posted on 2025-05-08, 14:21authored byJonathan M. Borwein, David M. Bradley, David J. Broadhurst, Petr Lisoněk
Historically, the polylogarithm has attracted specialists and nonspecialists alike with its lovely evaluations. Much the same can be said for Euler sums (or multiple harmonic sums), which, within the past decade, have arisen in combinatorics, knot theory and high-energy physics. More recently, we have been forced to consider multidimensional extensions encompassing the classical polylogarithm, Euler sums, and the Riemann zeta function. Here, we provide a general framework within which previously isolated results can now be properly understood. Applying the theory developed herein, we prove several previously conjectured evaluations, including an intriguing conjecture of Don Zagier.
History
Journal title
Transactions of the American Mathematical Society
Volume
353
Issue
3
Pagination
907-941
Publisher
American Mathematical Society
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Science and Information Technology
School
School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences
Rights statement
First published in Transactions of the American Mathematical Society in Vol. 353, No. 3, pp. 907-941, 2001, published by the American Mathematical Society.