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== Generalizations ==
== Generalizations ==
A far-reaching generalization of Bohr-Mollerup's theorem to a wide variety of functions is given in the following open access book:
A far-reaching generalization of Bohr-Mollerup's theorem to a wide variety of functions (that have convexity or concavity properties of any order) is given in the following open access book:


J.-L. Marichal and N. Zenaïdi, [https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-95088-0 ''A Generalization of Bohr-Mollerup's Theorem for Higher Order Convex Functions'']. Developments in Mathematics, Vol. 70. Springer, Cham, Switzerland, 2022.
{{cite book|author1=J.-L. Marichal|author2=N. Zenaïdi|url=https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-95088-0|title=A Generalization of Bohr-Mollerup's Theorem for Higher Order Convex Functions|publisher=Developments in Mathematics, Vol. 70. Springer, Cham, Switzerland|date=2022}}


== See also ==
== See also ==

Revision as of 21:33, 23 February 2023

In mathematical analysis, the Bohr–Mollerup theorem is a theorem proved by the Danish mathematicians Harald Bohr and Johannes Mollerup. The theorem characterizes the gamma function, defined for x > 0 by

as the only positive function  f , with domain on the interval x > 0, that simultaneously has the following three properties:

A treatment of this theorem is in Artin's book The Gamma Function, which has been reprinted by the AMS in a collection of Artin's writings.

The theorem was first published in a textbook on complex analysis, as Bohr and Mollerup thought it had already been proved.

Statement

Bohr–Mollerup Theorem.     Γ(x) is the only function that satisfies  f (x + 1) = x f (x) with log( f (x)) convex and also with  f (1) = 1.

Proof

Let Γ(x) be a function with the assumed properties established above: Γ(x + 1) = xΓ(x) and log(Γ(x)) is convex, and Γ(1) = 1. From Γ(x + 1) = xΓ(x) we can establish

The purpose of the stipulation that Γ(1) = 1 forces the Γ(x + 1) = xΓ(x) property to duplicate the factorials of the integers so we can conclude now that Γ(n) = (n − 1)! if nN and if Γ(x) exists at all. Because of our relation for Γ(x + n), if we can fully understand Γ(x) for 0 < x ≤ 1 then we understand Γ(x) for all values of x.

For x1, x2, the slope S(x1, x2) of the line segment connecting the points (x1, log(Γ (x1))) and (x2, log(Γ (x2))) is monotonically increasing in each argument with x1 < x2 since we have stipulated that log(Γ(x)) is convex. Thus, we know that

After simplifying using the various properties of the logarithm, and then exponentiating (which preserves the inequalities since the exponential function is monotonically increasing) we obtain

From previous work this expands to

and so

The last line is a strong statement. In particular, it is true for all values of n. That is Γ(x) is not greater than the right hand side for any choice of n and likewise, Γ(x) is not less than the left hand side for any other choice of n. Each single inequality stands alone and may be interpreted as an independent statement. Because of this fact, we are free to choose different values of n for the RHS and the LHS. In particular, if we keep n for the RHS and choose n + 1 for the LHS we get:

It is evident from this last line that a function is being sandwiched between two expressions, a common analysis technique to prove various things such as the existence of a limit, or convergence. Let n → ∞:

so the left side of the last inequality is driven to equal the right side in the limit and

is sandwiched in between. This can only mean that

In the context of this proof this means that

has the three specified properties belonging to Γ(x). Also, the proof provides a specific expression for Γ(x). And the final critical part of the proof is to remember that the limit of a sequence is unique. This means that for any choice of 0 < x ≤ 1 only one possible number Γ(x) can exist. Therefore, there is no other function with all the properties assigned to Γ(x).

The remaining loose end is the question of proving that Γ(x) makes sense for all x where

exists. The problem is that our first double inequality

was constructed with the constraint 0 < x ≤ 1. If, say, x > 1 then the fact that S is monotonically increasing would make S(n + 1, n) < S(n + x, n), contradicting the inequality upon which the entire proof is constructed. However,

which demonstrates how to bootstrap Γ(x) to all values of x where the limit is defined.

Generalizations

A far-reaching generalization of Bohr-Mollerup's theorem to a wide variety of functions (that have convexity or concavity properties of any order) is given in the following open access book:

J.-L. Marichal; N. Zenaïdi (2022). A Generalization of Bohr-Mollerup's Theorem for Higher Order Convex Functions. Developments in Mathematics, Vol. 70. Springer, Cham, Switzerland.

See also

References