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On the Number of Primes Less Than a Given Magnitude

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On the Number of Primes Less Than a Given Magnitude

This is an important nine-page paper written by a mathematician named Bernhard Riemann. He published it in November 1859 in a journal called the Monatsberichte der Königlich Preußischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin.

This paper is often called very important because it gave new ideas about prime numbers. Prime numbers are numbers greater than one that can only be divided evenly by one and themselves. For example, 2, 3, 5, and 7 are prime numbers.

Riemann tried to answer an interesting question: how many prime numbers are there below a certain big number? This question helps mathematicians understand patterns in numbers and has become useful in many areas of science and technology today.

The work is short but powerful, and it opened up new ways to study numbers that are still used by mathematicians around the world.

Overview

This paper by Bernhard Riemann looks at the prime-counting function using analytic methods. Even though it is the only paper Riemann wrote about number theory, its ideas have inspired many researchers. The paper introduces important definitions, like the Greek letter zeta (ζ), and makes guesses about where the roots of this function might be.

Riemann also showed new ways to study these functions and their links to prime numbers. He explained how primes are spread out and gave a formula to guess how many there are up to a certain number. His work helped create many modern tools used in number studies today.

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