Lambert summation method
2020 Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary: 40C [MSN][ZBL]
A summation method for summing series of complex numbers which assigns a sum to certain divergent series: it is regular in that it assigns the sum in the usual sense to any convergent series (an Abelian theorem). The series is summable by Lambert's method to the number A, written {} = A \ \mathrm{(L)} if \lim_{y \searrow 0} F(y) = A where F(y) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty a_n \frac{n y \exp(-ny)}{1-\exp(-ny)} for y>0, if the series on the right-hand side converges. The method was proposed by J.H. Lambert [1]. The summability of a series by the Cesàro summation method (C,k) for some k > -1 (cf. Cesàro summation methods) to the sum A implies its summability by the Lambert method to the same sum, and if the series is summable by the Lambert method to the sum A, then it is also summable by the Abel summation method to the same sum.
As an example, \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{\mu(n)}{n} = 0\ \mathrm{(L)} where \mu is the Möbius function. Hence if this series converges at all, it converges to zero.
References
[1] | J.H. Lambert, "Anlage zur Architektonik" , 2 , Riga (1771) |
[2] | G.H. Hardy, "Divergent series" , Clarendon Press (1949) |
[3] | Jacob Korevaar (2004). "Tauberian theory. A century of developments". Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften 329. Springer-Verlag (2004). ISBN 3-540-21058-X. p. 18. |
[4] | Hugh L. Montgomery; Robert C. Vaughan (2007). "Multiplicative number theory I. Classical theory". Cambridge tracts in advanced mathematics 97. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press (2007). ISBN 0-521-84903-9. pp. 159–160. |
[5] | Norbert Wiener "Tauberian theorems". Ann. Of Math. 33 (1932) 1–100. DOI 10.2307/1968102. JSTOR 1968102. |
Lambert summation method. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Lambert_summation_method&oldid=30244