Provided an arbitrary random variable $X$ with probability density/mass function $f$, are there any tests to determine if $f$ forms an exponential family?
Certainly, if $f$ can be written in the form $$ \tag{1} f(x|\theta)=h(x)\exp(\eta(\theta)\cdot T(x)-A(\theta)), $$ then it must form an exponential family. However, failure to write $f$ in such a form does not prove the converse.
In my particular problem I have the density given by the sum of independent Poisson and zero-mean normal variables $$ f(x|\lambda,\sigma)=\sum_{k=0}^\infty\frac{e^{-\lambda}\lambda^k}{k!}\frac{1}{\sigma}\phi\left(\frac{x-k}{\sigma}\right). $$
I suspect $f$ does not form an exponential family and up to this point have been unable to write it in the form $(1)$. So what else can be done to determine if this density function forms an exponential family?