Fibre Rotation and Topological InvarianceThe prime distribution is encoded into a line bundle over a sphere (S²). As information is parallel-transported along a closed loop, each fibre picks up a phase rotation proportional to the curvature. The total rotation integrated over the entire sphere yields a topological quantity called the degree, equal to 2σ − 1. This integer-valued charge is rigid: no smooth deformation can alter it without changing σ. At the unique value σ = 1/2, the degree vanishes, the connection becomes identically zero on every patch, and the bundle collapses to the trivial flat bundle. The critical line is thus the geometric locus where the prime distribution achieves maximal isotropy on S². 2. Energy Conservation and the Heat Conduction AnalogyThe system lives on a cylinder (AdS₂ × S²) whose two boundary faces carry distinct physical identities: the NS-face (fluid dynamics) and the YM-face (gauge theory). The interior bulk field Z satisfies the Prime Burgers equation, and the Dirichlet-to-Neumann operator serves as the analogue of a heat conduction map — given the field value on the boundary (Dirichlet data), it returns the energy flux through that boundary (Neumann data). On-shell reduction converts the entire bulk energy into the sum of these two boundary contributions. Treating the cylinder as a closed thermodynamic system, the first law of thermodynamics requires dEbulk/dτ = 0, which directly forces the integrated energies to be equal: I₍ₒ = Iₘ₌. This equality is Cylinder Completeness — the statement that information entering through one face is perfectly recovered at the other, with no leakage and no divergence. 3. From a Zero of ζ to a Norm Balance: The Contrapositive ArgumentA key step in the framework is connecting the pointwise condition ζ (ρ) = 0 to the global energy balance I₍ₒ = Iₘ₌. The bridge is built as follows. Each prime p contributes a spiral vector vₚ = p^−σe^−it log p rotating at angular velocity log p. Since log p/log q is irrational for distinct primes p ≠ q (Baker–Wüstholz), these vectors never synchronise: by Weyl equidistribution, their phases spread uniformly over [0, 2π) and no persistent alignment is possible. The condition ζ (ρ) = 0 is precisely the statement that these vectors cancel globally. Now define the norm difference Δ (σ) = ‖f_ρ‖²ₔ䃑 − ‖f_ρ‖²ₔ䃒. Sign Rigidity (Lemma 12. 1) gives Δ (σ) > 0 for σ > 1/2 and Δ (σ) 0, then a persistent norm bias toward U₁ would mean partial vector alignment, contradicting ζ (ρ) = 0. Hence c = 0, and symmetrically on the left. The Squeeze Theorem then forces Δ (1/2) = 0, i. e. I₍ₒ = Iₘ₌, conditional on continuity of Δ (σ) — a verification that remains open and is stated precisely as Open Problem 0. 4. Mutual Restoration of NS Viscosity and YM Mass GapCylinder Completeness is not an independent axiom but a thermodynamic necessity. When the boundary energies balance, the intertwining operator T_σ between the two faces must be self-adjoint, a condition satisfied only at σ = 1/2. This single constraint simultaneously determines both faces. On the NS-face, it fixes the effective viscosity to νₑff = (3/4) τ^−1/2 ∈ ℝ⁺, guaranteeing smooth dissipation and hence regularity of the fluid. On the YM-face, the same condition forces the infrared spectral energy F (k) → 0, realising the mass gap. These two outcomes form what the framework calls a TT/FF pair: they share the same bulk origin (∇·Z = 0 → d⊥ = 2 → monotone energy decay), so the truth of one logically entails the truth of the other, and the failure of one simultaneously destroys both. The value σ = 1/2 is the single condition governing all three: RH, NS regularity, and the YM mass gap. 5. p-adic and Archimedean Balance as an Energy ConditionThe Archimedean norm assigns each Dirichlet element p^−s the weight p^−σ, while the p-adic norm assigns the conjugate weight p^+σ. The NS-face energy is weighted by the square of the Archimedean norm; the YM-face energy by the square of the p-adic norm. The thermodynamic energy balance I₍ₒ = Iₘ₌ therefore translates directly into the norm equation |p^−s|_∞ = |p^−s|ₚ, which holds if and only if p^−σ = p^σ, forcing σ = 1/2. In this reading, the equilibrium between the real-analytic world and the number-theoretic world is not an abstract algebraic identity from Ostrowski's theorem — it is the physical requirement that the cylinder distributes energy equally across its two boundary faces. 6. Transverse Modes, Oscillation Cancellation, and Monotone DecayThe divergence-free condition ∇·Z = 0 implements the Leray projection, which kills all longitudinal modes and retains only d⊥ = 2 transverse degrees of freedom. The resulting energy evolution carries two terms: a dissipative term proportional to Re (νₑff) and an oscillatory phase-mixing term proportional to Im (νₑff). At σ = 1/2, the effective viscosity is purely real, so the oscillatory term vanishes identically. Energy then decays monotonically as E (τ) ≤ E (0) e^−2νₑff|k|²τ, and this monotone decay drives the time-averaged spectral energy to zero at every wavenumber: F (k) → 0 as k → 0. This is the infrared realisation of the mass gap. Off the critical line, νₑff acquires an imaginary part, the phase-mixing term revives, energy transfer between the two faces becomes oscillatory, and the monotone structure — and with it the mass gap — is destroyed. 7. Discrete Prime Frequencies and the Bost–Connes ConnectionWhen the curvature collapses to zero at σ = 1/2, the continuous part of the bundle degenerates to the trivial bundle O (0). What survives is purely discrete: each prime p contributes a deck transformation with period 2π/log p, which is entirely independent of σ and therefore immune to the curvature collapse. These periods form the residual spectrum Specᵣes = 2π/log p: p prime. This is the number-theoretic analogue of a quantum system whose continuous energy band dissolves, leaving only discrete bound states. Each surviving frequency corresponds to a pure state of the Bost–Connes system at inverse temperature β = 1, with the deck lattice mapping onto the symmetry orbits of the arithmetic group ℤ̂×. The prime numbers thus persist as the irreducible spectral skeleton of the collapsed geometry. 8. The Hopf Fibration: 3D Bulk to 2D Boundary BridgeThe final step connects the three-dimensional bulk (ℝ³) to the two-dimensional boundary (S²) through the Hopf fibration S¹ → S³ → S². Since ℝ³ ∪ ∞ ≅ S³, the bulk field can be constructed on S³ and then restricted. A naive pullback would be constant along the S¹ fibres and generically violate the divergence-free condition. The correct construction uses the Hopf connection to decompose each tangent space into vertical (fibre) and horizontal (base) components, then lifts the boundary data so that the field varies only in the horizontal direction. A small fibre-direction correction tuned by a parameter ε restores ∇·Z = 0 globally. Because the Hopf map is a smooth Riemannian submersion between compact manifolds, Sobolev regularity passes from S² to S³ without loss, and the correction term is annihilated by the pushforward, preserving boundary consistency π_*Z = Z₀. This provides the geometric bridge for the regularity argument, with the small-data condition addressed separately as Gap-DtN-1.
Jeong Min Yeon (Sat,) studied this question.