- Silverman–Toeplitz theorem
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In mathematics, the Silverman–Toeplitz theorem, first proved by Otto Toeplitz, is a result in summability theory characterizing matrix summability methods that are regular. A regular matrix summability method is a matrix transformation of a convergent sequence which preserves the limit.
Silverman–Toeplitz theorem
An infinite matrix
with complex-valued entries defines a regular summability method if and only if it satisfies all of the following properties
(every column sequence converges to 0)
(the row sums converge to 1)
(the absolute row sums are bounded).
References
- Toeplitz, Otto (1911) "Über die lineare Mittelbildungen." Prace mat.-fiz., 22, 113–118 (the original paper in German)
- Silverman, Louis Lazarus (1913) "On the definition of the sum of a divergent series." University of Missouri Studies, Math. Series I, 1–96
Categories:- Mathematical analysis
- Theorems in analysis
- Summability methods
- Summability theory
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