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Redheffer matrix

In mathematics, a Redheffer matrix, often denoted as studied by Redheffer (1977), is a square (0,1) matrix whose entries aij are 1 if i divides j or if j = 1; otherwise, aij = 0. It is useful in some contexts to express Dirichlet convolution, or convolved divisors sums, in terms of matrix products involving the transpose of the Redheffer matrix.

Variants and definitions of component matrices

Since the invertibility of the Redheffer matrices are complicated by the initial column of ones in the matrix, it is often convenient to express   where   is defined to be the (0,1) matrix whose entries are one if and only if   and  . The remaining one-valued entries in   then correspond to the divisibility condition reflected by the matrix  , which plainly can be seen by an application of Mobius inversion is always invertible with inverse  . We then have a characterization of the singularity of   expressed by  

If we define the function

 

then we can define the   Redheffer (transpose) matrix to be the nxn square matrix   in usual matrix notation. We will continue to make use this notation throughout the next sections.

Examples

The matrix below is the 12 × 12 Redheffer matrix. In the split sum-of-matrices notation for  , the entries below corresponding to the initial column of ones in   are marked in blue.

 

A corresponding application of the Mobius inversion formula shows that the   Redheffer transpose matrix is always invertible, with inverse entries given by

 

where   denotes the Moebius function. In this case, we have that the   inverse Redheffer transpose matrix is given by

 

Key properties

Singularity and relations to the Mertens function and special series

Determinants

The determinant of the nxn square Redheffer matrix is given by the Mertens function M(n). In particular, the matrix   is not invertible precisely when the Mertens function is zero (or is close to changing signs). This results in an interesting characterization that the Mertens function can only change signs infinitely often if the Redheffer matrix   is singular at infinitely many natural numbers, which is widely believed to be the case with respect to the oscillatory behavior of   The determinants of the Redheffer matrices are immediately tied to the Riemann Hypothesis (RH) through this intimate relation with the Mertens function as the RH is equivalent to showing that   for all (sufficiently small)  .

Factorizations of sums encoded by these matrices

In a somewhat unconventional construction which reinterprets the (0,1) matrix entries to denote inclusion in some increasing sequence of indexing sets, we can see that these matrices are also related to factorizations of Lambert series. This observation is offered in so much as for a fixed arithmetic function f, the coefficients of the next Lambert series expansion over f provide a so-called inclusion mask for the indices over which we sum f to arrive at the series coefficients of these expansions. Notably, observe that

 

Now in the special case of these divisor sums, which we can see from the above expansion, are codified by boolean (zero-one) valued inclusion in the sets of divisors of a natural number n, it is possible to re-interpret the Lambert series generating functions which enumerate these sums via yet another matrix-based construction. Namely, Merca and Schmidt (2017-2018) proved invertible matrix factorizations expanding these generating functions in the form of [1]

 

where   denotes the infinite q-Pochhammer symbol and where the lower triangular matrix sequence is exactly generated as the coefficients of  , through these terms also have interpretations as differences of special even (odd) indexed partition functions. Merca and Schmidt (2017) also proved a simple inversion formula which allows the implicit function f to be expressed as a sum over the convolved coefficients   of the original Lambert series generating function in the form of [2]

 

where p(n) denotes the partition function,   is the Moebius function, and the coefficients of   inherit a quadratic dependence on j through the pentagonal number theorem. This inversion formula is compared to the inverses (when they exist) of the Redheffer matrices   for the sake of completion here.

Other than that the underlying so-termed mask matrix which specifies the inclusion of indices in the divisor sums at hand are invertible, utilizing this type of construction to expand other Redheffer-like matrices for other special number theoretic sums need not be limited to those forms classically studied here. For example, in 2018 Mousavi and Schmidt extend such matrix based factorization lemmas to the cases of Anderson-Apostol divisor sums (of which Ramanujan sums are a notable special case) and sums indexed over the integers that are relatively prime to each n (for example, as classically defines the tally denoted by the Euler phi function).[3] More to the point, the examples considered in the applications section below suggest a study of the properties of what can be considered generalized Redheffer matrices representing other special number theoretic sums.

Spectral radius and eigenspaces

  • If we denote the spectral radius of   by  , i.e., the dominant maximum modulus eigenvalue in the spectrum of  , then
 

which bounds the asymptotic behavior of the spectrum of   when n is large. It can also be shown that  , and by a careful analysis (see the characteristic polynomial expansions below) that  .

  • The matrix   has eigenvalue one with multiplicity  .
  • The dimension of the eigenspace   corresponding to the eigenvalue   is known to be  . In particular, this implies that   is not diagonalizable whenever  .
  • For all other eigenvalues   of  , then dimension of the corresponding eigenspaces   are one.

Characterizing eigenvectors

We have that   is an eigenvector of   corresponding to some eigenvalue   in the spectrum of   if and only if for   the following two conditions hold:

 

If we restrict ourselves to the so-called non-trivial cases where  , then given any initial eigenvector component   we can recursively compute the remaining n-1 components according to the formula

 

With this in mind, for   we can define the sequences of

 

There are a couple of curious implications related to the definitions of these sequences. First, we have that   if and only if

 

Secondly, we have an established formula for the Dirichlet series, or Dirichlet generating function, over these sequences for fixed   which holds for all   given by

 

where   of course as usual denotes the Riemann zeta function.

Bounds and properties of non-trivial eigenvalues

A graph theoretic interpretation to evaluating the zeros of the characteristic polynomial of   and bounding its coefficients is given in Section 5.1 of.[4] Estimates of the sizes of the Jordan blocks of   corresponding to the eigenvalue one are given in.[5] A brief overview of the properties of a modified approach to factorizing the characteristic polynomial,  , of these matrices is defined here without the full scope of the somewhat technical proofs justifying the bounds from the references cited above. Namely, let the shorthand   and define a sequence of auxiliary polynomial expansions according to the formula

 

Then we know that   has two real roots, denoted by  , which satisfy

 

where   is Euler's classical gamma constant, and where the remaining coefficients of these polynomials are bounded by

 

A plot of the much more size-constrained nature of the eigenvalues of   which are not characterized by these two dominant zeros of the polynomial seems to be remarkable as evidenced by the only 20 remaining complex zeros shown below. The next image is reproduced from a freely available article cited above when   is available here for reference.

Applications and generalizations

We provide a few examples of the utility of the Redheffer matrices interpreted as a (0,1) matrix whose parity corresponds to inclusion in an increasing sequence of index sets. These examples should serve to freshen up some of the at times dated historical perspective of these matrices, and their being footnote-worthy by virtue of an inherent, and deep, relation of their determinants to the Mertens function and equivalent statements of the Riemann Hypothesis. This interpretation is a great deal more combinatorial in construction than typical treatments of the special Redheffer matrix determinants. Nonetheless, this combinatorial twist on enumerating special sequences of sums has been explored more recently in a number of papers and is a topic of active interest in pre-print archives. Before diving into the full construction of this spin on the Redheffer matrix variants   defined above, observe that this type of expansion is in many ways essentially just another variation of the usage of a Toeplitz matrix to represent truncated power series expressions where the matrix entries are coefficients of the formal variable in the series. Let's explore an application of this particular view of a (0,1) matrix as masking inclusion of summation indices in a finite sum over some fixed function. See the citations to the references [6] and [7] for existing generalizations of the Redheffer matrices in the context of general arithmetic function cases. The inverse matrix terms are referred to a generalized Mobius function within the context of sums of this type in.[8]

Matrix products expanding Dirichlet convolutions and Dirichlet inverses

First, given any two non-identically-zero arithmetic functions f and g, we can provide explicit matrix representations which encode their Dirichlet convolution in rows indexed by natural numbers  :

 

Then letting   denote the vector of all ones, it is easily seen that the   row of the matrix-vector product   gives the convolved Dirichlet sums

 

for all   where the upper index   is arbitrary.

One task that is particularly onerous given an arbitrary function f is to determine its Dirichlet inverse exactly without resorting to a standard recursive definition of this function via yet another convolved divisor sum involving the same function f with its under-specified inverse to be determined:

 

It is clear that in general the Dirichlet inverse   for f, i.e., the uniquely defined arithmetic function such that  , involves sums of nested divisor sums of depth from one to   where this upper bound is the prime omega function which counts the number of distinct prime factors of n. As this example shows, we can formulate an alternate way to construct the Dirichlet inverse function values via matrix inversion with our variant Redheffer matrices,  .

Generalizations of the Redheffer matrix forms: GCD sums and other matrices whose entries denote inclusion in special sets

There are several often cited articles from worthy journals that fight to establish expansions of number theoretic divisor sums, convolutions, and Dirichlet series (to name a few) through matrix representations. Besides non-trivial estimates on the corresponding spectrum and eigenspaces associated with truly notable and important applications of these representations—the underlying machinery in representing sums of these forms by matrix products is to effectively define a so-termed masking matrix whose zero-or-one valued entries denote inclusion in an increasing sequence of sets of the natural numbers  . To illustrate that the previous mouthful of jargon makes good sense in setting up a matrix based system for representing a wide range of special summations, consider the following construction: Let   be a sequence of index sets, and for any fixed arithmetic function   define the sums

 

One of the classes of sums considered by Mousavi and Schmidt (2017) defines the relatively prime divisor sums by setting the index sets in the last definition to be

 

This class of sums can be used to express important special arithmetic functions of number theoretic interest, including Euler's phi function (where classically we define  ) as

 

and even the Mobius function through its representation as a discrete (finite) Fourier transform:

 

Citations in the full paper provide other examples of this class of sums including applications to cyclotomic polynomials (and their logarithms). The referenced article by Mousavi and Schmidt (2017) develops a factorization-theorem-like treatment to expanding these sums which is an analog to the Lambert series factorization results given in the previous section above. The associated matrices and their inverses for this definition of the index sets   then allow us to perform the analog of Moebius inversion for divisor sums which can be used to express the summand functions f as a quasi-convolved sum over the inverse matrix entries and the left-hand-side special functions, such as   or   pointed out in the last pair of examples. These inverse matrices have many curious properties (and a good reference pulling together a summary of all of them is currently lacking) which are best intimated and conveyed to new readers by inspection. With this in mind, consider the case of the upper index   and the relevant matrices defined for this case given as follows:

 

Examples of invertible matrices which define other special sums with non-standard, however, clear applications should be catalogued and listed in this generalizations section for completeness. An existing summary of inversion relations, and in particular, exact criteria under which sums of these forms can be inverted and related is found in many references on orthogonal polynomials. Other good examples of this type of factorization treatment to inverting relations between sums over sufficiently invertible, or well enough behaved triangular sets of weight coefficients include the Mobius inversion formula, the binomial transform, and the Stirling transform, among others.

See also

References

  1. ^ M. Merca; M. D. Schmidt (2018). "Factorization Theorems for Generalized Lambert Series and Applications". The Ramanujan Journal. arXiv:1712.00611. Bibcode:2017arXiv171200611M.
  2. ^ M. Merca; M. D. Schmidt (2017). "Generating Special Arithmetic Functions by Lambert Series Factorizations". arXiv:1706.00393 [math.NT].
  3. ^ H. Mousavi; M. D. Schmidt (2018). "Factorization Theorems for Relatively Prime Divisor Sums, GCD Sums and Generalized Ramanujan Sums". arXiv:1810.08373 [math.NT].
  4. ^ Dana, Will. "Eigenvalues of the Redheffer matrix and their relation to the Mertens function" (PDF). Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  5. ^ D. W. Robinson; W. W. Barret. "The Jordan l-Structure of a Matrix of Redheffer" (PDF). Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  6. ^ Gillespie, B. R. "Extending Redheffer's Matrix to Arbitrary Arithmetic Functions". Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  7. ^ M. Li; Q. Tan. "Divisibility of matrices associated with multiplicative functions" (PDF). Discrete Mathematics: 2276–2282. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  8. ^ J. Sandor; B. Crstici (2004). Handbook of Number Theory II. The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 112. doi:10.1007/1-4020-2547-5. ISBN 978-1-4020-2546-4.
  • Redheffer, Ray (1977), "Eine explizit lösbare Optimierungsaufgabe", Numerische Methoden bei Optimierungsaufgaben, Band 3 (Tagung, Math. Forschungsinst., Oberwolfach, 1976), Basel, Boston, Berlin: Birkhäuser, pp. 213–216, MR 0468170
  • W. Barrett and T. Jarvis (1992). "Spectral properties of a matrix of Redheffer". Linear Algebra and Its Applications: 673–683.
  • Cardon, David A. (2010). "Matrices related to Dirichlet series" (PDF). Journal of Number Theory: 27–39. arXiv:0809.0076. Bibcode:2008arXiv0809.0076C. Retrieved 12 December 2018.

External links and citations to related work

  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Redheffer matrix". MathWorld.
  • Cardinal, Jean-Paul. "Symmetric matrices related to the Mertens function". Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  • Kline, Jeffery (2020). "On the eigenstructure of sparse matrices related to the prime number theorem". Linear Algebra and Its Applications. 584: 409–430. doi:10.1016/j.laa.2019.09.022.

redheffer, matrix, mathematics, often, denoted, displaystyle, studied, redheffer, 1977, square, matrix, whose, entries, divides, otherwise, useful, some, contexts, express, dirichlet, convolution, convolved, divisors, sums, terms, matrix, products, involving, . In mathematics a Redheffer matrix often denoted A n displaystyle A n as studied by Redheffer 1977 is a square 0 1 matrix whose entries aij are 1 if i divides j or if j 1 otherwise aij 0 It is useful in some contexts to express Dirichlet convolution or convolved divisors sums in terms of matrix products involving the transpose of the n t h displaystyle n th Redheffer matrix Contents 1 Variants and definitions of component matrices 2 Examples 3 Key properties 3 1 Singularity and relations to the Mertens function and special series 3 1 1 Determinants 3 1 2 Factorizations of sums encoded by these matrices 3 2 Spectral radius and eigenspaces 3 3 Characterizing eigenvectors 3 4 Bounds and properties of non trivial eigenvalues 4 Applications and generalizations 4 1 Matrix products expanding Dirichlet convolutions and Dirichlet inverses 4 2 Generalizations of the Redheffer matrix forms GCD sums and other matrices whose entries denote inclusion in special sets 5 See also 6 References 7 External links and citations to related workVariants and definitions of component matrices EditSince the invertibility of the Redheffer matrices are complicated by the initial column of ones in the matrix it is often convenient to express A n C n D n displaystyle A n C n D n where C n c i j displaystyle C n c ij is defined to be the 0 1 matrix whose entries are one if and only if j 1 displaystyle j 1 and i 1 displaystyle i neq 1 The remaining one valued entries in A n displaystyle A n then correspond to the divisibility condition reflected by the matrix D n displaystyle D n which plainly can be seen by an application of Mobius inversion is always invertible with inverse D n 1 m j i M i j displaystyle D n 1 left mu j i M i j right We then have a characterization of the singularity of A n displaystyle A n expressed by det A n det D n 1 C n I n displaystyle det left A n right det left D n 1 C n I n right If we define the function M j i 1 if j divides i 0 otherwise displaystyle M j i begin cases 1 amp text if j divides i 0 amp text otherwise end cases then we can define the n t h displaystyle n th Redheffer transpose matrix to be the nxn square matrix R n M j i 1 i j n displaystyle R n M j i 1 leq i j leq n in usual matrix notation We will continue to make use this notation throughout the next sections Examples EditThe matrix below is the 12 12 Redheffer matrix In the split sum of matrices notation for A 12 C 12 D 12 displaystyle A 12 C 12 D 12 the entries below corresponding to the initial column of ones in C n displaystyle C n are marked in blue 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 displaystyle left begin matrix 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 color blue mathbf 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 color blue mathbf 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 end matrix right A corresponding application of the Mobius inversion formula shows that the n t h displaystyle n th Redheffer transpose matrix is always invertible with inverse entries given by R n 1 M j i m i j 1 i j n displaystyle R n 1 left M j i cdot mu left frac i j right right 1 leq i j leq n where m n displaystyle mu n denotes the Moebius function In this case we have that the 12 12 displaystyle 12 times 12 inverse Redheffer transpose matrix is given by R 12 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 displaystyle R 12 1 left begin matrix 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 end matrix right Key properties EditSingularity and relations to the Mertens function and special series Edit Determinants Edit The determinant of the nxn square Redheffer matrix is given by the Mertens function M n In particular the matrix A n displaystyle A n is not invertible precisely when the Mertens function is zero or is close to changing signs This results in an interesting characterization that the Mertens function can only change signs infinitely often if the Redheffer matrix A n displaystyle A n is singular at infinitely many natural numbers which is widely believed to be the case with respect to the oscillatory behavior of M x displaystyle M x The determinants of the Redheffer matrices are immediately tied to the Riemann Hypothesis RH through this intimate relation with the Mertens function as the RH is equivalent to showing that M x O x 1 2 e displaystyle M x O left x 1 2 varepsilon right for all sufficiently small e gt 0 displaystyle varepsilon gt 0 Factorizations of sums encoded by these matrices Edit In a somewhat unconventional construction which reinterprets the 0 1 matrix entries to denote inclusion in some increasing sequence of indexing sets we can see that these matrices are also related to factorizations of Lambert series This observation is offered in so much as for a fixed arithmetic function f the coefficients of the next Lambert series expansion over f provide a so called inclusion mask for the indices over which we sum f to arrive at the series coefficients of these expansions Notably observe that d n f d k 1 n M k n f k q n n 1 f n q n 1 q n displaystyle sum d n f d sum k 1 n M k n cdot f k q n left sum n geq 1 frac f n q n 1 q n right Now in the special case of these divisor sums which we can see from the above expansion are codified by boolean zero one valued inclusion in the sets of divisors of a natural number n it is possible to re interpret the Lambert series generating functions which enumerate these sums via yet another matrix based construction Namely Merca and Schmidt 2017 2018 proved invertible matrix factorizations expanding these generating functions in the form of 1 n 1 f n q n 1 q n 1 q q n 1 k 1 n s n k f k q n displaystyle sum n geq 1 frac f n q n 1 q n frac 1 q q infty sum n geq 1 left sum k 1 n s n k f k right q n where q q displaystyle q q infty denotes the infinite q Pochhammer symbol and where the lower triangular matrix sequence is exactly generated as the coefficients of s n k q n q k 1 q k q q displaystyle s n k q n frac q k 1 q k q q infty through these terms also have interpretations as differences of special even odd indexed partition functions Merca and Schmidt 2017 also proved a simple inversion formula which allows the implicit function f to be expressed as a sum over the convolved coefficients ℓ n f 1 n displaystyle ell n f ast 1 n of the original Lambert series generating function in the form of 2 f n d n k 1 n p d k m n d j 0 k j 0 ℓ k j q j q q displaystyle f n sum d n sum k 1 n p d k mu n d left sum j geq 0 atop k j geq 0 ell k j q j q q infty right where p n denotes the partition function m n displaystyle mu n is the Moebius function and the coefficients of q q displaystyle q q infty inherit a quadratic dependence on j through the pentagonal number theorem This inversion formula is compared to the inverses when they exist of the Redheffer matrices A n displaystyle A n for the sake of completion here Other than that the underlying so termed mask matrix which specifies the inclusion of indices in the divisor sums at hand are invertible utilizing this type of construction to expand other Redheffer like matrices for other special number theoretic sums need not be limited to those forms classically studied here For example in 2018 Mousavi and Schmidt extend such matrix based factorization lemmas to the cases of Anderson Apostol divisor sums of which Ramanujan sums are a notable special case and sums indexed over the integers that are relatively prime to each n for example as classically defines the tally denoted by the Euler phi function 3 More to the point the examples considered in the applications section below suggest a study of the properties of what can be considered generalized Redheffer matrices representing other special number theoretic sums Spectral radius and eigenspaces Edit If we denote the spectral radius of A n displaystyle A n by r n displaystyle rho n i e the dominant maximum modulus eigenvalue in the spectrum of A n displaystyle A n thenlim n r n n 1 displaystyle lim n rightarrow infty frac rho n sqrt n 1 which bounds the asymptotic behavior of the spectrum of A n displaystyle A n when n is large It can also be shown that 1 n 1 r n lt n O log n displaystyle 1 sqrt n 1 leq rho n lt sqrt n O log n and by a careful analysis see the characteristic polynomial expansions below that r n n log n O 1 displaystyle rho n sqrt n log sqrt n O 1 The matrix A n displaystyle A n has eigenvalue one with multiplicity n log 2 n 1 displaystyle n left lfloor log 2 n right rfloor 1 The dimension of the eigenspace E l A n displaystyle E lambda A n corresponding to the eigenvalue l 1 displaystyle lambda 1 is known to be n 2 1 displaystyle left lfloor frac n 2 right rfloor 1 In particular this implies that A n displaystyle A n is not diagonalizable whenever n 5 displaystyle n geq 5 For all other eigenvalues l 1 displaystyle lambda neq 1 of A n displaystyle A n then dimension of the corresponding eigenspaces E l A n displaystyle E lambda A n are one Characterizing eigenvectors Edit We have that a 1 a 2 a n displaystyle a 1 a 2 ldots a n is an eigenvector of A n T displaystyle A n T corresponding to some eigenvalue l s A n displaystyle lambda in sigma A n in the spectrum of A n displaystyle A n if and only if for n 2 displaystyle n geq 2 the following two conditions hold l a n d n a d and l a 1 k 1 n a k displaystyle lambda a n sum d n a d quad text and quad lambda a 1 sum k 1 n a k If we restrict ourselves to the so called non trivial cases where l 1 displaystyle lambda neq 1 then given any initial eigenvector component a 1 displaystyle a 1 we can recursively compute the remaining n 1 components according to the formula a j 1 l 1 d j d lt j a d displaystyle a j frac 1 lambda 1 sum d j atop d lt j a d With this in mind for l 1 displaystyle lambda neq 1 we can define the sequences of v l n 1 n 1 1 l 1 d n d n v l d n 2 displaystyle v lambda n begin cases 1 amp n 1 frac 1 lambda 1 sum d n atop d neq n v lambda d amp n geq 2 end cases There are a couple of curious implications related to the definitions of these sequences First we have that l s A n displaystyle lambda in sigma A n if and only if k 1 n v l k l displaystyle sum k 1 n v lambda k lambda Secondly we have an established formula for the Dirichlet series or Dirichlet generating function over these sequences for fixed l 1 displaystyle lambda neq 1 which holds for all ℜ s gt 1 displaystyle Re s gt 1 given by n 1 v l n n s l 1 l z s displaystyle sum n geq 1 frac v lambda n n s frac lambda 1 lambda zeta s where z s displaystyle zeta s of course as usual denotes the Riemann zeta function Bounds and properties of non trivial eigenvalues Edit A graph theoretic interpretation to evaluating the zeros of the characteristic polynomial of A n displaystyle A n and bounding its coefficients is given in Section 5 1 of 4 Estimates of the sizes of the Jordan blocks of A n displaystyle A n corresponding to the eigenvalue one are given in 5 A brief overview of the properties of a modified approach to factorizing the characteristic polynomial p A n x displaystyle p A n x of these matrices is defined here without the full scope of the somewhat technical proofs justifying the bounds from the references cited above Namely let the shorthand s log 2 n displaystyle s lfloor log 2 n rfloor and define a sequence of auxiliary polynomial expansions according to the formula f n t p A n t 1 t n s 1 t s 1 k 1 s v n k t s k displaystyle f n t frac p A n t 1 t n s 1 t s 1 sum k 1 s v nk t s k Then we know that f n t displaystyle f n t has two real roots denoted by t n displaystyle t n pm which satisfy t n n log n g 3 2 O log 2 n n displaystyle t n pm pm sqrt n log sqrt n gamma frac 3 2 O left frac log 2 n sqrt n right where g 0 577216 displaystyle gamma approx 0 577216 is Euler s classical gamma constant and where the remaining coefficients of these polynomials are bounded by v n k n log k 1 n k 1 displaystyle v nk leq frac n cdot log k 1 n k 1 A plot of the much more size constrained nature of the eigenvalues of f n t displaystyle f n t which are not characterized by these two dominant zeros of the polynomial seems to be remarkable as evidenced by the only 20 remaining complex zeros shown below The next image is reproduced from a freely available article cited above when n 10 6 displaystyle n sim 10 6 is available here for reference Applications and generalizations EditWe provide a few examples of the utility of the Redheffer matrices interpreted as a 0 1 matrix whose parity corresponds to inclusion in an increasing sequence of index sets These examples should serve to freshen up some of the at times dated historical perspective of these matrices and their being footnote worthy by virtue of an inherent and deep relation of their determinants to the Mertens function and equivalent statements of the Riemann Hypothesis This interpretation is a great deal more combinatorial in construction than typical treatments of the special Redheffer matrix determinants Nonetheless this combinatorial twist on enumerating special sequences of sums has been explored more recently in a number of papers and is a topic of active interest in pre print archives Before diving into the full construction of this spin on the Redheffer matrix variants R n displaystyle R n defined above observe that this type of expansion is in many ways essentially just another variation of the usage of a Toeplitz matrix to represent truncated power series expressions where the matrix entries are coefficients of the formal variable in the series Let s explore an application of this particular view of a 0 1 matrix as masking inclusion of summation indices in a finite sum over some fixed function See the citations to the references 6 and 7 for existing generalizations of the Redheffer matrices in the context of general arithmetic function cases The inverse matrix terms are referred to a generalized Mobius function within the context of sums of this type in 8 Matrix products expanding Dirichlet convolutions and Dirichlet inverses Edit First given any two non identically zero arithmetic functions f and g we can provide explicit matrix representations which encode their Dirichlet convolution in rows indexed by natural numbers n 1 1 n x displaystyle n geq 1 1 leq n leq x D f g x M d n f d g n d 1 d n x 0 0 0 g x 0 0 g x 1 g x g 1 g 2 g x 1 g x 0 0 0 f 1 0 0 f 2 f 1 f x f x 1 f 2 f 1 R x T displaystyle D f g x left M d n f d g n d right 1 leq d n leq x begin bmatrix 0 amp 0 amp cdots amp 0 amp g x 0 amp 0 amp cdots amp g x 1 amp g x ldots amp ldots amp ddots amp ddots amp cdots g 1 amp g 2 amp cdots amp g x 1 amp g x end bmatrix begin bmatrix 0 amp 0 amp cdots amp 0 amp f 1 0 amp 0 amp cdots amp f 2 amp f 1 ldots amp ldots amp ddots amp ddots amp cdots f x amp f x 1 amp cdots amp f 2 amp f 1 end bmatrix R x T Then letting e T 1 1 1 displaystyle e T 1 1 ldots 1 denote the vector of all ones it is easily seen that the n t h displaystyle n th row of the matrix vector product e T D f g x displaystyle e T cdot D f g x gives the convolved Dirichlet sums f g n d n f d g n d displaystyle f ast g n sum d n f d g n d for all 1 n x displaystyle 1 leq n leq x where the upper index x 2 displaystyle x geq 2 is arbitrary One task that is particularly onerous given an arbitrary function f is to determine its Dirichlet inverse exactly without resorting to a standard recursive definition of this function via yet another convolved divisor sum involving the same function f with its under specified inverse to be determined f 1 n 1 f 1 d n d lt n f n d f 1 d n gt 1 where f 1 1 1 f 1 displaystyle f 1 n frac 1 f 1 mathop sum d mid n d lt n f left frac n d right f 1 d n gt 1 text where f 1 1 1 f 1 It is clear that in general the Dirichlet inverse f 1 n displaystyle f 1 n for f i e the uniquely defined arithmetic function such that f 1 f n d n 1 displaystyle f 1 ast f n delta n 1 involves sums of nested divisor sums of depth from one to w n displaystyle omega n where this upper bound is the prime omega function which counts the number of distinct prime factors of n As this example shows we can formulate an alternate way to construct the Dirichlet inverse function values via matrix inversion with our variant Redheffer matrices R n displaystyle R n Generalizations of the Redheffer matrix forms GCD sums and other matrices whose entries denote inclusion in special sets Edit There are several often cited articles from worthy journals that fight to establish expansions of number theoretic divisor sums convolutions and Dirichlet series to name a few through matrix representations Besides non trivial estimates on the corresponding spectrum and eigenspaces associated with truly notable and important applications of these representations the underlying machinery in representing sums of these forms by matrix products is to effectively define a so termed masking matrix whose zero or one valued entries denote inclusion in an increasing sequence of sets of the natural numbers 1 2 n displaystyle 1 2 ldots n To illustrate that the previous mouthful of jargon makes good sense in setting up a matrix based system for representing a wide range of special summations consider the following construction Let A n 1 n Z displaystyle mathcal A n subseteq 1 n cap mathbb Z be a sequence of index sets and for any fixed arithmetic function f N C displaystyle f mathbb N longrightarrow mathbb C define the sums S A f n S f n k A n f k displaystyle S mathcal A f n mapsto S f n sum k in mathcal A n f k One of the classes of sums considered by Mousavi and Schmidt 2017 defines the relatively prime divisor sums by setting the index sets in the last definition to be A n G n 1 d n gcd d n 1 displaystyle mathcal A n mapsto mathcal G n 1 leq d leq n gcd d n 1 This class of sums can be used to express important special arithmetic functions of number theoretic interest including Euler s phi function where classically we define m 0 displaystyle m 0 as f n d G n d m displaystyle varphi n sum d in mathcal G n d m and even the Mobius function through its representation as a discrete finite Fourier transform m n gcd k n 1 1 k n e 2 p i k n displaystyle mu n sum stackrel 1 leq k leq n gcd k n 1 e 2 pi i frac k n Citations in the full paper provide other examples of this class of sums including applications to cyclotomic polynomials and their logarithms The referenced article by Mousavi and Schmidt 2017 develops a factorization theorem like treatment to expanding these sums which is an analog to the Lambert series factorization results given in the previous section above The associated matrices and their inverses for this definition of the index sets A n displaystyle mathcal A n then allow us to perform the analog of Moebius inversion for divisor sums which can be used to express the summand functions f as a quasi convolved sum over the inverse matrix entries and the left hand side special functions such as f n displaystyle varphi n or m n displaystyle mu n pointed out in the last pair of examples These inverse matrices have many curious properties and a good reference pulling together a summary of all of them is currently lacking which are best intimated and conveyed to new readers by inspection With this in mind consider the case of the upper index x 21 displaystyle x 21 and the relevant matrices defined for this case given as follows 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 end smallmatrix right 1 left begin smallmatrix 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 2 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 3 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 3 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 3 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 3 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 3 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 2 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 2 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 1 end smallmatrix right Examples of invertible matrices which define other special sums with non standard however clear applications should be catalogued and listed in this generalizations section for completeness An existing summary of inversion relations and in particular exact criteria under which sums of these forms can be inverted and related is found in many references on orthogonal polynomials Other good examples of this type of factorization treatment to inverting relations between sums over sufficiently invertible or well enough behaved triangular sets of weight coefficients include the Mobius inversion formula the binomial transform and the Stirling transform among others See also EditRedheffer star productReferences Edit M Merca M D Schmidt 2018 Factorization Theorems for Generalized Lambert Series and Applications The Ramanujan Journal arXiv 1712 00611 Bibcode 2017arXiv171200611M M Merca M D Schmidt 2017 Generating Special Arithmetic Functions by Lambert Series Factorizations arXiv 1706 00393 math NT H Mousavi M D Schmidt 2018 Factorization Theorems for Relatively Prime Divisor Sums GCD Sums and Generalized Ramanujan Sums arXiv 1810 08373 math NT Dana Will Eigenvalues of the Redheffer matrix and their relation to the Mertens function PDF Retrieved 12 December 2018 D W Robinson W W Barret The Jordan l Structure of a Matrix of Redheffer PDF Retrieved 12 December 2018 Gillespie B R Extending Redheffer s Matrix to Arbitrary Arithmetic Functions Retrieved 12 December 2018 M Li Q Tan Divisibility of matrices associated with multiplicative functions PDF Discrete Mathematics 2276 2282 Retrieved 12 December 2018 J Sandor B Crstici 2004 Handbook of Number Theory II The Netherlands Kluwer Academic Publishers p 112 doi 10 1007 1 4020 2547 5 ISBN 978 1 4020 2546 4 Redheffer Ray 1977 Eine explizit losbare Optimierungsaufgabe Numerische Methoden bei Optimierungsaufgaben Band 3 Tagung Math Forschungsinst Oberwolfach 1976 Basel Boston Berlin Birkhauser pp 213 216 MR 0468170 W Barrett and T Jarvis 1992 Spectral properties of a matrix of Redheffer Linear Algebra and Its Applications 673 683 Cardon David A 2010 Matrices related to Dirichlet series PDF Journal of Number Theory 27 39 arXiv 0809 0076 Bibcode 2008arXiv0809 0076C Retrieved 12 December 2018 External links and citations to related work EditWeisstein Eric W Redheffer matrix MathWorld Cardinal Jean Paul Symmetric matrices related to the Mertens function Retrieved 12 December 2018 Kline Jeffery 2020 On the eigenstructure of sparse matrices related to the prime number theorem Linear Algebra and Its Applications 584 409 430 doi 10 1016 j laa 2019 09 022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Redheffer matrix amp oldid 1114872929, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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