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Are there examples of Mellin transforms of functions $ \int_{0}^{\infty}f(x)x^{s-1}\mathrm dx$ that have only real zeroes or have only zeroes on the critical line?

For example, the Mellin transform of the Hermite polynomials has zeroes on the critical line $\mathrm{Re}(s)=1/2$. Can this fact be extended to the Mellin transform of any function $ f(x)$ which is its own Fourier transform ? $ F(f(x))=kf(x) $

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The 'modified' Bessel function, or MacDonald's function, is more or less a Mellin transform of the order $s$: $ K_s(x)=\frac12(\frac x2)^s\int_0^\infty\exp(-t-(x^2/4t))t^{-s}\frac{dt}{t} $ once you swap $s$ for $-s$ and move the leading term to the other side. And $K_s(x)=K_{-s}(x)$, so $K_{it}(x)$ is real for real $x$. I believe all the zeros of $K_s$, as a function of $s$, are on the imaginary axis, but I can't find the reference. Polya did some work with this in connection to the Riemann Hypothesis.

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    [This](http://dlmf.nist.gov/10.42) mentions a few facts about the zeroes of the modified Bessel function of the second kind. [This](http://dlmf.nist.gov/10.45) talks a bit about "imaginary order" modified Bessel functions.2011-10-20