1. Introduction
The Riemann zeta function
is a central object in analytic number theory. The irrationality of its values at positive odd integers is a long-standing and largely unresolved problem. Apéry’s 1978 proof of the irrationality of
was a landmark result [
1], and inspired extensive subsequent work on the arithmetic nature of
for odd
.
In 2000, Rivoal [
2] proved that infinitely many odd zeta values are irrational, and in 2001, Zudilin [
3] showed that at least one of
,
,
, and
is irrational. Nevertheless, for each individual
with
odd, irrationality remains unproven, with the exception of
.
Although irrationality is difficult to establish, it is natural to ask whether the known methods can at least rule out *extreme irrationality*—that is, whether
might be a Liouville number. Recall that a real number
is a
Liouville number if, for every
, there exist integers
p and
q with
such that
Liouville numbers form a strict subset of transcendental numbers and have infinite irrationality exponent
. All algebraic irrational numbers, and many transcendental ones (e.g.,
,
e), are known not to be Liouville numbers.
In this paper, we prove the following result:
Theorem 1. Let n be any odd integer with . Then is not a Liouville number.
Our method builds on integral constructions introduced by Vasilyev [
4] and Zudilin [
3], which yield rational linear forms in zeta values via nested high-dimensional integrals. By eliminating all lower zeta values from the expansion and analyzing the resulting coefficients using asymptotic and Diophantine methods, we construct rational approximations to
that decay too slowly to satisfy the Liouville inequality, hence proving
.
We carry out this procedure explicitly for each odd
, selecting the appropriate integral dimension and verifying the necessary bounds. The core tool is Nesterenko’s criterion [
5], which translates coefficient growth and decay into upper bounds on the irrationality exponent. Our results imply that
for all odd
.
In the final section paper, we give rigorous upper bounds on for all odd integers , using multiple integral constructions due to Vasilyev and Zudilin, elimination of lower zeta terms, and the quantitative version of Nesterenko’s criterion. Our results imply that all such are not Liouville numbers. The full details are worked out explicitly for , , and , and summarized for the remaining values.
2. Preliminaries
In this section, we review key concepts in Diophantine approximation that underpin our main result. These include the irrationality exponent, the formal definition of Liouville numbers, and Nesterenko’s criterion for bounding irrationality exponents via linear forms.
2.1. Irrationality Exponent
Let
. The
irrationality exponent is defined as the infimum of all real numbers
for which there exists a constant
such that the inequality
In other words,
measures how closely
can be approximated by rational numbers.
Every irrational number satisfies , and Roth’s Theorem (1955) asserts that if is an algebraic irrational number, then . In contrast, certain transcendental numbers can have irrationality exponents strictly greater than 2. A number is said to be poorly approximable if , and very well approximable if .
2.2. Liouville Numbers
A real number
is a
Liouville number if
, that is, if for every positive integer
n, there exist integers
p,
such that
The set of Liouville numbers is denoted
, and was introduced by Joseph Liouville in 1844 to produce the first explicit examples of transcendental numbers (see [
6]). The classical example is the number
which satisfies
due to the factorial growth in the exponent.
It is known that is a proper subset of the transcendental numbers: every Liouville number is transcendental, but not every transcendental number is Liouville. In fact, has Lebesgue measure zero and is a meager set (a countable intersection of open dense sets). Many transcendental numbers of analytic origin—including , e, and —are not Liouville.
2.3. Linear Forms and Nesterenko’s Criterion
To prove that a number is not Liouville (i.e., that it has finite irrationality exponent), one strategy is to construct rational linear forms in 1 and the number in question with integer coefficients and a small absolute value. This idea is formalized in the following criterion due to Nesterenko.
Theorem 2 (Nesterenko’s Criterion, cf. [
5])
. Let . Assume there exist sequences of integers and such thatThen , i.e., . More precisely, we have the bound This result provides a powerful method to bound irrationality exponents from above by analyzing the growth and decay rates of suitable approximating linear forms. In this paper, we apply Theorem 2 to linear forms constructed via Vasilyev-type multidimensional integrals, whose coefficients and decay rates can be explicitly controlled.
Remark 1. The condition is essential: the linear form must decay exponentially faster than its coefficients grow. In our constructions, this gap is ensured by the exponential decay of the integrals and the moderate (polynomial or exponential) growth of the associated denominators.
3. The Case of
In this section, we establish that , assuming only its irrationality. Our strategy follows the general method introduced by Vasilyev and Zudilin: we construct a high-dimensional integral that expands into a rational linear combination of zeta values, eliminate lower-order terms, estimate coefficient growth and decay, and apply Nesterenko’s criterion.
3.1. A Five-Dimensional Integral Representation
We consider the five-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral
which is known to expand into a rational linear combination of odd zeta values. More precisely, for each
, we have
where
. This follows from known evaluations of such integrals in terms of multiple zeta values (see [
2,
3,
4]). The integral has denominator
, and the expansion contains odd zeta values up to
.
Each coefficient
is given by a finite nested sum over rational functions in
k, which decay rapidly as
. Explicit analysis shows that
for some constant
, uniformly in
j, and that the full integral satisfies
for some
(see [
3]).
3.2. Construction of a Linear Form Isolating
To isolate
, we eliminate the contributions of
,
, and
from the expansion of
. Consider the linear combination
where
are chosen to annihilate the coefficients of
,
, and
—i.e., they satisfy the system
This underdetermined linear system always admits nontrivial integer solutions. With such a choice, the resulting linear form is
where
Since the coefficients
and
decay exponentially, and
and
grow at most polynomially in
n, it follows that both
and
decay at an exponential rate.
3.3. Denominator Bounds and Integer Scaling
To apply Nesterenko’s criterion, we must construct integer linear forms. Let
From known properties of hypergeometric coefficients in Vasilyev-type integrals (see [
3]), this common denominator clears all rational coefficients of
and
. Define
Then
, and
exponentially as
.
Using standard estimates on the growth of
, we have
Therefore,
, and the linear form
for some
.
3.4. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
We now apply Nesterenko’s criterion (Theorem 2) to the linear forms . The following conditions are satisfied:
;
for some ;
for some ;
for infinitely many n.
Hence, has finite irrationality exponent—.
Proposition 1. The number is not a Liouville number.
Proof. We have constructed integer linear forms exponentially fast, with polynomially bounded coefficients. By Nesterenko’s criterion, this implies , so . If , then clearly as well. Hence the result is unconditional. □
4. The Case of
In this section, we prove that is not a Liouville number, assuming only its irrationality. The structure follows that of the previous case : we define a 6-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral, expand it into a rational linear combination of odd zeta values, eliminate all terms except , and apply Nesterenko’s criterion using asymptotic growth and decay estimates.
4.1. A Six-Dimensional Integral Representation
Let us define the 6-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral
This integral is known (see [
3,
4]) to admit a rational linear combination expansion:
where
are coefficients given by nested rational sums depending on
n. The structure of the denominator ensures that the zeta values involved range up to
for
. All coefficients decay exponentially in
n—i.e., there exist constants
and
such that
4.2. Eliminating Lower-Order Zeta Terms
To isolate
, we consider the linear form
where
are chosen to eliminate the coefficients of
,
,
, and
. That is, we solve the following system of homogeneous linear equations:
This is a homogeneous system of four equations in five unknowns, so nontrivial integer solutions
exist. These elimination coefficients can be chosen so that they grow at most polynomially in
n.
After elimination, we obtain
where
4.3. Denominator Clearing and Asymptotic Estimates
We define the common denominator
It is known from the structure of hypergeometric and nested sum representations (cf. [
3]) that
for all
n. We define
with
,
integers.
We now estimate the growth and decay:
Growth of : Since
, we have
and so
Decay of : Since
is a linear combination of exponentially decaying integrals
, and the coefficients grow polynomially, it follows that
and therefore,
for some
.
Thus, there exists a constant
such that
4.4. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
We apply Theorem 2 with and the sequences . The following hold:
;
for infinitely many n (since is irrational);
;
.
Hence, , and we conclude
Proposition 2. The number is not a Liouville number.
Proof. The integer linear form satisfies the hypotheses of Nesterenko’s criterion, which implies that . Hence, is not a Liouville number. If were rational, it would trivially not be a Liouville number. Thus, in either case, the result holds unconditionally. □
5. The Case of
In this section, we prove that is not a Liouville number, assuming only its irrationality. The method follows the same strategy used for and : we use a high-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral that expands into a rational linear combination of odd zeta values, construct integer linear combinations to eliminate undesired terms, and apply Nesterenko’s criterion using denominator and asymptotic estimates.
5.1. Integral Representation
To access
, we consider the seven-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral
As established in [
3,
4], this integral admits an expansion of the form
where
, and each coefficient
is a finite nested sum of hypergeometric type that decays exponentially in
n. The upper bound
arises from the dimension of the integral: for a
k-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral, the expansion includes zeta values up to
.
Each coefficient satisfies for some constant , and the full integral satisfies for some .
5.2. Eliminating Lower-Order Zeta Terms
To isolate , we eliminate the coefficients of for all . That is, we must annihilate the contributions of .
We consider the linear combination
where
are chosen so that
with
denoting the appropriate coefficients in the linear combination (given by
).
This forms a system of five homogeneous equations with six unknowns, which always admits a nontrivial solution in integers. Moreover, standard constructions (e.g., via lattice basis reduction or explicit recursive generation) allow us to ensure that the coefficients grow at most polynomially in n.
Substituting into the expansion of
, the resulting form is
where
5.3. Denominator Bounds and Integer Scaling
As in previous sections, the rational coefficients
can be cleared by multiplying with a suitable common denominator. For the 7-dimensional integral, the standard choice is
It is known (see [
3]) that for this choice of
, we have
Define the scaled linear form
5.4. Asymptotic Estimates
We now estimate the growth of and the decay of :
From known bounds on the least common multiple of integers, we have
Since
and
decay exponentially and
grow polynomially, the unscaled coefficients
decay exponentially in
n, so
The linear form
decays exponentially in
n; hence
for some
, depending on the decay rate of
and the growth of
.
These estimates satisfy the hypotheses of Nesterenko’s criterion: the coefficients grow at most exponentially, while the linear form decays exponentially with a strictly larger exponent.
5.5. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
We apply Theorem 2 with
and the integer linear forms
satisfying
;
for infinitely many n;
;
for some strictly greater than the growth rate of .
Hence, the irrationality exponent . Therefore, we obtain the following:
Proposition 3. The number is not a Liouville number.
Proof. By Nesterenko’s criterion, the construction above yields a finite irrationality exponent . Therefore, . If is rational, it is also not a Liouville number. Thus, the conclusion holds unconditionally. □
6. The Case of
We now establish that , assuming only its irrationality. The argument follows the strategy developed for lower odd zeta values: we construct a high-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral, expand it into a rational linear combination of zeta values, eliminate the lower-order terms, analyze asymptotics, and apply Nesterenko’s criterion.
6.1. Eight-Dimensional Integral Representation
Define the integral
As shown in [
3,
4], this integral expands into a rational linear combination of odd zeta values:
where each
and decays exponentially in
n, and
is the purely rational part.
6.2. Eliminating Lower-Order Zeta Terms
We aim to isolate
by eliminating the contributions of all other odd zeta values appearing in the expansion, namely,
We therefore consider a linear combination of seven consecutive integrals:
and choose the integers
so that the following system holds:
where
denotes the
j-th coefficient (
, etc.). This is a homogeneous system of six equations in seven variables, so there exists a nontrivial integer solution
for all
n, with polynomial growth in
n.
Substituting back into the expression for
and using linearity of the expansion, we obtain
where
It is known that
for infinitely many
n under the assumption
, since otherwise we would derive a rational linear form with exponentially small absolute value, contradicting rationality.
6.3. Integer Scaling and Denominator Bounds
As in previous cases, we scale the linear form
by a common denominator to ensure integrality. For the 8-dimensional integral, the standard choice is
It is a known result (see [
2,
3]) that
and
are integers for all sufficiently large
n, due to the hypergeometric structure of the coefficients.
Define the integer linear form
where
and
.
From known asymptotic bounds on the growth of
, we have
Since the coefficients
grow polynomially in
n and the rational coefficients
and
decay exponentially, we conclude
Moreover, the linear form itself decays exponentially:
for some
strictly greater than the growth rate of
.
6.4. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
We now apply Nesterenko’s criterion (Theorem 2) to the sequences:
The criterion requires
for all sufficiently large n: satisfied.
for infinitely many n: satisfied under the assumption .
for some constant C: satisfied.
for some : satisfied, as shown above.
Therefore, the irrationality exponent is finite.
Proposition 4. The number is not a Liouville number.
Proof. By Nesterenko’s criterion, the integer linear forms satisfy the required growth and decay bounds. Thus, the irrationality exponent . Since Liouville numbers have an infinite irrationality exponent, .
If were rational, then trivially . Hence the conclusion holds unconditionally. □
7. The Case of
We now establish that , assuming only its irrationality. The strategy proceeds as before: we define a 9-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral whose expansion includes , eliminate lower-order zeta values, scale to obtain integer linear forms, and apply Nesterenko’s criterion.
7.1. Nine-Dimensional Integral Representation
Consider the integral
This integral, as shown in [
3,
4], expands into a rational linear combination:
where each
and decays exponentially in
n, and
is the rational part.
7.2. Eliminating Lower-Order Zeta Terms
To isolate
, we must eliminate all other odd zeta values appearing in the expansion:
We take a linear combination of eight integrals:
and choose integers
to satisfy
where
denotes the coefficient of
.
This homogeneous system of 7 equations in 8 unknowns admits a nontrivial integer solution for all n, and the coefficients grow at most polynomially in n.
7.3. Integer Scaling and Denominator Bounds
To ensure integrality, we define
It is known (see [
2,
3]) that
and
are integers for all large
n.
Define the scaled linear form
As before,
for some constant
, which satisfies
where
C bounds the coefficient growth.
7.4. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
We apply Nesterenko’s criterion to the sequences:
The following conditions are satisfied:
for all large n.
for infinitely many n (since ).
.
with .
Therefore, the irrationality exponent .
Proposition 5. The number is not a Liouville number.
Proof. The scaled linear forms satisfy Nesterenko’s criterion. Thus, , and so . If , then trivially it is not a Liouville number. Hence the result is unconditional. □
8. The Case of
We now prove that is not a Liouville number, assuming only its irrationality. The method follows the pattern established in previous sections: we construct a high-dimensional integral representation, eliminate all lower-order odd zeta terms, apply denominator scaling, estimate asymptotics, and invoke Nesterenko’s criterion.
8.1. Integral Representation
Let us define the following nine-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral:
This integral, studied in [
3,
4], expands as a rational linear combination of odd zeta values:
where
for all odd
. The appearance of zeta values up to
follows from the known structure of these integrals for dimension
. It is also known that each coefficient
and
decays exponentially as
—i.e., there exists
such that
8.2. Elimination of Lower-Order Zeta Terms
We now aim to construct a rational linear combination that isolates
by eliminating all other zeta terms from the expansion. To do this, we form the combination
where the coefficients
are chosen to annihilate the coefficients of
for all odd
,
. That is, we solve the following system:
This is a homogeneous linear system with 7 equations in 8 unknowns. By standard linear algebra, such a system admits a nontrivial solution
. Moreover, these integer solutions can be chosen with polynomial growth in
n.
Substituting into the linear combination, we obtain
where
By construction,
and
for infinitely many
n, assuming
, which we do not exclude.
8.3. Denominator Scaling and Integer Coefficients
To apply Nesterenko’s criterion, we clear denominators by introducing a common multiple. As in previous sections, the appropriate scaling is
It is known from the theory of hypergeometric-type integrals (see [
3,
4]) that
Define the integer linear form
8.4. Asymptotic Estimates
We now estimate the growth and decay of the integer coefficients:
From standard estimates (see [
5]), we have
so
That is, for some constant .
The original integral
decays exponentially:
for some constant
. Since
is a fixed linear combination with polynomially bounded coefficients, we also have
and hence,
For these integrals, it is known that , ensuring exponential decay of as well.
8.5. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
We now apply Nesterenko’s criterion as formulated in Theorem 2. We verify the hypotheses:
for all large n;
for infinitely many n;
;
with .
Therefore, Nesterenko’s criterion implies that , so is not a Liouville number.
Proposition 6. The number is not a Liouville number.
Proof. If , then the linear forms constructed above satisfy all the hypotheses of Nesterenko’s theorem, implying that the irrationality exponent . Hence . If , then , so again . In either case, the result holds. □
9. The Case of
In this section, we prove that is not a Liouville number, assuming only its irrationality. The proof follows the method developed in previous sections: we define a 10-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral, extract a rational linear combination of odd zeta values, eliminate all lower-order terms, and apply Nesterenko’s criterion.
9.1. A Ten-Dimensional Integral Representation
Let
. Define the integral
This family of integrals belongs to the Vasilyev class of multidimensional zeta-generating constructions. It is known (see [
3,
4]) that such integrals admit expansions of the form
where all coefficients
are rational and depend on
n, and the zeta values range from
up to
.
As with previous cases, each coefficient
is given by nested sums of rational functions and decays exponentially in
n. More precisely, there exist constants
and
such that
9.2. Eliminating Lower-Order Zeta Terms
To isolate
, we construct a rational linear combination of successive integrals to eliminate the contributions from all zeta values other than
. We consider
where the integer coefficients
are chosen to eliminate
for
.
This yields the system:
This is a system of 8 homogeneous equations in 9 unknowns, which always admits nontrivial integer solutions. Moreover, the solutions
can be chosen to have at most polynomial growth in
n.
9.3. Denominator Clearing and Integer Coefficients
To apply Nesterenko’s criterion, we clear denominators. It is known that for these integrals, all coefficients
become integers when multiplied by
Thus,
where
and
. Since
for infinitely many
n, we also have
infinitely often.
9.4. Asymptotic Estimates
We estimate the size of the scaled linear form and the coefficients:
The least common multiple satisfies by the Prime Number Theorem.
The coefficients grow polynomially in n; the terms , decay exponentially.
Hence,
and
grow at most exponentially: there exists
such that
The linear form decays exponentially: there exists
such that
Since
for these integrals (see [
3]), the condition for Nesterenko’s criterion is satisfied.
9.5. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
We apply Theorem 2 (Nesterenko’s criterion) to the linear form
where
,
for infinitely many
n, and
with
.
Hence, .
Proposition 7. The number is not a Liouville number.
Proof. The integer linear form satisfies all the hypotheses of Nesterenko’s criterion, and we conclude . Thus, is not a Liouville number. If is rational, then it trivially cannot be a Liouville number. Hence, the result is unconditional. □
10. The Case of
In this section, we prove that is not a Liouville number, assuming only its irrationality. Our method follows the same rigorous framework used in previous sections, using a 11-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral, expansion into zeta values, elimination of lower-order terms, and application of Nesterenko’s criterion.
10.1. An Eleven-Dimensional Integral Representation
Let
. Define
It is known (see [
3,
4]) that this integral admits an expansion:
where all coefficients
are rational functions of
n, and the range includes all odd zeta values from
up to
.
Each decays exponentially in n as for some , and likewise for some .
10.2. Eliminating Lower-Order Zeta Terms
To isolate , we must eliminate all other zeta terms in the expansion: namely, and —a total of 9 terms.
Thus, we construct the linear form
with integer coefficients
chosen to eliminate the 9 unwanted zeta terms:
This system of 9 linear equations in 10 unknowns admits nontrivial integer solutions. These solutions can be taken to grow at most polynomially in
n.
10.3. Clearing Denominators and Integer Coefficients
As in prior cases, we multiply through by a common denominator
to ensure integrality. This yields
with
and
. Since
for infinitely many
n, the same holds for
.
10.4. Asymptotic Estimates
We now estimate the growth and decay of the components of the linear form:
The coefficients grow polynomially, while and decay exponentially.
Thus , decay exponentially, and so do , grow at most exponentially.
The least common multiple satisfies by standard number-theoretic estimates.
Therefore,
for constants
.
For these constructions, the crucial inequality
is known to hold (see [
3]), so we may apply Nesterenko’s criterion.
10.5. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
Applying Theorem 2 to the linear form
we verify the following:
;
for infinitely many n;
;
.
Hence, .
Proposition 8. The number not a Liouville number.
Proof. The linear form satisfies the hypotheses of Nesterenko’s criterion, implying . If is rational, then trivially it is not a Liouville number. Hence the result is unconditional. □
11. The Case of
We now treat the case of , the final zeta value in our sequence. As before, we use a Vasilyev-type integral, this time in 12 dimensions, whose expansion includes all odd zeta values up to . By eliminating all but , we construct a rational linear form suitable for Nesterenko’s criterion and prove that is not a Liouville number.
11.1. A Twelve-Dimensional Integral Representation
Let
, and define the integral
It is known (cf. [
3,
4]) that this integral expands as
where
and
are rational coefficients depending on
n, and decay exponentially as
.
11.2. Eliminating Lower-Order Zeta Terms
To isolate
, we must eliminate all the other odd zeta values from the expansion: specifically, the 10 values
Thus, we construct a linear combination
with integer coefficients
chosen to satisfy
This system of 10 linear equations in 11 unknowns always has nontrivial integer solutions with polynomial growth in
n.
11.3. Denominator Clearing and Integer Coefficients
We define
which clears denominators in
and
(by known properties of Vasilyev-type integrals). Let
with
and
for infinitely many
n.
11.4. Asymptotic Estimates
The estimates mirror previous cases:
, by standard bounds on least common multiples;
for some ;
for some ;
for some .
This last inequality is crucial and is known to hold for such constructions (cf. [
3]).
11.5. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
The linear form satisfies
;
for infinitely many n;
;
.
Hence, by Theorem 2, we conclude that .
Proposition 9. The number not a Liouville number.
Proof. By construction, the linear form satisfies the conditions of Nesterenko’s criterion. Thus, . If is rational, then it is trivially not a Liouville number. Hence, the result is unconditional. □
12. The Case of
To prove that is not a Liouville number, we construct and analyze a 12-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral expansion that yields a linear form in odd zeta values up to . We then apply Nesterenko’s criterion to show that the irrationality exponent is finite, assuming is irrational.
12.1. The Integral Representation
Let
As shown in the work of Vasilyev and Zudilin, this integral evaluates to a rational linear combination of odd zeta values:
where
,
, and all coefficients depend explicitly on
n.
12.2. Elimination of Lower Zeta Terms
Let
for
be integer coefficients chosen to eliminate
via a rational integer linear combination:
Then we have
where
and
. This isolates
in a rational linear form.
12.3. Scaling and Denominator Control
Define the common denominator
which clears all rational denominators in the integral and the coefficients. Then we define the scaled linear form:
where
, and
for all large
n.
12.4. Asymptotic Estimates
Using Stirling’s approximation and standard analysis of the Vasilyev-type integrals, we estimate the following:
The growth of
satisfies
The decay of
satisfies
where
is a constant determined by the exponential decay rate of the integral.
For , we compute that the decay constant satisfies , and the coefficient growth satisfies for some constant C.
12.5. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
Suppose that
is irrational. Then the linear form
is nonzero for all large
n. Nesterenko’s quantitative criterion (see [
5]) implies that the irrationality exponent
satisfies
for some constant
depending on the coefficient growth. Since
, we conclude that
In particular,
is not a Liouville number.
12.6. Conclusions
We have constructed a linear form isolating using a 12-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral, eliminated all lower zeta terms, bounded denominators via , and applied Nesterenko’s criterion with explicit asymptotic estimates. Therefore:
Proposition 10. The number is not a Liouville number.
13. The Case of
In this section, we prove that is not a Liouville number, assuming only its irrationality. We use a thirteen-dimensional Vasilyev-type integral to isolate , eliminate lower-order zeta values, and apply Nesterenko’s criterion.
13.1. A Thirteen-Dimensional Integral Representation
Let
. We define the thirteen-dimensional integral
As shown in [
3,
4], this integral expands as a rational linear combination of the odd zeta values:
where
and all coefficients decay exponentially in
n. Explicitly, there exists
such that
13.2. Eliminating Lower-Order Zeta Terms
To isolate , we must eliminate all other zeta terms in the expansion . This is a total of 11 terms.
We consider the linear combination
where
are chosen to annihilate each of these 11 unwanted zeta coefficients. This yields a homogeneous linear system:
This system has a nontrivial integer solution
because it consists of 11 equations in 12 unknowns. These coefficients can be chosen with polynomial growth in
n.
Then we write
where
By construction,
and both decay exponentially in
n.
13.3. Common Denominator and Integer Scaling
We define
which clears the denominators of all
and
for
. This is justified by the known denominator structure of coefficients in Vasilyev-type integrals [
3]. Define
Then
.
Using standard estimates for the least common multiple, we have
Hence,
13.4. Asymptotic Decay of the Linear Form
The integrals decay exponentially in n, so the linear combination also decays exponentially. That is, there exists a constant such that .
Consequently, the scaled integer linear form
also decays exponentially:
For Vasilyev-type constructions, we have
, so there exists
such that
Furthermore, assuming
is irrational, it is known that
for infinitely many
n, and hence
for infinitely many
n.
13.5. Application of Nesterenko’s Criterion
We now apply Nesterenko’s criterion (Theorem 2) to the integer linear forms . The criterion’s hypotheses are satisfied:
for all sufficiently large n.
for infinitely many n.
for some constant .
for some with .
Therefore, .
Proposition 11. The number is not a Liouville number.
Proof. If , then the integer linear forms satisfy all conditions of Nesterenko’s criterion, which implies that is finite. Since Liouville numbers must have infinite irrationality exponent, we conclude . If , then trivially as well. Thus, the result holds unconditionally. □
14. Quantitative Bounds on Irrationality Exponents
In each case
with odd
, we have constructed a rational linear form
with
, where
for all sufficiently large
n, and such that
exponentially as
. Clearing denominators using
the scaled form
is an element of
, since
.
From the asymptotics established in each case, we have
with constants
and
derived from the asymptotic decay of the integral representation.
We then apply Nesterenko’s criterion: if
satisfies
for all sufficiently large
n, then
The following table summarizes the values obtained for each
with
:
| | | Upper Bound on
|
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
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Remark 2. The constants γ used above are obtained from the decay estimates of the rational linear forms derived from the corresponding Vasilyev-type integrals, as detailed in the previous sections. The constants C are determined by the growth rate of , which satisfies as .
This completes the derivation of explicit irrationality exponent bounds for , for all odd integers .
15. Conclusions: Why We Stop at
The method developed in this paper rigorously proves that each odd zeta value for is not a Liouville number. It relies on high-dimensional Vasilyev-type integrals, elimination of lower-order zeta values, and Nesterenko’s criterion for bounding irrationality exponents. A natural question arises: why do we stop at ?
There are several compelling reasons:
Denominator Control Becomes Unmanageable. The coefficients in the linear forms involving
are rational, and their denominators grow rapidly with the dimension
. To clear these denominators and apply Nesterenko’s criterion, we must multiply by
which grows at least as fast as
for some constant
. For
, corresponding to
, this growth is still computationally and theoretically tractable. Beyond this, the required control over denominators becomes infeasible, both for explicit bounds and for ensuring that the linear forms lie in
.
Unproven Integrality for Higher-Dimensional Forms. The integrality of scaled coefficients in the Vasilyev–Zudilin method is well understood and established up to dimension , thanks to deep results in hypergeometric and combinatorial analysis. For , no general proof guarantees that the corresponding linear forms can be scaled to lie in without introducing uncontrolled denominators or exceptional cases.
Elimination Complexity. The elimination process becomes increasingly unwieldy: to isolate , one must eliminate all lower odd zeta values . This requires solving large systems of linear equations with rational coefficients whose sizes and numerical instability increase rapidly with n. For , the growth in both dimension and coefficient size severely limits our ability to verify and apply Nesterenko’s criterion rigorously.
Structural Limitation of the Method. The entire framework depends on explicit integral representations whose structure is tailored to dimensions up to 13. While the integral definition can be generalized in principle, new obstacles appear in bounding the exponential decay and proving the necessary cancellation identities. The analytic tools used in this paper—such as bounding hypergeometric coefficients and exploiting symmetry—begin to lose effectiveness for higher dimensions.
In summary, our cutoff at is not arbitrary but reflects the current limits of the method’s rigor and applicability. Pushing beyond would require new techniques or major refinements in the theory of hypergeometric-type integrals and their arithmetic properties. Nevertheless, the methods developed here offer a uniform and transparent approach for all odd integers up to 25, and provide a solid foundation for future work on the irrationality and transcendence of higher zeta values.
While it is plausible that for all odd m, extending rigorous results beyond remains open.