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Equidistributed sequence

In mathematics, a sequence (s1, s2, s3, ...) of real numbers is said to be equidistributed, or uniformly distributed, if the proportion of terms falling in a subinterval is proportional to the length of that subinterval. Such sequences are studied in Diophantine approximation theory and have applications to Monte Carlo integration.

Definition edit

A sequence (s1, s2, s3, ...) of real numbers is said to be equidistributed on a non-degenerate interval [a, b] if for every subinterval [c, d] of [a, b] we have

 

(Here, the notation |{s1,...,sn} ∩ [c, d]| denotes the number of elements, out of the first n elements of the sequence, that are between c and d.)

For example, if a sequence is equidistributed in [0, 2], since the interval [0.5, 0.9] occupies 1/5 of the length of the interval [0, 2], as n becomes large, the proportion of the first n members of the sequence which fall between 0.5 and 0.9 must approach 1/5. Loosely speaking, one could say that each member of the sequence is equally likely to fall anywhere in its range. However, this is not to say that (sn) is a sequence of random variables; rather, it is a determinate sequence of real numbers.

Discrepancy edit

We define the discrepancy DN for a sequence (s1, s2, s3, ...) with respect to the interval [ab] as

 

A sequence is thus equidistributed if the discrepancy DN tends to zero as N tends to infinity.

Equidistribution is a rather weak criterion to express the fact that a sequence fills the segment leaving no gaps. For example, the drawings of a random variable uniform over a segment will be equidistributed in the segment, but there will be large gaps compared to a sequence which first enumerates multiples of ε in the segment, for some small ε, in an appropriately chosen way, and then continues to do this for smaller and smaller values of ε. For stronger criteria and for constructions of sequences that are more evenly distributed, see low-discrepancy sequence.

Riemann integral criterion for equidistribution edit

Recall that if f is a function having a Riemann integral in the interval [a, b], then its integral is the limit of Riemann sums taken by sampling the function f in a set of points chosen from a fine partition of the interval. Therefore, if some sequence is equidistributed in [a, b], it is expected that this sequence can be used to calculate the integral of a Riemann-integrable function. This leads to the following criterion[1] for an equidistributed sequence:

Suppose (s1, s2, s3, ...) is a sequence contained in the interval [a, b]. Then the following conditions are equivalent:

  1. The sequence is equidistributed on [a, b].
  2. For every Riemann-integrable (complex-valued) function f : [a, b] →  , the following limit holds:
 

This criterion leads to the idea of Monte-Carlo integration, where integrals are computed by sampling the function over a sequence of random variables equidistributed in the interval.

It is not possible to generalize the integral criterion to a class of functions bigger than just the Riemann-integrable ones. For example, if the Lebesgue integral is considered and f is taken to be in L1, then this criterion fails. As a counterexample, take f to be the indicator function of some equidistributed sequence. Then in the criterion, the left hand side is always 1, whereas the right hand side is zero, because the sequence is countable, so f is zero almost everywhere.

In fact, the de Bruijn–Post Theorem states the converse of the above criterion: If f is a function such that the criterion above holds for any equidistributed sequence in [a, b], then f is Riemann-integrable in [a, b].[2]

Equidistribution modulo 1 edit

A sequence (a1, a2, a3, ...) of real numbers is said to be equidistributed modulo 1 or uniformly distributed modulo 1 if the sequence of the fractional parts of an, denoted by (an) or by an − ⌊an⌋, is equidistributed in the interval [0, 1].

Examples edit

 
Illustration of the filling of the unit interval (x-axis) using the first n terms of the Van der Corput sequence, for n from 0 to 999 (y-axis). Gradation in colour is due to aliasing.
0, α, 2α, 3α, 4α, ...
is equidistributed modulo 1.[3]
  • More generally, if p is a polynomial with at least one coefficient other than the constant term irrational then the sequence p(n) is uniformly distributed modulo 1.

This was proven by Weyl and is an application of van der Corput's difference theorem.[4]

  • The sequence log(n) is not uniformly distributed modulo 1.[3] This fact is related to Benford's law.
  • The sequence of all multiples of an irrational α by successive prime numbers,
2α, 3α, 5α, 7α, 11α, ...
is equidistributed modulo 1. This is a famous theorem of analytic number theory, published by I. M. Vinogradov in 1948.[5]

Weyl's criterion edit

Weyl's criterion states that the sequence an is equidistributed modulo 1 if and only if for all non-zero integers ℓ,

 

The criterion is named after, and was first formulated by, Hermann Weyl.[7] It allows equidistribution questions to be reduced to bounds on exponential sums, a fundamental and general method.

Generalizations edit

  • A quantitative form of Weyl's criterion is given by the Erdős–Turán inequality.
  • Weyl's criterion extends naturally to higher dimensions, assuming the natural generalization of the definition of equidistribution modulo 1:

The sequence vn of vectors in Rk is equidistributed modulo 1 if and only if for any non-zero vector ℓ ∈ Zk,

 

Example of usage edit

Weyl's criterion can be used to easily prove the equidistribution theorem, stating that the sequence of multiples 0, α, 2α, 3α, ... of some real number α is equidistributed modulo 1 if and only if α is irrational.[3]

Suppose α is irrational and denote our sequence by aj =  (where j starts from 0, to simplify the formula later). Let  ≠ 0 be an integer. Since α is irrational, ℓα can never be an integer, so   can never be 1. Using the formula for the sum of a finite geometric series,

 

a finite bound that does not depend on n. Therefore, after dividing by n and letting n tend to infinity, the left hand side tends to zero, and Weyl's criterion is satisfied.

Conversely, notice that if α is rational then this sequence is not equidistributed modulo 1, because there are only a finite number of options for the fractional part of aj = .

Complete uniform distribution edit

A sequence   of real numbers is said to be k-uniformly distributed mod 1 if not only the sequence of fractional parts   is uniformly distributed in   but also the sequence  , where   is defined as  , is uniformly distributed in  .

A sequence   of real numbers is said to be completely uniformly distributed mod 1 it is  -uniformly distributed for each natural number  .

For example, the sequence   is uniformly distributed mod 1 (or 1-uniformly distributed) for any irrational number  , but is never even 2-uniformly distributed. In contrast, the sequence   is completely uniformly distributed for almost all   (i.e., for all   except for a set of measure 0).

van der Corput's difference theorem edit

A theorem of Johannes van der Corput[8] states that if for each h the sequence sn+hsn is uniformly distributed modulo 1, then so is sn.[9][10][11]

A van der Corput set is a set H of integers such that if for each h in H the sequence sn+hsn is uniformly distributed modulo 1, then so is sn.[10][11]

Metric theorems edit

Metric theorems describe the behaviour of a parametrised sequence for almost all values of some parameter α: that is, for values of α not lying in some exceptional set of Lebesgue measure zero.

  • For any sequence of distinct integers bn, the sequence (bnα) is equidistributed mod 1 for almost all values of α.[12]
  • The sequence (αn) is equidistributed mod 1 for almost all values of α > 1.[13]

It is not known whether the sequences (en) or (πn) are equidistributed mod 1. However it is known that the sequence (αn) is not equidistributed mod 1 if α is a PV number.

Well-distributed sequence edit

A sequence (s1, s2, s3, ...) of real numbers is said to be well-distributed on [a, b] if for any subinterval [c, d] of [a, b] we have

 

uniformly in k. Clearly every well-distributed sequence is uniformly distributed, but the converse does not hold. The definition of well-distributed modulo 1 is analogous.

Sequences equidistributed with respect to an arbitrary measure edit

For an arbitrary probability measure space  , a sequence of points   is said to be equidistributed with respect to   if the mean of point measures converges weakly to  :[14]

 

In any Borel probability measure on a separable, metrizable space, there exists an equidistributed sequence with respect to the measure; indeed, this follows immediately from the fact that such a space is standard.

The general phenomenon of equidistribution comes up a lot for dynamical systems associated with Lie groups, for example in Margulis' solution to the Oppenheim conjecture.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kuipers & Niederreiter (2006) pp. 2–3
  2. ^ http://math.uga.edu/~pete/udnotes.pdf, Theorem 8
  3. ^ a b c Kuipers & Niederreiter (2006) p. 8
  4. ^ Kuipers & Niederreiter (2006) p. 27
  5. ^ Kuipers & Niederreiter (2006) p. 129
  6. ^ Kuipers & Niederreiter (2006) p. 127
  7. ^ Weyl, H. (September 1916). "Über die Gleichverteilung von Zahlen mod. Eins" [On the distribution of numbers modulo one] (PDF). Math. Ann. (in German). 77 (3): 313–352. doi:10.1007/BF01475864. S2CID 123470919.
  8. ^ van der Corput, J. (1931), "Diophantische Ungleichungen. I. Zur Gleichverteilung Modulo Eins", Acta Mathematica, 56, Springer Netherlands: 373–456, doi:10.1007/BF02545780, ISSN 0001-5962, JFM 57.0230.05, Zbl 0001.20102
  9. ^ Kuipers & Niederreiter (2006) p. 26
  10. ^ a b Montgomery (1994) p. 18
  11. ^ a b Montgomery, Hugh L. (2001). "Harmonic analysis as found in analytic number theory" (PDF). In Byrnes, James S. (ed.). Twentieth century harmonic analysis–a celebration. Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute, Il Ciocco, Italy, July 2–15, 2000. NATO Sci. Ser. II, Math. Phys. Chem. Vol. 33. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 271–293. doi:10.1007/978-94-010-0662-0_13. ISBN 978-0-7923-7169-4. Zbl 1001.11001.
  12. ^ See Bernstein, Felix (1911), "Über eine Anwendung der Mengenlehre auf ein aus der Theorie der säkularen Störungen herrührendes Problem", Mathematische Annalen, 71 (3): 417–439, doi:10.1007/BF01456856, S2CID 119558177.
  13. ^ Koksma, J. F. (1935), "Ein mengentheoretischer Satz über die Gleichverteilung modulo Eins", Compositio Mathematica, 2: 250–258, JFM 61.0205.01, Zbl 0012.01401
  14. ^ Kuipers & Niederreiter (2006) p. 171

References edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

equidistributed, sequence, mathematics, sequence, real, numbers, said, equidistributed, uniformly, distributed, proportion, terms, falling, subinterval, proportional, length, that, subinterval, such, sequences, studied, diophantine, approximation, theory, have. In mathematics a sequence s1 s2 s3 of real numbers is said to be equidistributed or uniformly distributed if the proportion of terms falling in a subinterval is proportional to the length of that subinterval Such sequences are studied in Diophantine approximation theory and have applications to Monte Carlo integration Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Discrepancy 1 2 Riemann integral criterion for equidistribution 2 Equidistribution modulo 1 2 1 Examples 2 2 Weyl s criterion 2 2 1 Generalizations 2 2 2 Example of usage 2 3 Complete uniform distribution 2 4 van der Corput s difference theorem 2 5 Metric theorems 3 Well distributed sequence 4 Sequences equidistributed with respect to an arbitrary measure 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDefinition editA sequence s1 s2 s3 of real numbers is said to be equidistributed on a non degenerate interval a b if for every subinterval c d of a b we have lim n s 1 s n c d n d c b a displaystyle lim n to infty left s 1 dots s n cap c d right over n d c over b a nbsp Here the notation s1 sn c d denotes the number of elements out of the first n elements of the sequence that are between c and d For example if a sequence is equidistributed in 0 2 since the interval 0 5 0 9 occupies 1 5 of the length of the interval 0 2 as n becomes large the proportion of the first n members of the sequence which fall between 0 5 and 0 9 must approach 1 5 Loosely speaking one could say that each member of the sequence is equally likely to fall anywhere in its range However this is not to say that sn is a sequence of random variables rather it is a determinate sequence of real numbers Discrepancy edit We define the discrepancy DN for a sequence s1 s2 s3 with respect to the interval a b as D N sup a c d b s 1 s N c d N d c b a displaystyle D N sup a leq c leq d leq b left vert frac left s 1 dots s N cap c d right N frac d c b a right vert nbsp A sequence is thus equidistributed if the discrepancy DN tends to zero as N tends to infinity Equidistribution is a rather weak criterion to express the fact that a sequence fills the segment leaving no gaps For example the drawings of a random variable uniform over a segment will be equidistributed in the segment but there will be large gaps compared to a sequence which first enumerates multiples of e in the segment for some small e in an appropriately chosen way and then continues to do this for smaller and smaller values of e For stronger criteria and for constructions of sequences that are more evenly distributed see low discrepancy sequence Riemann integral criterion for equidistribution edit Recall that if f is a function having a Riemann integral in the interval a b then its integral is the limit of Riemann sums taken by sampling the function f in a set of points chosen from a fine partition of the interval Therefore if some sequence is equidistributed in a b it is expected that this sequence can be used to calculate the integral of a Riemann integrable function This leads to the following criterion 1 for an equidistributed sequence Suppose s1 s2 s3 is a sequence contained in the interval a b Then the following conditions are equivalent The sequence is equidistributed on a b For every Riemann integrable complex valued function f a b C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp the following limit holds lim N 1 N n 1 N f s n 1 b a a b f x d x displaystyle lim N to infty frac 1 N sum n 1 N f left s n right frac 1 b a int a b f x dx nbsp dd Proof First note that the definition of an equidistributed sequence is equivalent to the integral criterion whenever f is the indicator function of an interval If f 1 c d then the left hand side is the proportion of points of the sequence falling in the interval c d and the right hand side is exactly d c b a displaystyle textstyle frac d c b a nbsp This means 2 1 since indicator functions are Riemann integrable and 1 2 for f being an indicator function of an interval It remains to assume that the integral criterion holds for indicator functions and prove that it holds for general Riemann integrable functions as well Note that both sides of the integral criterion equation are linear in f and therefore the criterion holds for linear combinations of interval indicators that is step functions To show it holds for f being a general Riemann integrable function first assume f is real valued Then by using Darboux s definition of the integral we have for every e gt 0 two step functions f1 and f2 such that f1 f f2 and a b f 2 x f 1 x d x e b a displaystyle textstyle int a b f 2 x f 1 x dx leq varepsilon b a nbsp Notice that 1 b a a b f 1 x d x lim N 1 N n 1 N f 1 s n lim inf N 1 N n 1 N f s n displaystyle frac 1 b a int a b f 1 x dx lim N to infty frac 1 N sum n 1 N f 1 s n leq liminf N to infty frac 1 N sum n 1 N f s n nbsp 1 b a a b f 2 x d x lim N 1 N n 1 N f 2 s n lim sup N 1 N n 1 N f s n displaystyle frac 1 b a int a b f 2 x dx lim N to infty frac 1 N sum n 1 N f 2 s n geq limsup N to infty frac 1 N sum n 1 N f s n nbsp By subtracting we see that the limit superior and limit inferior of 1 N n 1 N f s n displaystyle textstyle frac 1 N sum n 1 N f s n nbsp differ by at most e Since e is arbitrary we have the existence of the limit and by Darboux s definition of the integral it is the correct limit Finally for complex valued Riemann integrable functions the result follows again from linearity and from the fact that every such function can be written as f u vi where u v are real valued and Riemann integrable This criterion leads to the idea of Monte Carlo integration where integrals are computed by sampling the function over a sequence of random variables equidistributed in the interval It is not possible to generalize the integral criterion to a class of functions bigger than just the Riemann integrable ones For example if the Lebesgue integral is considered and f is taken to be in L1 then this criterion fails As a counterexample take f to be the indicator function of some equidistributed sequence Then in the criterion the left hand side is always 1 whereas the right hand side is zero because the sequence is countable so f is zero almost everywhere In fact the de Bruijn Post Theorem states the converse of the above criterion If f is a function such that the criterion above holds for any equidistributed sequence in a b then f is Riemann integrable in a b 2 Equidistribution modulo 1 editA sequence a1 a2 a3 of real numbers is said to be equidistributed modulo 1 or uniformly distributed modulo 1 if the sequence of the fractional parts of an denoted by an or by an an is equidistributed in the interval 0 1 Examples edit nbsp Illustration of the filling of the unit interval x axis using the first n terms of the Van der Corput sequence for n from 0 to 999 y axis Gradation in colour is due to aliasing The equidistribution theorem The sequence of all multiples of an irrational a 0 a 2a 3a 4a dd is equidistributed modulo 1 3 More generally if p is a polynomial with at least one coefficient other than the constant term irrational then the sequence p n is uniformly distributed modulo 1 This was proven by Weyl and is an application of van der Corput s difference theorem 4 The sequence log n is not uniformly distributed modulo 1 3 This fact is related to Benford s law The sequence of all multiples of an irrational a by successive prime numbers 2a 3a 5a 7a 11a dd is equidistributed modulo 1 This is a famous theorem of analytic number theory published by I M Vinogradov in 1948 5 The van der Corput sequence is equidistributed 6 Weyl s criterion edit Weyl s criterion states that the sequence an is equidistributed modulo 1 if and only if for all non zero integers ℓ lim n 1 n j 1 n e 2 p i ℓ a j 0 displaystyle lim n to infty frac 1 n sum j 1 n e 2 pi i ell a j 0 nbsp The criterion is named after and was first formulated by Hermann Weyl 7 It allows equidistribution questions to be reduced to bounds on exponential sums a fundamental and general method Sketch of proof If the sequence is equidistributed modulo 1 then we can apply the Riemann integral criterion described above on the function f x e 2 p i ℓ x displaystyle textstyle f x e 2 pi i ell x nbsp which has integral zero on the interval 0 1 This gives Weyl s criterion immediately Conversely suppose Weyl s criterion holds Then the Riemann integral criterion holds for functions f as above and by linearity of the criterion it holds for f being any trigonometric polynomial By the Stone Weierstrass theorem and an approximation argument this extends to any continuous function f Finally let f be the indicator function of an interval It is possible to bound f from above and below by two continuous functions on the interval whose integrals differ by an arbitrary e By an argument similar to the proof of the Riemann integral criterion it is possible to extend the result to any interval indicator function f thereby proving equidistribution modulo 1 of the given sequence Generalizations edit A quantitative form of Weyl s criterion is given by the Erdos Turan inequality Weyl s criterion extends naturally to higher dimensions assuming the natural generalization of the definition of equidistribution modulo 1 The sequence vn of vectors in Rk is equidistributed modulo 1 if and only if for any non zero vector ℓ Zk lim n 1 n j 0 n 1 e 2 p i ℓ v j 0 displaystyle lim n to infty frac 1 n sum j 0 n 1 e 2 pi i ell cdot v j 0 nbsp Example of usage edit Weyl s criterion can be used to easily prove the equidistribution theorem stating that the sequence of multiples 0 a 2a 3a of some real number a is equidistributed modulo 1 if and only if a is irrational 3 Suppose a is irrational and denote our sequence by aj ja where j starts from 0 to simplify the formula later Let ℓ 0 be an integer Since a is irrational ℓa can never be an integer so e 2 p i ℓ a textstyle e 2 pi i ell alpha nbsp can never be 1 Using the formula for the sum of a finite geometric series j 0 n 1 e 2 p i ℓ j a j 0 n 1 e 2 p i ℓ a j 1 e 2 p i ℓ n a 1 e 2 p i ℓ a 2 1 e 2 p i ℓ a displaystyle left sum j 0 n 1 e 2 pi i ell j alpha right left sum j 0 n 1 left e 2 pi i ell alpha right j right left frac 1 e 2 pi i ell n alpha 1 e 2 pi i ell alpha right leq frac 2 left 1 e 2 pi i ell alpha right nbsp a finite bound that does not depend on n Therefore after dividing by n and letting n tend to infinity the left hand side tends to zero and Weyl s criterion is satisfied Conversely notice that if a is rational then this sequence is not equidistributed modulo 1 because there are only a finite number of options for the fractional part of aj ja Complete uniform distribution edit A sequence a 1 a 2 displaystyle a 1 a 2 dots nbsp of real numbers is said to be k uniformly distributed mod 1 if not only the sequence of fractional parts a n a n a n displaystyle a n a n a n nbsp is uniformly distributed in 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 nbsp but also the sequence b 1 b 2 displaystyle b 1 b 2 dots nbsp where b n displaystyle b n nbsp is defined as b n a n 1 a n k 0 1 k displaystyle b n a n 1 dots a n k in 0 1 k nbsp is uniformly distributed in 0 1 k displaystyle 0 1 k nbsp A sequence a 1 a 2 displaystyle a 1 a 2 dots nbsp of real numbers is said to be completely uniformly distributed mod 1 it is k displaystyle k nbsp uniformly distributed for each natural number k 1 displaystyle k geq 1 nbsp For example the sequence a 2 a displaystyle alpha 2 alpha dots nbsp is uniformly distributed mod 1 or 1 uniformly distributed for any irrational number a displaystyle alpha nbsp but is never even 2 uniformly distributed In contrast the sequence a a 2 a 3 displaystyle alpha alpha 2 alpha 3 dots nbsp is completely uniformly distributed for almost all a gt 1 displaystyle alpha gt 1 nbsp i e for all a displaystyle alpha nbsp except for a set of measure 0 van der Corput s difference theorem edit A theorem of Johannes van der Corput 8 states that if for each h the sequence sn h sn is uniformly distributed modulo 1 then so is sn 9 10 11 A van der Corput set is a set H of integers such that if for each h in H the sequence sn h sn is uniformly distributed modulo 1 then so is sn 10 11 Metric theorems edit Metric theorems describe the behaviour of a parametrised sequence for almost all values of some parameter a that is for values of a not lying in some exceptional set of Lebesgue measure zero For any sequence of distinct integers bn the sequence bna is equidistributed mod 1 for almost all values of a 12 The sequence a n is equidistributed mod 1 for almost all values of a gt 1 13 It is not known whether the sequences en or p n are equidistributed mod 1 However it is known that the sequence an is not equidistributed mod 1 if a is a PV number Well distributed sequence editA sequence s1 s2 s3 of real numbers is said to be well distributed on a b if for any subinterval c d of a b we have lim n s k 1 s k n c d n d c b a displaystyle lim n to infty left s k 1 dots s k n cap c d right over n d c over b a nbsp uniformly in k Clearly every well distributed sequence is uniformly distributed but the converse does not hold The definition of well distributed modulo 1 is analogous Sequences equidistributed with respect to an arbitrary measure editFor an arbitrary probability measure space X m displaystyle X mu nbsp a sequence of points x n displaystyle x n nbsp is said to be equidistributed with respect to m displaystyle mu nbsp if the mean of point measures converges weakly to m displaystyle mu nbsp 14 k 1 n d x k n m displaystyle frac sum k 1 n delta x k n Rightarrow mu nbsp In any Borel probability measure on a separable metrizable space there exists an equidistributed sequence with respect to the measure indeed this follows immediately from the fact that such a space is standard The general phenomenon of equidistribution comes up a lot for dynamical systems associated with Lie groups for example in Margulis solution to the Oppenheim conjecture See also editEquidistribution theorem Low discrepancy sequence Erdos Turan inequalityNotes edit Kuipers amp Niederreiter 2006 pp 2 3 http math uga edu pete udnotes pdf Theorem 8 a b c Kuipers amp Niederreiter 2006 p 8 Kuipers amp Niederreiter 2006 p 27 Kuipers amp Niederreiter 2006 p 129 Kuipers amp Niederreiter 2006 p 127 Weyl H September 1916 Uber die Gleichverteilung von Zahlen mod Eins On the distribution of numbers modulo one PDF Math Ann in German 77 3 313 352 doi 10 1007 BF01475864 S2CID 123470919 van der Corput J 1931 Diophantische Ungleichungen I Zur Gleichverteilung Modulo Eins Acta Mathematica 56 Springer Netherlands 373 456 doi 10 1007 BF02545780 ISSN 0001 5962 JFM 57 0230 05 Zbl 0001 20102 Kuipers amp Niederreiter 2006 p 26 a b Montgomery 1994 p 18 a b Montgomery Hugh L 2001 Harmonic analysis as found in analytic number theory PDF In Byrnes James S ed Twentieth century harmonic analysis a celebration Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute Il Ciocco Italy July 2 15 2000 NATO Sci Ser II Math Phys Chem Vol 33 Dordrecht Kluwer Academic Publishers pp 271 293 doi 10 1007 978 94 010 0662 0 13 ISBN 978 0 7923 7169 4 Zbl 1001 11001 See Bernstein Felix 1911 Uber eine Anwendung der Mengenlehre auf ein aus der Theorie der sakularen Storungen herruhrendes Problem Mathematische Annalen 71 3 417 439 doi 10 1007 BF01456856 S2CID 119558177 Koksma J F 1935 Ein mengentheoretischer Satz uber die Gleichverteilung modulo Eins Compositio Mathematica 2 250 258 JFM 61 0205 01 Zbl 0012 01401 Kuipers amp Niederreiter 2006 p 171References editKuipers L Niederreiter H 2006 1974 Uniform Distribution of Sequences Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 45019 8 Kuipers L Niederreiter H 1974 Uniform Distribution of Sequences John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 0 471 51045 9 Zbl 0281 10001 Montgomery Hugh L 1994 Ten lectures on the interface between analytic number theory and harmonic analysis Regional Conference Series in Mathematics Vol 84 Providence RI American Mathematical Society ISBN 0 8218 0737 4 Zbl 0814 11001 Further reading editGranville Andrew Rudnick Zeev eds 2007 Equidistribution in number theory an introduction Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute on equidistribution in number theory Montreal Canada July 11 22 2005 NATO Science Series II Mathematics Physics and Chemistry Vol 237 Dordrecht Springer Verlag ISBN 978 1 4020 5403 7 Zbl 1121 11004 Tao Terence 2012 Higher order Fourier analysis Graduate Studies in Mathematics Vol 142 Providence RI American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 8986 2 Zbl 1277 11010 External links editWeisstein Eric W Equidistributed Sequence MathWorld Weisstein Eric W Weyl s Criterion MathWorld Weyl s Criterion at PlanetMath Lecture notes by Charles Walkden with proof of Weyl s Criterion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Equidistributed sequence amp oldid 1120955410, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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