On Some Estimates in the Theory of Toeplitz Forms and Orthogonal Polynomials
Ya. L. Geronimus
Submitted 1957-01-01 | SovietRxiv: ru-195701.83950 | Translated from Russian

Abstract Generated abstract

The paper studies positive definite Toeplitz forms and the associated orthonormal polynomials on the unit circle, focusing on the rate at which the ratios of consecutive Toeplitz determinants approach their limiting value. It introduces the quantity measuring this deviation and relates it to Verblunsky parameters, to Szegő type conditions on the weight, and to asymptotic estimates for the reversed orthogonal polynomials. The results give bounds for polynomial growth and convergence errors in terms of this deviation, including conditions yielding uniform boundedness or boundary asymptotics. For absolutely continuous measures, further estimates are expressed through moduli of continuity and integrability properties of the weight and its reciprocal.

Full Text

Mathematics

Ya. L. Geronimus

ON SOME ESTIMATES IN THE THEORY OF TOEPLITZ FORMS AND ORTHOGONAL POLYNOMIALS

(Presented by Academician V. I. Smirnov on 23 V 1957)

  1. Consider the Toeplitz forms
    \[ T_n=\sum_{i,k=0}^{n} c_{i-k}x_i\overline{x}_k,\qquad c_{-n}=\overline{c}_n,\qquad \Delta_n=\left|c_{i-k}\right|_0^n \quad (n=0,1,2,\ldots); \tag{1} \]
    they are positive definite if \(\{\Delta_n\}_0^\infty>0\). Introduce the notation
    \[ h_n=\frac{\Delta_{n+1}}{\Delta_n}\qquad (n=0,1,2,\ldots). \tag{2} \]
    It is not difficult to prove that \(0<h_{n+1}\leq h_n\) \((^6)\); therefore there exists the limit
    \[ \lim_{n\to\infty} h_n=h\geq 0. \]
    We shall consider the quantity
    \[ \mu_n=h_n-h=h_n-\lim_{n\to\infty}h_n\qquad (n=0,1,2,\ldots) \tag{3} \]
    and indicate some estimates for it.

If one introduces the parameters \((({}^1), \text{pp. }36\text{--}38)\)
\[ a_n=\frac{(-1)^n}{\Delta_n}\left|c_{i-k+1}\right|_0^n,\qquad h_n=h_0\prod_{k=0}^{n-1}\{1-|a_k|^2\}\qquad (n=0,1,2,\ldots), \tag{4} \]
then it is clear that the conditions \(\{\Delta_n\}_0^\infty>0\) are equivalent to the conditions \(\{|a_n|\}_0^\infty<1\), and the condition \(h>0\) is equivalent to the convergence of the series \(\sum_{k=0}^{\infty}|a_k|^2\); consequently, when these conditions are fulfilled, we have the estimate of the quantity \(\mu_n\) in terms of the parameters:
\[ \frac{\mu_n}{h_n}=\left|1-\prod_{k=n}^{\infty}\{1-|a_k|^2\}\right|\sim \sum_{k=n}^{\infty}|a_k|^2,\qquad \mu_n=O\left\{\sum_{k=n}^{\infty}|a_k|^2\right\}. \tag{5} \]

  1. When the conditions \(\{\Delta_n\}_0^\infty>0\) are fulfilled, we have the representation
    \[ \frac{1}{2\pi}\int_0^{2\pi} e^{-ik\theta}\,d\sigma(\theta)=c_k\qquad (k=0,1,2,\ldots), \tag{6} \]
    where \(\sigma(\theta)\) is a bounded nondecreasing function with an infinite set of points of increase; if one introduces the polynomials \(\{P_n(z)\}\), orthonormal on the circle \(z=e^{i\theta}\), \(0\leq\theta\leq 2\pi\), with respect to the mass distribution \(d\sigma(\theta)\), then the quantity \(h_n\) also has the meaning
    \[ h_n=\frac{1}{\alpha_n^2},\qquad P_n(z)=\alpha_n z^n+\cdots\qquad (n=0,1,2,\ldots), \tag{7} \]

and, thus,

\[ \mu_n=\frac{1}{\alpha_n^2}-\frac{1}{\alpha^2},\qquad \lim_{n\to\infty}\alpha_n=\alpha\leqslant\infty, \tag{8} \]

The conditions

\[ h=\frac{1}{\alpha}>0,\qquad \sum_{k=0}^{\infty}|a_k|^2<\infty,\qquad \lg\sigma'(\theta)\in L_1 \tag{9} \]

are equivalent to one another by virtue of the relation ((7); (1), p. 38)

\[ h=\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{\Delta_{n+1}}{\Delta_n} =h_0\prod_{k=0}^{\infty}\{1-|a_k|^2\} =\exp\left\{\frac{1}{2\pi}\int_{0}^{2\pi}\lg\sigma'(\theta)\,d\theta\right\}; \tag{10} \]

in what follows we shall assume that these conditions are satisfied; they, in turn, are equivalent to the condition ((1), p. 21)

\[ \lim_{n\to\infty}P_n^*(z)=\pi(z) =\exp\left\{-\frac{1}{4\pi}\int_{0}^{2\pi} \frac{e^{i\theta}+z}{e^{i\theta}-z}\lg\sigma'(\theta)\,d\theta\right\}, \]

\[ |z|<1,\qquad P_n^*(z)=z^n\overline{P_n}\left(\frac{1}{z}\right), \tag{11} \]

and for \(|z|\leqslant r<1\) we have uniformly

\[ |P_n^*(z)-\pi(z)|=o\bigl(\sqrt{\mu_n}\bigr), \tag{12} \]

i.e., the error of the asymptotic formula inside the disk \(|z|<1\) is estimated by means of \(\mu_n\). We have the growth estimate for the orthonormal polynomials:

\[ |P_n(e^{i\theta})|=\max_{0\leqslant\theta<2\pi}|P_n(e^{i\theta})| \leqslant |\pi(re^{i\theta})|\bigl(C_1+C_2\sqrt{n\mu_n}\bigr),\qquad r=1-\frac{1}{2n}. \tag{13} \]

The case \(\mu_n=O(1/n)\) is especially interesting: then we may put \(C_2=0\) in (13). If, moreover, the condition

\[ \sigma(\theta_2)-\sigma(\theta_1)\geqslant m(\theta_2-\theta_1),\qquad 0\leqslant\theta_1<\theta_2\leqslant2\pi, \tag{14} \]

is satisfied, then in the closed disk \(|z|\leqslant1\) the estimate

\[ |P_n(z)|\leqslant C_3+C_4\sqrt{n\mu_n},\qquad |z|\leqslant1 \tag{15} \]

holds. If both conditions are satisfied, the entire orthonormal system is uniformly bounded in the closed disk \((^2)\).

If \(\mu_n=o(1/n)\), then, under (14), at every point \(z_0=e^{i\theta_0}\) at which there exists the radial boundary value \(\pi(e^{i\theta_0})\), we have

\[ |P_n^*(z_0)-\pi(z_0)| \leqslant \lambda_n,\qquad \lambda_n=C_1^3\sqrt{n\mu_n}+C_2|\pi(z_0)-\pi(rz_0)|,\qquad r=1-\mu_n^{1/3}n^{-2/3}. \tag{16} \]

Under the more restrictive condition

\[ \sum_{n=1}^{\infty}\sqrt{\frac{\mu_n}{n}}<\infty \]

the function \(\sigma(\theta)\) is absolutely continuous on the whole interval \([0,2\pi]\), the function \(\pi(z)\) is continuous in the closed disk, and the asymptotic formula (16) holds with error estimate \((^5)\)

\[ \lambda_n=C\sum_{k=n+1}^{\infty}\sqrt{\frac{\mu_k}{k}}. \tag{17} \]

Let us indicate still other estimates expressed in terms of the quantity \(\mu_n\):

\[ \frac{1}{2\pi}\int_0^{2\pi}\left|\frac{P_n^+(e^{i\theta})}{\pi(e^{i\theta})}-1\right|^2\,d\theta \le C_1\mu_n;\qquad \frac{1}{2\pi}\int_0^{2\pi}|P_n(e^{i\theta})|^2\,d\sigma_1(\theta)\le C_2\mu_n; \tag{18} \]

\(\sigma_1(\theta)\) is the sum of the jump function and the singular component of the function \(\sigma(\theta)\).

  1. As we have shown, many estimates are connected with the quantity \(\mu_n\); therefore it is very important to find estimates for \(\mu_n\). From estimate (5) it is clear that \(\mu_n\)

Table 1

Conditions imposed on the weight \(p(\theta)\), \(0\le \theta\le 2\pi\) Upper estimates for the quantity \(\sqrt{\mu_n}\)
I \(0<m\le p(\theta)\le M\) \(C_1\omega_2\left(\dfrac{1}{n};p\right)\) or \(C_2\sqrt{\omega_1\left(\dfrac{1}{n};p\right)}\)
II \(0<m\le p(\theta)\) \(C_1\omega_4\left(\dfrac{1}{n};\lg p\right)+C_2\omega_2\left(\dfrac{1}{n};p\right)\)

or \(C_3\sqrt{\omega_1\left(\dfrac{1}{n};p\right)}\)
III \(p(\theta)\in L_r,\ \dfrac{1}{p(\theta)}\in L_{r'},\)

\(\dfrac{1}{r}+\dfrac{1}{r'}=1,\ r>1\)
\(C_1\omega_{2r}\left(\dfrac{1}{n};\sqrt{p}\right)+C_2\omega_4\left(\dfrac{2}{n};\lg p\right)\)

or \(C_3\sqrt{\omega_r\left(\dfrac{1}{n};p\right)}\)
IV \(\dfrac{1}{p(\theta)}\in L_1,\ p(\theta)\le M\) \(C_1\omega_4\left(\dfrac{1}{n};\lg p\right)+C_2\omega_2\left(\dfrac{1}{n};\dfrac{1}{\sqrt{p}}\right)\)

or \(C_3\sqrt{\omega_1\left(\dfrac{1}{n};\dfrac{1}{p}\right)}\)
V \(\displaystyle \lim_{\delta\to 0} I(\delta)=0.\) \(C_1\sqrt{I\left(\dfrac{1}{n}\right)}\)

can tend to zero arbitrarily slowly, since the parameters \(\{a_n\}\) may be chosen quite arbitrarily, provided only that the conditions

\[ |a_n|<1,\qquad n=0,1,2,\ldots,\qquad \sum_{n=0}^{\infty}|a_n|^2<\infty \tag{19} \]

are satisfied.

Assuming that the function \(\sigma(\theta)\) is absolutely continuous on the whole interval \([0,2\pi]\), and introducing the notation

\[ \omega_r(\delta;f)=\sup_{|h|\le\delta}\|f(\theta+h)-f(\theta)\|_r,\qquad f\in L_r, \]

\[ I(\delta)=\sup_{|h|\le\delta}\left\{\frac{1}{2\pi}\int_0^{2\pi}\frac{|p(\theta+h)-p(\theta)|}{p(\theta)}\,d\theta\right\}, \]

we indicate in Table 1 some estimates for the quantity \(\mu_n\), expressed in terms of the structural characteristics of the weight \(p(\theta)=\sigma'(\theta)\).

Kharkov Aviation Institute

Received
21 V 1957

REFERENCES

  1. Ya. L. Geronimus, Communications of the Kharkov Mathematical Society, ser. 4, 19, 35 (1948).
  2. Ya. L. Geronimus, DAN, 83, No. 1 (1952).
  3. Ya. L. Geronimus, DAN, 88, No. 2 (1953).
  4. Ya. L. Geronimus, DAN, 106, No. 2 (1956).
  5. Ya. L. Geronimus, DAN, 88, No. 4 (1953).
  6. G. Szegő, Math. Zs., 6, 167 (1920); 9, 167 (1921).
  7. S. Verblunsky, Proc. Lond. Math. Soc., 40, 290 (1935).

Submission history

On Some Estimates in the Theory of Toeplitz Forms and Orthogonal Polynomials