Szegő limit theorems

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Template:Short description In mathematical analysis, the Szegő limit theorems describe the asymptotic behaviour of the determinants of large Toeplitz matrices.[1][2][3] They were first proved by Gábor Szegő.

Notation

Let w be a Fourier series with Fourier coefficients ck, relating to each other as

w(θ)=k=ckeikθ,θ[0,2π],
ck=12π02πw(θ)eikθdθ,

such that the n×n Toeplitz matrices Tn(w)=(ckl)0k,ln1 are Hermitian, i.e., if Tn(w)=Tn(w) then ck=ck. Then both w and eigenvalues (λm(n))0mn1 are real-valued and the determinant of Tn(w) is given by

detTn(w)=m=1n1λm(n).

Szegő theorem

Under suitable assumptions the Szegő theorem states that

limn1nm=0n1F(λm(n))=12π02πF(w(θ))dθ

for any function F that is continuous on the range of w. In particular Template:NumBlk

such that the arithmetic mean of λ(n) converges to the integral of w.[4]

First Szegő theorem

The first Szegő theorem[1][3][5] states that, if right-hand side of (Template:EquationNote) holds and w0, then Template:NumBlk

holds for w>0 and wL1. The RHS of (Template:EquationNote) is the geometric mean of w (well-defined by the arithmetic-geometric mean inequality).

Second Szegő theorem

Let c^k be the Fourier coefficient of logwL1, written as

c^k=12π02πlog(w(θ))eikθdθ

The second (or strong) Szegő theorem[1][6] states that, if w0, then

limndetTn(w)e(n+1)c^0=exp(k=1k|c^k|2).

See also

References

Template:Reflist