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Published November 2021 | Submitted
Journal Article Open

Multiplicative functions that are close to their mean

Abstract

We introduce a simple sieve-theoretic approach to studying partial sums of multiplicative functions which are close to their mean value. This enables us to obtain various new results as well as strengthen existing results with new proofs. As a first application, we show that for a multiplicative function f:N → {−1,1},lim sup x → ∞|∑n ≤ x μ²(n)f(n)|= ∞. This confirms a conjecture of Aymone concerning the discrepancy of square-free supported multiplicative functions. Secondly, we show that a completely multiplicative function f:N → C satisfies ∑n ≤ x f(n) = cx+O(1) with c ≠ 0 if and only if f(p) = 1 for all but finitely many primes and |f(p)|< 1 for the remaining primes. This answers a question of Ruzsa. For the case c = 0, we show, under the additional hypothesis ∑p 1−|f(p)|p < ∞,that f has bounded partial sums if and only if f(p) = χ(p)p^(it) for some non-principal Dirichlet character χ modulo q and t ∈ R except on a finite set of primes that contains the primes dividing q, wherein |f(p)| < 1. This provides progress on another problem of Ruzsa and gives a new and simpler proof of a stronger form of Chudakov's conjecture. Along the way we obtain quantitative bounds for the discrepancy of the modified characters improving on the previous work of Borwein, Choi and Coons.

Additional Information

© 2021 American Mathematical Society. Received by the editors December 1, 2020, and, in revised form, February 18, 2021. Article electronically published on August 18, 2021. The fourth author was supported by a Titchmarsh Fellowship from the University of Oxford. The authors would like to warmly thank Marco Aymone for suggesting that our initial argument could lead to a proof of Theorem 1.1. We are grateful to the referee for a careful reading of the paper and many helpful comments. Finally, the first author greatly acknowledges support and excellent working conditions at the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics (Bonn).

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Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023