Tauberian theorem

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

After Austrian and Slovak mathematician Alfred Tauber (1866-1942).

Noun[edit]

Tauberian theorem (plural Tauberian theorems)

  1. (mathematical analysis) Any of a class of theorems which, for a given Abelian theorem, specifies conditions such that any series whose Abel sums converge (as stipulated by the Abelian theorem) is in fact convergent.
    • 1957, Einar Hille, Ralph Saul Phillips, Functional Analysis and Semi-groups, Part 1, American Mathematical Society, page 117:
      Paragraph five deals with (A*)-algebras and contains a proof of a vector-valued variant of Wiener's Tauberian theorem.
    • 1988, Staff writer, Foreword, [1933, Norbert Wiener, The Fourier Integral and Certain of Its Applications], Cambridge University Press, 1988 reissue, page xi,
      Not only did the general Tauberian theorem give a unifying view on questions involving summations and limits, but it introduced a paradigm for what was called abstract harmonic analysis a few years later. [] Generalized harmonic analysis is the subject-matter of the last chapter, though it was conceived before the Tauberian theorems.
    • 2000, Johann Boos, F. Peter Cass, Classical and Modern Methods in Summability, Oxford University Press, page 167:
      We should emphasize that our main concern is — besides the presentation of Tauberian theorems in the case of special summability methods — to put, by way of examples, different methods in the hands of the reader to prove Tauberian theorems in the case of special summability methods.

Usage notes[edit]

G. H. Hardy describes Tauberian theorems as corrected forms of the false converse of Abelian theorems.[1]

Coordinate terms[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ 1949, G. H. Hardy, Divergent Series, 1991, 2nd Edition (textually unaltered), Chelsea Publishing, page 149.

Further reading[edit]