Esscher principle

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In operator theory, von Neumann's inequality, due to John von Neumann, states that, for a contraction T acting on a Hilbert space and a polynomial p, then the norm of p(T) is bounded by the supremum of |p(z)| for z in the unit disk."[1] In other words, for a fixed contraction T, the polynomial functional calculus map is itself a contraction. The inequality can be proved by considering the unitary dilation of T, for which the inequality is obvious.

This inequality is a specific case of Matsaev's conjecture. That is that for any polynomial P and contraction T on Lp

||P(T)||Lp||P(S)||p

where S is the right-shift operator. The von Neumann inequality proves it true for p=2 and for p=1 and p= it is true by straightforward calculation. S.W. Drury has recently shown that the conjecture fails in the general case.[2]

References


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