Proof of the Riemann Hypothesis
–Proved with the Flower of Life and Eisenstein Lattice Constraint
This video introduces my new paper (1.1.2026) presenting a first-principles geometric proof of the Riemann Hypothesis—one of the seven Millennium Prize Problems that has remained unsolved for over 165 years.
Rather than attacking the problem through traditional analytic number theory, I propose that the critical line Re(s) = ½ emerges inevitably from dimensional necessity. The key insight: prime number fluctuations behave as boundary phenomena in a two-dimensional geometric space, and boundaries are always one dimension lower than the bulk they enclose.
THE THREE PILLARS OF THE PROOF:
1. The Boundary Dominance Theorem
Any exponential sum bounded by O(√N) must have its controlling zeros on the line Re(s) = ½. This isn’t a coincidence—it’s geometric inevitability. The √N bound reflects the dimensional ratio between 1D boundaries and 2D bulk space.
2. The Resolution Principle
Phase coherence in the zeta function can only be maintained when zeros align on a single vertical line. Any deviation from Re(s) = ½ creates destructive interference that violates the functional equation’s symmetry requirements.
3. The Neutral Spin Enforcement Theorem
The symmetry s ↔ (1-s) in the functional equation acts as a forcing condition. Zeros cannot exist off the critical line because they would require asymmetric “spin” states that the functional equation explicitly forbids.
THE HARMONIC SUBSTITUTION (√10)
I also introduce a novel approach: replacing the imaginary unit i with -1/√10 in key analytical expressions. This substitution—rooted in the unique self-referential properties of √10—transforms oscillatory behavior into exponential decay, revealing the “harmonic collapse” mechanism that governs zero placement.
WHY THIS MATTERS:
The Riemann Hypothesis controls the error term in the Prime Number Theorem. Proving it true confirms that primes are distributed as regularly as mathematically possible—their apparent randomness is an illusion created by observing boundary effects from within the system itself.
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