6
$\begingroup$

Let $n\ge2$ be a given positive integer, and $z_{1},z_{2},\cdots,z_{n}\in \mathbb{C}$,such $$|z_{1}|^2+|z_{2}|^2+\cdots+|z_{n}|^2\ge n.$$ Prove or disprove $$f_{n}=\sum_{j=1}^{n}\left|\sum_{I\subseteq \{1,2,3,\cdots,n\},|I|=j}\prod_{k\in I}z_{k}\right|^2\ge 1$$

In the particular case when $n=2$, it can be proved that \begin{align*}f_{2}&=|z_{1}+z_{2}|^2+|z_{1}z_{2}|^2=(|z_{1}|^2+|z_{2}|^2)+|z_{1}z_{2}|^2+2\Re(z_{1}\overline{z_{2}})\\ &\ge |z_{1}|^2+|z_{2}|^2+|z_{1}z_{2}|^2-2|z_{1}z_{2}|\\ &=(|z_{1}|^2+|z_{2}|^2-1)+(|z_{1}z_{2}|-1)^2\\ &\ge(|z_{1}|^2+|z_{2}|^2-1)\\ &\ge 1 \end{align*}

$\endgroup$
0

1 Answer 1

12
$\begingroup$

For a polynomial $Q(x)=\sum_i q_ix^i$, define $N(Q)=\sum_i|q_i|^2$. We need to show that $N(R)\geq 2$, where $R(x)=\prod_i (x-z_i)$.

For a polynomial $Q(x)=\sum_{i=0}^k q_ix^i$, define $Q^*(x)=\sum_{i=0}^k\overline{q_i}x^{k-i}=x^k\overline{Q(\bar x^{-1})}$. Here is the lemma which I definitely saw somewhere.

Lemma 1. $N(FG)=N(FG^*)$.

Proof. This can be shown directly, by expanding the brackets. However, a more neat way is to apply the discrete Fourier transform, assigning to a polynomial $Q$ of degree $<n$ the collection of values $Q(\zeta_i)$, where $\zeta_1,\dots,\zeta_n$ are the $n$th degree roots of unity. The Plancherel identity claims $$ N(Q)=\frac1n\sum_{i=1}^n|Q(\zeta_i)|^2. $$ On the other hamd, we have $$ |F(\zeta_i)G^*(\zeta_i)|=\left|F(\zeta_i)\overline{G(\bar\zeta_i^{-1})}\right| =|F(\zeta_i)G(\zeta_i)|, $$ hence $N(FG)=N(FG^*)$. $\Box$

Back to the problem, let $|z_1|\leq|z_2|\leq\dots\leq|z_k|\leq 1\leq |z_{k+1}|\leq\dots\leq |z_n|$. Then, instead of $R$, we may consider the polynomial $$ S(x)=\prod_{i=1}^k(1-\bar z_i x)\prod_{i=k+1}^n(x-z_i), $$ as Lemma 1 claims $N(R)=N(S)$. In the polynomial $S(x)$, we are interested only in the coefficients of $x^n$ and $x^0$, whose absolute values are $|\prod_{i=1}^kz_i|$ and $|\prod_{i=k+1}^nz_i|$: the next Lemma shows they suffice.

Lemma 2. Assume that $a_1,\dots,a_k\leq 1$ and $a_{k+1},\dots,a_n\geq 1$ are nonnegative real numbers such that $\sum_ia_i^2=n$. Then $(a_1\dots a_k)^2+(a_{k+1}\dots a_n)^2\geq 2$.

Proof. Induction on the number of indices $i$ such that $a_i\neq 1$. If all the $a_i$ equal $1$, the claim is trivial. Also it is trivial if $a_i=1$ for all $i\leq k$.

Assume that $a_1<1$; then, without loss of generality, $a_n>1$. Replace $a_1$ and $a_n$ with $b_1\leq b_n$ such that $b_1^2+b_n^2=a_1^2+a_n^2$, and one of the $b_i$ equals $1$ (then $a_1<b_1\leq b_n<a_n$). Denote $B_1=\prod_{i=2}^k a_i$ and $B_n=\prod_{i=k+1}^{n-1} a_i$; the inductive hypothesis yields $$ b_1^2B_1^2+b_n^2B_n^2\geq 2. $$ On the other hand, we have $$ \left(a_1B_1\right)^2+\left(a_nB_n\right)^2 =(b_1B_1)^2+(b_nB_n)^2+(a_1^2-b_1^2)B_1^2+(a_n^2-b_n^2)B_n^2\\ =(b_1B_1)^2+(b_nB_n)^2+(a_1^2-b_1^2)(B_1^2-B_n^2) \geq (b_1B_1)^2+(b_nB_n)^2\geq 2, $$ as desired. $\Box$

$\endgroup$
4
  • 2
    $\begingroup$ Lemma immediately follows from $N(f)=\frac1{2\pi}\int |f(e^{it})|^2dt$ $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 9, 2022 at 9:58
  • $\begingroup$ @FedorPetrov Can it be applied to prove the inequality directly? $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 9, 2022 at 10:05
  • $\begingroup$ ...and I guess you know lemma from here: problems.ru/view_problem_details_new.php?id=109607 $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 9, 2022 at 10:16
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ very nice solution!+1 $\endgroup$
    – math110
    Commented Nov 9, 2022 at 11:53

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .