Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Ihara zeta function

In mathematics, the Ihara zeta function is a zeta function associated with a finite graph. It closely resembles the Selberg zeta function, and is used to relate closed walks to the spectrum of the adjacency matrix. The Ihara zeta function was first defined by Yasutaka Ihara in the 1960s in the context of discrete subgroups of the two-by-two p-adic special linear group. Jean-Pierre Serre suggested in his book Trees that Ihara's original definition can be reinterpreted graph-theoretically. It was Toshikazu Sunada who put this suggestion into practice in 1985. As observed by Sunada, a regular graph is a Ramanujan graph if and only if its Ihara zeta function satisfies an analogue of the Riemann hypothesis.[1]

  1. ^ Terras (1999) p. 678

Previous Page Next Page






Funció zeta d'Ihara Catalan Función zeta de Ihara Spanish Fonction zêta d'Ihara French 伊原のゼータ函数 Japanese 이하라 제타 함수 Korean Funcția zeta Ihara Romanian

Responsive image

Responsive image