Tauberian

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Tauber +‎ -ian, specifically referring to Austrian and Slovak mathematician Alfred Tauber (1866-1942).

Adjective[edit]

Tauberian (not comparable)

  1. (mathematical analysis) Being or relating to Tauberian theorems, a class of theorems that are partial converses to Abelian theorems.
    • 1992, Dissertation Abstracts International, page 326:
      In the third chapter we obtain characterizations of Tauberian convergence classes in the limiting case and representations of Fourier and Fourier-Stieltjes coefficients.
    • 2003, B. N. Prasad, “1966, Chandigarh - B. N. Prasad”, in The Shaping of Indian Science, Indian Science Congress Association Presidential Addresses, Volume 2: 1948-1981, Universities Press, page 916:
      Lorentz has developed a general method for obtaining Tauberian conditions for absolute summability.
    • 2004, Jacob Korevaar, Tauberian Theory: A Century of Developments, Springer, page 142:
      In this section we use ideas from the proof of Proposition 4.3 to obtain a convergence theorem involving more general Tauberian conditions.

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