Stahl's theorem

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In matrix analysis Stahl's theorem is a theorem proved in 2011 by Herbert Stahl concerning Laplace transforms for special matrix functions.[1] It originated in 1975 as the Bessis-Moussa-Villani (BMV) conjecture by Daniel Bessis, Pierre Moussa, and Marcel Villani.[2] In 2004 Elliott H. Lieb and Robert Seiringer gave two important reformulations of the BMV conjecture.[3] In 2015, Alexandre Eremenko gave a simplified proof of Stahl's theorem.[4]

In 2023, Otte Heinävaara proved a structure theorem for Hermitian matrices introducing tracial joint spectral measures that implies Stahl's theorem as a corollary.[5]

Statement of the theorem

Let tr denote the trace of a matrix. If A and B are n×n Hermitian matrices and B is positive semidefinite, define 𝐟(t)=tr(exp(AtB)), for all real t0. Then 𝐟 can be represented as the Laplace transform of a non-negative Borel measure μ on [0,). In other words, for all real t0,

𝐟(Template:Math) = [0,)etsdμ(s),

for some non-negative measure μ depending upon A and B.[6]

References