow \infty,$ the conditions
${\frac{1}{\varphi'(\tau)}=o(\tau)}$ and $\varphi(2 \tau) \max_{\tau \leqslant t \leqslant 2\tau} \frac{1}{\varphi'(t)} \ll \tau$. More precisely, in the paper it is proved that, if
$\kappa$ is the weight of the cusp form
$F$,
$K$ is the compact subset of the strip $\left\{s \in \mathbb{C}: \frac{\kappa}{2} < \sigma < \frac{\kappa+1}{2} \right\}$ with connected complement, and
$f(s)$ is a continuous non-vanishing function on
$K$ which is analytic in the interior of
$K,$ then , for every
$\varepsilon > 0,$ the set $\left\{\tau \in \mathbb{R}: \sup_{s \in K} | \zeta (s+i \varphi(\tau), F)-f(s) |< \varepsilon \right\}$ has a positive lower density.
Keywords:
zeta-function of cusp forms, Hecke-eigen cusp form, universality.
UDC:
511 Received: 09.01.2019
Accepted: 10.04.2019
Language: English
DOI:
10.22405/2226-8383-2018-20-1-82-93