The Mertens function slowly grows in positive and negative directions both on average and in peak value, oscillating in an apparently chaotic manner passing through zero when n has the values Because the Möbius function only takes the values −1, 0, and +1, the Mertens function moves slowly and there is no x such that |M| > x. The Mertens conjecture went further, stating that there would be no x where the absolute value of the Mertens function exceeds the square root ofx. The Mertens conjecture was proven false in 1985 by Andrew Odlyzko and Herman te Riele. However, the Riemann hypothesis is equivalent to a weaker conjecture on the growth of M, namely M = O. Since high values for M grow at least as fast as, this puts a rather tight bound on its rate of growth. Here, O refers to Big O notation. The true rate of growth of M is not known. An unpublished conjecture of Steve Gonek states that Probabilistic evidence towards this conjecture is given by Nathan Ng. In particular, Ng gives a conditional proof that the function has a limiting distribution on. That is, for all bounded Lipschitz continuous functions on the reals we have that
Representations
As an integral
Using the Euler product one finds that where is the Riemann zeta function and the product is taken over primes. Then, using this Dirichlet series with Perron's formula, one obtains: where c > 1. Conversely, one has the Mellin transform which holds for. A curious relation given by Mertens himself involving the second Chebyshev function is Assuming that the Riemann zeta function has no multiple non-trivial zeros, one has the "exact formula" by the residue theorem: Weyl conjectured that the Mertens function satisfied the approximate functional-differential equation where H is the Heaviside step function, B are Bernoulli numbers and all derivatives with respect tot are evaluated at t = 0. There is also a trace formula involving a sum over the Möbius function and zeros of the Riemann zeta function in the form where the first sum on the right-hand side is taken over the non-trivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function, and are related by the Fourier transform, such that
As a sum over Farey sequences
Another formula for the Mertens function is This formula is used in the proof of the Franel–Landau theorem.
Neither of the methods mentioned previously leads to practical algorithms to calculate the Mertens function. Using sieve methods similar to those used in prime counting, the Mertens function has been computed for all integers up to an increasing range of x. The Mertens function for all integer values up to x may be computed in O time. Combinatorial based algorithms can compute isolated values of M in O time, and faster non-combinatorial methods are also known. See for values of M at powers of 10.
Ng notes that the Riemann hypothesis is equivalent to for some positive constant. Other upper bounds have been obtained by Maier, Montgomery, and Soundarajan assuming the RH including Other explicit upper bounds are given by Kotnik as