2004, Paula B. Cohen, “Interactions between number theory and operator algebras in the study of the Riemann zeta function (d'apres Bost-Connes and Connes)”, in David Chudnovsky, Gregory Chudnovsky, Melvyn Bernard Nathanson, editors, Number Theory: New York Seminar 2003, Springer,, page 87:
The Riemann zeta functionis the function for a complex number whose real part is greater than 1.[…]The historical moments include Euler's proof that there are infinitely many primes, in which he proves
as well as Riemann's statement of his hypothesis and several others. Beineke and Hughes then define the moment of the modulus of the Riemann zeta function by
and take us through the work of several mathematicians on properties of the second and fourth moments.
(countable) A usage of (a specified value of) the Riemann zeta function, such as in an equation.
2005, Jay Jorgenson, Serge Lang, Posn(R) and Eisenstein Series, Springer, Lecture Notes in Mathematics 1868, page 134,