In mathematics, Dedekind sums are certain sums of products of a sawtooth function s, and are given by a function D of three integer variables. They are named after the mathematician Richard Dedekind, who introduced them to express the functional equation of the Dedekind eta function. They have subsequently been much studied in number theory, and have occurred in some problems of topology. Dedekind sums obey a large number of relationships on themselves; this article lists only a tiny fraction of these.
Definition
Define the sawtooth function
as
.
Then the function
- D :Z3 → R
defined by
is called a Dedekind sum. For the case a=1, one often writes
- s(b,c) = D(1,b;c)
Alternate forms
For integers b > 0 and c > 0, one can also write
and
and
where the sum extends over ω the c 'th root of unity.
Properties
Note that for c > 0,
and more generally,
for b coprime to c, that is, (b,c)=1.
If
then
with the same sign being taken as in the congruence. Does this equation hold for general D(a,b;c) ??
If
then
.
If
then s(b,c) = 0.
Reciprocity law
If b > 0 and c > 0 and (b,c) = 1 then
It then follows that the number 6c s(b,c) is an integer.
If k = (3, c) then
and
A relation that is prominent in the theory of the Dedekind eta function is the following. Let q = 3, 5, 7 or 13 and let n = 24/(q − 1). Then given integers a, b, c, d with ad − bc = 1 (thus belonging to the modular group), with c chosen so that c = kq for some integer k > 0, define
Then one has nδ is an even integer.
References
- Tom M. Apostol, Modular functions and Dirichlet Series in Number Theory (1990), Springer-Verlag, New York. ISBN 0-387-97127-0 See chapter 3.
- Matthias Beck and Sinai Robins, Dedekind sums: a discrete geometric viewpoint, (2005 or earlier) [1]