A class of conservative summability methods that are not potent (Q2367338): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 06:54, 5 March 2024
scientific article
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English | A class of conservative summability methods that are not potent |
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A class of conservative summability methods that are not potent (English)
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9 August 1993
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Let \(A\) be a conservative matrix method of summability. \(A\) is said to be potent if every matrix \(H\) that sums all \(A\)-summable sequences of 0's and 1's will also sum all \(A\)-summable bounded sequences. The authors prove five theorems which provide a large class of conservative matrices that are easily identifiable as being not potent. They prove that the condition \(\sup_ k| a_{nk}|\to 0\) as \(n\to\infty\) is not sufficient for a regular matrix \(A\) to be potent.
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matrix method of summability
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