Prime Numbers and the Riemann Hypothesis 1st Edition
by
Barry Mazur
(Author)
ISBN-13:
978-1107499430
ISBN-10:
1107499437
Why is ISBN important?
ISBN
Scan an ISBN with your phone
Use the Amazon App to scan ISBNs and compare prices.
This bar-code number lets you verify that you're getting exactly the right version or edition of a book. The 13-digit and 10-digit formats both work.
Use the Amazon App to scan ISBNs and compare prices.
Add to book club
Loading your book clubs
There was a problem loading your book clubs. Please try again.
Not in a club?
Learn more
Join or create book clubs
Choose books together
Track your books
Bring your club to Amazon Book Clubs, start a new book club and invite your friends to join, or find a club that’s right for you for free.
In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
More Buying Choices
Frequently bought together
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
What other items do customers buy after viewing this item?
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
Editorial Reviews
Review
"This is an extraordinary book, really one of a kind. Written by two supreme experts, but aimed at the level of an undergraduate or curious amateur, it emphasizes the really powerful ideas, with the bare minimum of math notation and the maximum number of elegant and suggestive visuals. The authors explain why this legendary problem is so beautiful, why it is difficult, and why you should care."
Will Hearst, Hearst Corporation
"This book is a soaring ride, starting from the simplest ideas and ending with one of the deepest unsolved problems of mathematics. Unlike in many popular math books puffed up with anecdotal material, the authors here treat the reader as seriously interested in prime numbers and build up the real math in four stages with compelling graphical demonstrations revealing in deeper and deeper ways the hidden music of the primes. If you have ever wondered why so many mathematicians are obsessed with primes, here's the real deal."
David Mumford, Brown University, Rhode Island
"This is a delightful little book, not quite like anything else that I am aware of … a splendid piece of work, informative and valuable. Undergraduate mathematics majors, and the faculty who teach them, should derive considerable benefit from looking at it."
Mark Hunacek, MAA Reviews
'This book is divided into four parts, and succeeds beautifully in giving both an overview for the general audience and a sense of the details needed to understand how quickly the number of primes grows. This is accomplished through a very clear exposition and numerous illuminating pictures.' Steven Joel Miller, MathSciNet
'Where popularizers of mathematics usually succumb either to a journalist's penchant for ‘man bites dog’ irony and spectacle or a schoolteacher's iron will to simplify away the terror, one might call the distinctive approach here ‘take a lay reader to work’. Computers now provide mathematicians a laboratory, and the authors exploit this modern power to exhibit graphics, making the key equivalence a luminous phenomenon of experimental mathematics … for its clarity and the importance of its topic, this book deserves the same classic status as A Brief History of Time (CH, Jul'88). Summing Up: Essential. All readers.' D. V. Feldman, CHOICE
'Prime Numbers and the Riemann Hypothesis is an agile, unusual book written over a decade, one week per year; it can be considered a sort of collaborative work, in that each version was put online with the purpose of getting feedback.' Massimo Nespolo, Acta Crystallographica Section A: Foundations and Advances
'… a great gift for a curious student. Using the graphical methods found in calculus reform texts, this beautiful little book allows a patient reader with a good grasp of first-year calculus to explore the most famous unsolved problem in mathematics, the so-called Riemann Hypothesis, and to understand why it points to as yet undiscovered regularities in the distribution of prime numbers.' Donal O’Shea, The Herald Tribune
'The book under review succeeds handsomely in making the case for the Riemann Hypothesis to a wide audience … Beginning with the definition of prime numbers, the authors weave their way through concrete and picturesque presentations of elementary techniques and descriptions of unsolved problems connected with the primes. They provide many insightful footnotes, concrete and illuminating figures, pointers to arXiv pages for added information, and a rich set of endnotes that contain further descriptions and details with varying levels of sophistication. After 23 short sections (a few pages each) they have arrived at a formulation of the Riemann Hypothesis in terms of counting primes up to a given size. By this point in their masterful and compelling presentation, the Hypothesis appears to be completely natural and inevitable … I have no doubt that many newcomers to the subject who have read to the end of the book will be eager to learn more and will be drawn into this fertile playground.' Peter Sarnak, Bulletin of the AMS
'I really recommend this book if you want to get a feeling for the Riemann hypothesis without sinking into technicalities.' John Baez, The n-Category Café (http://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category)
Will Hearst, Hearst Corporation
"This book is a soaring ride, starting from the simplest ideas and ending with one of the deepest unsolved problems of mathematics. Unlike in many popular math books puffed up with anecdotal material, the authors here treat the reader as seriously interested in prime numbers and build up the real math in four stages with compelling graphical demonstrations revealing in deeper and deeper ways the hidden music of the primes. If you have ever wondered why so many mathematicians are obsessed with primes, here's the real deal."
David Mumford, Brown University, Rhode Island
"This is a delightful little book, not quite like anything else that I am aware of … a splendid piece of work, informative and valuable. Undergraduate mathematics majors, and the faculty who teach them, should derive considerable benefit from looking at it."
Mark Hunacek, MAA Reviews
'This book is divided into four parts, and succeeds beautifully in giving both an overview for the general audience and a sense of the details needed to understand how quickly the number of primes grows. This is accomplished through a very clear exposition and numerous illuminating pictures.' Steven Joel Miller, MathSciNet
'Where popularizers of mathematics usually succumb either to a journalist's penchant for ‘man bites dog’ irony and spectacle or a schoolteacher's iron will to simplify away the terror, one might call the distinctive approach here ‘take a lay reader to work’. Computers now provide mathematicians a laboratory, and the authors exploit this modern power to exhibit graphics, making the key equivalence a luminous phenomenon of experimental mathematics … for its clarity and the importance of its topic, this book deserves the same classic status as A Brief History of Time (CH, Jul'88). Summing Up: Essential. All readers.' D. V. Feldman, CHOICE
'Prime Numbers and the Riemann Hypothesis is an agile, unusual book written over a decade, one week per year; it can be considered a sort of collaborative work, in that each version was put online with the purpose of getting feedback.' Massimo Nespolo, Acta Crystallographica Section A: Foundations and Advances
'… a great gift for a curious student. Using the graphical methods found in calculus reform texts, this beautiful little book allows a patient reader with a good grasp of first-year calculus to explore the most famous unsolved problem in mathematics, the so-called Riemann Hypothesis, and to understand why it points to as yet undiscovered regularities in the distribution of prime numbers.' Donal O’Shea, The Herald Tribune
'The book under review succeeds handsomely in making the case for the Riemann Hypothesis to a wide audience … Beginning with the definition of prime numbers, the authors weave their way through concrete and picturesque presentations of elementary techniques and descriptions of unsolved problems connected with the primes. They provide many insightful footnotes, concrete and illuminating figures, pointers to arXiv pages for added information, and a rich set of endnotes that contain further descriptions and details with varying levels of sophistication. After 23 short sections (a few pages each) they have arrived at a formulation of the Riemann Hypothesis in terms of counting primes up to a given size. By this point in their masterful and compelling presentation, the Hypothesis appears to be completely natural and inevitable … I have no doubt that many newcomers to the subject who have read to the end of the book will be eager to learn more and will be drawn into this fertile playground.' Peter Sarnak, Bulletin of the AMS
'I really recommend this book if you want to get a feeling for the Riemann hypothesis without sinking into technicalities.' John Baez, The n-Category Café (http://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category)
Book Description
This book introduces prime numbers and explains the famous unsolved Riemann hypothesis.
About the Author
Barry Mazur is Gerhard Gade University Professor of Mathematics at Harvard University, Massachusetts. He is the author of Imagining Numbers: (Particularly the Square Root of Minus Fifteen) and co-editor, with Apostolos Doxiadis, of Circles Disturbed: The Interplay of Mathematics and Narrative.
William Stein is Professor of Mathematics at the University of Washington. Author of Elementary Number Theory: Primes, Congruences, and Secrets: A Computational Approach, he is also the founder of the Sage mathematical software project.
William Stein is Professor of Mathematics at the University of Washington. Author of Elementary Number Theory: Primes, Congruences, and Secrets: A Computational Approach, he is also the founder of the Sage mathematical software project.
Start reading Prime Numbers and the Riemann Hypothesis instantly on your Kindle Fire or on the free Kindle apps for iPad, Android tablet, PC or Mac. Don't have a free Kindle app? Get yours here
Audible Holiday Deal
Save 46% on your first 4 months. Get this deal
Product details
- Publisher : Cambridge University Press; 1st edition (April 1, 2016)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 150 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1107499437
- ISBN-13 : 978-1107499430
- Item Weight : 9.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.3 x 9 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#456,730 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #104 in Number Theory (Books)
- #2,261 in Mathematics (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
106 global ratings
How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2016
Verified Purchase
A couple of books on the Riemann hypothesis have appeared for the general public: Derbeshire 2003, Du Sautoiy 2003, Sabbagh 2003, Rockmore 2005, Watkins 2015, van der Veen and van der Craats 2015 and now Mazur-Stein 2016. More for mathematicians are Koblitz 1977, Edwards 2001, and Stopple 2003. From general expositions, one should also mention the paper of Conrey of 2003 which won the Conant prize for expository writing as well as a nice paper of Bombieri of 1992. Is this too much for the subject? No. A problem like the Riemann hypothesis can never be written too much about, especially if texts are written by experts. It is the open problems which drive mathematics. The Riemann hypothesis is the most urgent of all the open problems in math and like a good wine, the problem has become more valuable over time. What helped also is that since the time of Riemann, more and more connections with other fields of mathematics have emerged. The book of Veen-Craats and Mazur-Stein have emerged about at the same time. They are both small and well structured. Veen-Craats has been field tested with high school students and has focus mostly on the gorgeous Mangoldt explicit formula for the Chebychev prime distribution function, sometimes called the "music of the primes". Mazur-Stein do it similarly, however stress more on the Riemann spectrum and go didactically rather gently into the mathematics of Fourier theory as well as the theory of distributions. The book is carefully typeset, has color prints and some computer code for Sage. While Veen-Craats has many nice exercises, an exercise of Mazur-Stein led me to abandon other things for a couple of weeks, since it was so captivating. So be careful! A student who has taken basic calculus courses, should be able to read it. By the way, except Sabagh's book "Dr Riemann's zeros", which was written by a writer and journalist, the other books were created by professional mathematicians. The Mazur-Stein book has probably the best "street cred" among the RH books for the general audience: both have done important work in number theory, also related to zeta functions: Mazur's name is on one of the grand generalizations of the Riemann zeta functions, the Artin-Mazur zeta function which has exploded into a major tool under the lead of Ruelle who made it into a tool of dynamical systems and statistical mechanics. Other generalizations of zeta functions are spectrally defined and abundant in studies of differential geometry of a geometric space, one of the simplest cases being the circle, where it is the Riemann zeta function. Even other generalizations appear in algebraic geometry related to Diophantine equations and modular forms, where both authors, Mazur and Stein are leading experts working on the interplay between the analytic, geometric and number theoretic aspects of these functions. Additionally, Stein is the architect of the Sage computer algebra system. What distinguishes the book from the others? First of all, it is refreshingly short, gorgeous, inspiring and the publisher also kept it affordable. And since it can keep you caught, be prepared to shelf any other plans you might have while reading.
71 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2018
Verified Purchase
Nicely illustrated and written book. I totally recommend it but I feel I did not learn as much as I expected.
I wish, e.g., this book give a clue on why Riemann hypothesis is so important by describing some interesting theorems that use it for a proof. What is also the state of the art in search for proof of this hypothesis?
I wish, e.g., this book give a clue on why Riemann hypothesis is so important by describing some interesting theorems that use it for a proof. What is also the state of the art in search for proof of this hypothesis?
3 people found this helpful
Report abuse
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Concise Introduction to the Riemann Hypothesis for a Broad Spectrum of Math Readers
Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2018Verified Purchase
This is a very well written and concise presentation of the Riemann Hypothesis. The initial segment of the book is likely accessible by most readers and will afford a general understanding of this intriguing topic regarding the distribution of prime numbers. However, later sections of the book dive more deeply into the mathematics and therefore require a greater math background. The book is well illustrated with historical images as well as graphs demonstrating the intriguing output of the functions under consideration in the text.
5 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2018
Verified Purchase
I bought this book as a kindle edition for my iPad Pro. But I cannot read it on my device. There is something wrong
With Amazon’s system for this particular book. Mostly you just get blank pages. I bought other books from amazon,
novels, and had no problem reading them on my iPad. I am a mathematician and know that the authors, Mazur and
Stein, are excellent mathematicians. It is probably a great book if only you could read it.
Hugh M. Hilden.
With Amazon’s system for this particular book. Mostly you just get blank pages. I bought other books from amazon,
novels, and had no problem reading them on my iPad. I am a mathematician and know that the authors, Mazur and
Stein, are excellent mathematicians. It is probably a great book if only you could read it.
Hugh M. Hilden.
5 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2017
Verified Purchase
Prime Numbers and the Riemann Hypothesis by Barry Mazur and William Stein is a slender (142 pg.) book aimed at a varied audience of the mathematically curious. It is profusely illustrated, mainly with pictures of what the authors call the staircase of primes, a function that starts at zero and goes up by one each time a prime is encountered, though several recarpentried versions of the staircase also make the scene.
The book is divided into 38 very short chapters, organized into four sections, with the first and longest section (chapters 1-24) aimed at readers without a calculus background. The second section demands a bit of calculus (not much!) and the third some Fourier analysis, while the fourth gets to the nitty-gritty of the zeta function.
The figures and many of the calculations were done with Sage, a free mathware package developed by the second author, and made available to the eager experimenter.
The first section has a lot of the lore primes that is accessible at the elementary level, and that is a great deal. How many consecutive primes, for example, are separated by two (3-5, 5-7, 41-43,...)? Nobody knows. How many are separated by an even number less than or equal to 246? That turns out to be known to be infinitely many.
This isn't a textbook, and doesn't have problems, as such, but there are a few "you might try proving" suggestions. Here is the first one, a fairly good test of your basic algebra (or at least mine): A number of primes have the form 2^p - 1. Show that if p is not prime, then 2^p - 1 is composite (not prime). If that's too tough, try this: How many pairs of consecutive primes are separated by an odd number? ;-)
Along the way, we meet several different incarnations of the Riemann Hypothesis, the first one being: For any real number X the number of prime numbers less than X is approximately Li(X) and this approximation is essentially square root accurate. Here Li(X) is the log integral of X = Integral[(1/Log(t))dt, {t,0,X}]. (by Log we mean natural Log)
Sections II and III of the book are devoted building up the apparatus needed to transform this statement into Riemann's form, which looks superficially very different: All the non-trivial zeroes of the zeta function lie on the vertical line in the complex plain consisting of the complex numbers with real part 1/2. These zeroes are (1/2 plus or minus i*theta(i)) where the theta(i) comprise the spectrum of primes talked about in the earlier chapters.
Despite a good deal of verbiage devoted to the subject in the earlier chapters, I was never quite clear on exactly how these values are calculated, though I think that they are the Fourier transform of some version of the staircase of primes. I'd just like an equation that said theta(i) = some expression.
The book is divided into 38 very short chapters, organized into four sections, with the first and longest section (chapters 1-24) aimed at readers without a calculus background. The second section demands a bit of calculus (not much!) and the third some Fourier analysis, while the fourth gets to the nitty-gritty of the zeta function.
The figures and many of the calculations were done with Sage, a free mathware package developed by the second author, and made available to the eager experimenter.
The first section has a lot of the lore primes that is accessible at the elementary level, and that is a great deal. How many consecutive primes, for example, are separated by two (3-5, 5-7, 41-43,...)? Nobody knows. How many are separated by an even number less than or equal to 246? That turns out to be known to be infinitely many.
This isn't a textbook, and doesn't have problems, as such, but there are a few "you might try proving" suggestions. Here is the first one, a fairly good test of your basic algebra (or at least mine): A number of primes have the form 2^p - 1. Show that if p is not prime, then 2^p - 1 is composite (not prime). If that's too tough, try this: How many pairs of consecutive primes are separated by an odd number? ;-)
Along the way, we meet several different incarnations of the Riemann Hypothesis, the first one being: For any real number X the number of prime numbers less than X is approximately Li(X) and this approximation is essentially square root accurate. Here Li(X) is the log integral of X = Integral[(1/Log(t))dt, {t,0,X}]. (by Log we mean natural Log)
Sections II and III of the book are devoted building up the apparatus needed to transform this statement into Riemann's form, which looks superficially very different: All the non-trivial zeroes of the zeta function lie on the vertical line in the complex plain consisting of the complex numbers with real part 1/2. These zeroes are (1/2 plus or minus i*theta(i)) where the theta(i) comprise the spectrum of primes talked about in the earlier chapters.
Despite a good deal of verbiage devoted to the subject in the earlier chapters, I was never quite clear on exactly how these values are calculated, though I think that they are the Fourier transform of some version of the staircase of primes. I'd just like an equation that said theta(i) = some expression.
6 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2019
Verified Purchase
This is a brilliant book, written by brilliant authors, on a fascinating topic. They manage to explain a devilish problem for non-experts in such a way that when you finish it, you feel like you learned something solid. That is a very rare thing. Needless to say, this is a book I highly recommend.
4 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2018
Verified Purchase
Great compromise between appealing to a general audience and really covering the topic
2 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2019
Verified Purchase
very good book
Top reviews from other countries
W. Scott
3.0 out of 5 stars
Mathematical minds without the flair to connect with the novice.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 14, 2018Verified Purchase
This is beautifully produced, very clear print with coloured photos and graphs. But the idea that the Riemann Hypothesis can be conveyed this way in 140 pages with a lot of spacing is foolish, I believe. I have led five maths departments, served on a national committee on maths and have a fellowship in it but I struggled to penetrate it fully. I am not sure it can be done this way. Derbyshire's book is miles better, actually exciting. But there is a lot of numerical work here and that is a good idea. As a teacher I understand very well the difficulty of overcoming higher mathematical proofs like the Maxwell Equations, The Transcendence of e and pi but I think this little book fails, did not have a chance of success given its aims, despite the expertise of its authors.
I will try it again but I will go back to Derbyshire's more readily. The problem there was to convey in a graph of some kind the nature of the Zeta function with the complex numbers. Grasping the problem is the first problem. Everyone wants the chance to work on it fully, flat out for there is some structure to be discovered that is very illuminating, I sense.
I will try it again but I will go back to Derbyshire's more readily. The problem there was to convey in a graph of some kind the nature of the Zeta function with the complex numbers. Grasping the problem is the first problem. Everyone wants the chance to work on it fully, flat out for there is some structure to be discovered that is very illuminating, I sense.
6 people found this helpful
Report abuse
VIDAL Diego
3.0 out of 5 stars
Testo di medio valore, troppo stringato e poco innovativo
Reviewed in Italy on December 15, 2020Verified Purchase
Il testo è troppo conciso, abbastanza esauriente ma non esaustivo, non aggiunge nulla di nuovo rispettonad altri testi analoghi, e costa troppo in rapporto a quanto fornito.
Prabuddha Ghosh
5.0 out of 5 stars
Must Read !
Reviewed in India on March 11, 2020Verified Purchase
Shall highly encourage the reader to explore more on this dense subject together with several mathematical techniques. Crisp and sharp this is a marvellous book on mathematics .
Vincenzo
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hypothesis
Reviewed in Italy on November 22, 2018Verified Purchase
Scritto da due dei massimi studiosi della funzione Zeta. Fruibile da chi ha una buona conoscenza matematica a livello liceale. Da studiare.
mache
5.0 out of 5 stars
Easy to read
Reviewed in Canada on January 21, 2021Verified Purchase
An easy and interesting book to read.
Explore similar books
Tags that will help you discover similar books. 4 tags
mathematicsnumber theoryscience & mathpure mathematics
Results for:
Page 1 of 1Start overPage 1 of 1
- The Prime Number Conspiracy: The Biggest Ideas in Math from Quanta (The MIT Press)
Paperback$19.95$19.95
Where do clickable book tags come from?
Book tags are created from a variety of sources, some of which are customer-generated. Amazon is not legally responsible for the accuracy of the tags represented. If you are an author or publisher and would like to remove a tag associated with your title, please contact your vendor manager or publisher support team.













