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In mathematics, the Cauchy–Hadamard theorem is a result in complex analysis named after the French mathematicians Augustin Louis Cauchy and Jacques Hadamard, describing the radius of convergence of a power series. It was published in 1821 by Cauchy, [1] but remained relatively unknown until Hadamard rediscovered it. [2]
Define the Hadamard canonical factors ():= = / Entire functions of finite order have Hadamard's canonical representation: [1] = = (/) where are those roots of that are not zero (), is the order of the zero of at = (the case = being taken to mean ()), a polynomial (whose degree we shall call ), and is the smallest non-negative integer such that the series = | | + converges.
Let H be a Hadamard matrix of order n.The transpose of H is closely related to its inverse.In fact: = where I n is the n × n identity matrix and H T is the transpose of H.To see that this is true, notice that the rows of H are all orthogonal vectors over the field of real numbers and each have length .
The Hadamard transform H m is a 2 m × 2 m matrix, the Hadamard matrix (scaled by a normalization factor), that transforms 2 m real numbers x n into 2 m real numbers X k.The Hadamard transform can be defined in two ways: recursively, or by using the binary (base-2) representation of the indices n and k.
The Hadamard product operates on identically shaped matrices and produces a third matrix of the same dimensions. In mathematics, the Hadamard product (also known as the element-wise product, entrywise product [1]: ch. 5 or Schur product [2]) is a binary operation that takes in two matrices of the same dimensions and returns a matrix of the multiplied corresponding elements.
In mathematics, the Hadamard product may refer to: Hadamard product of two matrices , the matrix such that each entry is the product of the corresponding entries of the input matrices Hadamard product of two power series , the power series whose coefficients are the product of the corresponding coefficients of the input series
In mathematics, Hadamard's inequality (also known as Hadamard's theorem on determinants [1]) is a result first published by Jacques Hadamard in 1893. [2] It is a bound on the determinant of a matrix whose entries are complex numbers in terms of the lengths of its column vectors.
The Walsh matrices are a special case of Hadamard matrices where the rows are rearranged so that the number of sign changes in a row is in increasing order. In short, a Hadamard matrix is defined by the recursive formula below and is naturally ordered, whereas a Walsh matrix is sequency-ordered. [1]