A Converse of the Gauss–Lucas Theorem
DOI10.4169/AMER.MATH.MONTHLY.121.06.541zbMATH Open1303.30006DBLPjournals/tamm/NikolovS14arXiv1307.8236OpenAlexW1566387723WikidataQ58158494 ScholiaQ58158494MaRDI QIDQ2928657FDOQ2928657
Authors: Nikolai Nikolov, Blagovest Sendov
Publication date: 10 November 2014
Published in: American Mathematical Monthly (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1307.8236
Polynomials and rational functions of one complex variable (30C10) Zeros of polynomials, rational functions, and other analytic functions of one complex variable (e.g., zeros of functions with bounded Dirichlet integral) (30C15)
Cited In (6)
- Critical points of polynomials
- Some recent results on the geometry of complex polynomials: the Gauss-Lucas theorem, polynomial lemniscates, shape analysis, and conformal equivalence
- Analogue of Gauss-Lucas theorem for non convex set on the complex plane
- More on the Converse of Lagrange's Theorem
- On the Converse of Lagrange's Theorem
- A converse of the Gelfand theorem
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