<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!DOCTYPE article  PUBLIC "-//NLM//DTD Journal Publishing DTD v3.0 20080202//EN" "http://dtd.nlm.nih.gov/publishing/3.0/journalpublishing3.dtd"><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" dtd-version="3.0" xml:lang="en" article-type="research article"><front><journal-meta><journal-id journal-id-type="publisher-id">AM</journal-id><journal-title-group><journal-title>Applied Mathematics</journal-title></journal-title-group><issn pub-type="epub">2152-7385</issn><publisher><publisher-name>Scientific Research Publishing</publisher-name></publisher></journal-meta><article-meta><article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.4236/am.2013.41026</article-id><article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">AM-27243</article-id><article-categories><subj-group subj-group-type="heading"><subject>Articles</subject></subj-group><subj-group subj-group-type="Discipline-v2"><subject>Physics&amp;Mathematics</subject></subj-group></article-categories><title-group><article-title>
 
 
  Some &lt;i&gt;L&lt;sub&gt;p&lt;/sub&gt;&lt;/i&gt; Inequalities for &lt;i&gt;B&lt;/i&gt;-Operators
 
</article-title></title-group><contrib-group><contrib contrib-type="author" xlink:type="simple"><name name-style="western"><surname>isar</surname><given-names>Ahmad Rather</given-names></name><xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff1"><sup>1</sup></xref><xref ref-type="corresp" rid="cor1"><sup>*</sup></xref></contrib><contrib contrib-type="author" xlink:type="simple"><name name-style="western"><surname>Sajad</surname><given-names>Hussain Ahangar</given-names></name><xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff1"><sup>1</sup></xref></contrib></contrib-group><aff id="aff1"><addr-line>Department of mathematics, University of Kashmir, Harzarbal, Sringar, India.</addr-line></aff><author-notes><corresp id="cor1">* E-mail:<email>dr.narather@gmail.com(IAR)</email>;</corresp></author-notes><pub-date pub-type="epub"><day>25</day><month>01</month><year>2013</year></pub-date><volume>04</volume><issue>01</issue><fpage>155</fpage><lpage>166</lpage><history><date date-type="received"><day>November</day>	<month>8,</month>	<year>2012</year></date><date date-type="rev-recd"><day>December</day>	<month>8,</month>	<year>2012</year>	</date><date date-type="accepted"><day>December</day>	<month>15,</month>	<year>2012</year></date></history><permissions><copyright-statement>&#169; Copyright  2014 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc. </copyright-statement><copyright-year>2014</copyright-year><license><license-p>This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</license-p></license></permissions><abstract><p><html>
 <head></head>
 
  If  <em>P(z</em><em>) </em>is a polynomial of degree at most 
  n
   having all its zeros in<img width="29" height="14" style="width:47px;height:23px;" alt="" src="Edit_69d770ca-4239-4f47-b0a5-1fd14a215963.bmp" /> , then it was recently claimed by Shah and Liman 
  (
  [1
  ]
  , estimates for the family of $B$-operators, Operators and Matrices, (2011), 79-87
  )
   that for every R≧1, 
   p ≧ 1,
  
   <img width="352" height="35" style="width:356px;height:30px;" alt="" src="Edit_6f77b5b6-d36b-4dc3-85a6-d49aa24f47da.bmp" />
  where <em>B</em> is a B<sub>n</sub>-operator with parameters <img width="69" height="20" style="width:68px;height:21px;" alt="" src="Edit_0210dae5-4f7e-4452-aad4-dee1e4f7817d.bmp" /> in the sense of Rahman [2],  and<img width="390" height="50" style="width:387px;height:30px;" alt="" src="Edit_e58b8cfe-1e7d-4f3e-b947-1db5aafe863e.bmp" /> . Unfortunately the proof of this re
  sult is not correct. In this paper, we present certain more general sharp <em>Lp</em>-inequalities for Bn-operators which not only provide a correct proof of the above inequality as a special case but also extend them for 0≦p﹤1 as well.
  
 
</html></p></abstract><kwd-group><kwd>L&lt;sup&gt;p&lt;/sup&gt; -Inequalities;  B&lt;sub&gt;n&lt;/sub&gt;-Operators; Polynomials</kwd></kwd-group></article-meta></front><body><sec id="s1"><title>1. Introduction and Statement of Results</title><p>Let <img src="26-7401226\6220bc72-1bbb-4a81-b60e-411211995b20.jpg" /> denote the space of all complex polynomials</p><p><img src="26-7401226\a7d977e6-59ef-4e04-a101-61a3b8816700.jpg" />of degree at most<img src="26-7401226\04d1cdf1-e4cc-4aeb-9f2e-1fc9a7139b6b.jpg" />. For<img src="26-7401226\65892629-3f78-4588-b10f-27404a3f8497.jpg" />define</p><p><img src="26-7401226\ec170ee5-71e5-41d1-9a47-39e4a565c95f.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\92ab28ea-4b9f-43ef-accf-b3bc8623ccae.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\8ed7e952-a86c-4e8b-9510-0cc1321a8241.jpg" /></p><p>and denote for any complex function <img src="26-7401226\a209efdd-2032-4955-b8bc-103ccc31ad56.jpg" /> the composite function of <img src="26-7401226\856dd28a-54f6-486a-8717-cd28b619aeb7.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\b9b48cd1-1d07-47b2-b61b-72e871323473.jpg" />, defined by <img src="26-7401226\b189a435-eb1d-4c43-b220-8d57a637f14f.jpg" />, as<img src="26-7401226\a9b9392c-402c-4c07-b54f-d8b8e4c893ee.jpg" />.</p><p>A famous result known as Bernstein’s inequality (for reference, see [3, p. 531], [4, p. 508] or [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref5">5</xref>] states that if<img src="26-7401226\54b7b5fd-3deb-4b8e-968b-9075cc58d9d4.jpg" />, then</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71971"><label>(1.1)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\5ec1fdb2-af0c-47cc-965c-407ff63fd833.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>whereas concerning the maximum modulus of <img src="26-7401226\778bcac6-5c81-441f-815f-eb1230ccce3e.jpg" /> on the circle<img src="26-7401226\76d184b8-d333-42fe-8a28-357a874e20e4.jpg" />, we have</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71972"><label>(1.2)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\b74c76b9-e3e0-4360-959b-bb3f3bfab91a.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>(for reference, see [6, p. 442] or [3, Vol. 1, p. 137]).</p><p>Inequalities (1.1) and (1.2) can be obtained by letting <img src="26-7401226\607024d4-10f3-4664-846e-7330dcdbbe2d.jpg" /> in the inequalities</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71973"><label>(1.3)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\8865859b-3959-46b7-bea8-17c238d9937a.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71974"><label>(1.4)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\b69c3c00-fc15-41a5-9209-9001de00eecd.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>respectively. Inequality (1.3) was found by Zygmund [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref7">7</xref>] whereas inequality (1.4) is a simple consequence of a result of Hardy [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref8">8</xref>] (see also [9, Th. 5.5]). Since inequality (1.3) was deduced from M. Riesz’s interpolation formula [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref10">10</xref>] by means of Minkowski’s inequality, it was not clear, whether the restriction on p was indeed essential. This question was open for a long time. Finally Arestov [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref11">11</xref>] proved that (1.3) remains true for <img src="26-7401226\0364a325-85e0-4b89-8ca2-9b5ee89a5aab.jpg" /> as well.</p><p>If we restrict ourselves to the class of polynomials <img src="26-7401226\3706edd6-1422-416b-96af-23ed14fd97e8.jpg" /> having no zero in<img src="26-7401226\b4330211-0211-44a8-bb82-84eb2249653c.jpg" />, then Inequalities (1.1) and (1.2) can be respectively replaced by</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71975"><label>(1.5)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\2108be28-cee4-4804-a5b6-a59830a5dbf8.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71976"><label>(1.6)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\85db6284-7d4d-49c0-a28a-ff6d65182750.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Inequality (1.5) was conjectured by Erd&#246;s and later verified by Lax [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref12">12</xref>], whereas Inequality (1.6) is due to Ankey and Ravilin [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref13">13</xref>].</p><p>Both the Inequalities (1.5) and (1.6) can be obtain by letting <img src="26-7401226\fe14c23c-80c3-42a7-9616-7659038654a3.jpg" /> in the inequalities</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71977"><label>(1.7)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\71320602-7c13-453a-9c20-c35c55e4888e.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and for <img src="26-7401226\8e90ca5f-0aa4-4171-8a1f-85914176420e.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71978"><label>(1.8)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\d6c763f5-a7c6-4d40-b814-a71c9f01aa3b.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Inequality (1.7) is due to De-Bruijn [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref14">14</xref>] for<img src="26-7401226\5ddde9f7-8bf2-48dc-b075-a2450502f07a.jpg" />. Rahman and Schmeisser [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref15">15</xref>] extended it for <img src="26-7401226\610b2280-1354-438b-83b5-c9f0733dda2d.jpg" /> whereas the Inequality (1.8) was proved by Boas and Rahman [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref16">16</xref>] for <img src="26-7401226\f9524170-42fd-4a67-a91c-73e9a274d64e.jpg" /> and later it was extended for <img src="26-7401226\f863a9cd-bf2b-4adb-812f-7ea043c7bcbd.jpg" /> by Rahman and Schmeisser [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref15">15</xref>].</p><p>Q. I. Rahman [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref2">2</xref>] (see also Rahman and Schmeisser [4, p. 538]) introduced a class <img src="26-7401226\2f37f61e-7623-4703-ba3a-70f31ae70c17.jpg" /> of operators <img src="26-7401226\ecd0fa23-a716-490e-b2a3-82d8cc299887.jpg" /> that carries a polynomial <img src="26-7401226\d395f44b-2218-4a19-b495-3bc1f893ef72.jpg" /> into</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71979"><label>(1.9)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\a1fefe80-c9bd-4730-9425-605ac6865232.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\3627b8a5-0fd8-4659-9c38-acb41156da07.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\89d295eb-e71a-441f-bef4-93086497d27d.jpg" /> are such that all the zeros of</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71980"><label>(1.10)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\233e4265-b96b-4c6a-97b7-960c96d408dd.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\28b45d85-4311-4b87-8647-b58145f73c93.jpg" /> lie in half plane</p><p><img src="26-7401226\c565c9e5-fcaf-4e10-9cd5-311b5a6473dc.jpg" /></p><p>As a generalization of Inequality (1.1) and (1.5), Q. I. Rahman [2, inequality 5.2 and 5.3] proved that if <img src="26-7401226\bf9cffc9-ab29-4242-b3a1-1b424db4f878.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\7d049199-befd-45b7-8060-4749dd874efd.jpg" /> then for <img src="26-7401226\1ed6cfd7-556a-4147-bbc5-1ea591f14eb8.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71981"><label>(1.11)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\7c3c8bd8-1bf2-40af-a5cc-d61cf2f86f04.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and if <img src="26-7401226\e59c9506-9aef-4697-b474-c8aacc568693.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\f7c131a5-40bb-4c59-a52a-38afa887b5fb.jpg" /> in <img src="26-7401226\b5939e8c-f2d4-4002-b332-169494dde8ab.jpg" /> then <img src="26-7401226\3cc74c4b-cbca-44ed-920d-dfd66502595e.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71982"><label>(1.12)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\67377ccb-af93-4a54-af53-525d03c9e7db.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71983"><label>(1.13)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\1e62d588-2be3-4f3d-a9df-13f0ee3579e8.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>As a corresponding generalization of Inequalities (1.2) and (1.4), Rahman and Schmeisser [4, p. 538] proved that if <img src="26-7401226\3eec3437-e887-46fa-b634-8a53462410ff.jpg" /> then <img src="26-7401226\4dc81f0e-2660-44d6-accd-5a8dfd3d6558.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71984"><label>(1.14)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\3ac70171-4479-43bf-b27d-7d72408d196c.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and if <img src="26-7401226\14573752-5de8-4589-afaa-c7654251f0f5.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\69deea0c-9706-49ab-8a5c-8b0d76282a2b.jpg" /> in <img src="26-7401226\3850f348-4723-43c4-be44-f31279e2b2a7.jpg" /> then as a special case of Corollary 14.5.6 in [4, p. 539], we have</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71985"><label>(1.15)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\0ebe8f04-39dd-405b-b3f4-a08991e51984.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\9575d3b9-8fd5-47f8-8cc9-8c06bbd94143.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\43f067a4-ff17-4a93-8983-6475f1aac61e.jpg" /> is defined by (1.13).</p><p>Inequality (1.15) also follows by combining the Inequalities (5.2) and (5.3) due to Rahman [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref2">2</xref>].</p><p>As an extension of Inequality (1.14) to <img src="26-7401226\795dc7cb-c48f-4e1e-b142-daa91d99d397.jpg" />-norm, recently Shah and Liman [1, Theorem 1] proved:</p><p>Theorem A. If<img src="26-7401226\eb76a051-08fb-4e56-aaf4-ca4153acaa7b.jpg" />, then for every <img src="26-7401226\06896550-2816-423b-979a-6b274d129543.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\13383344-64f9-46fc-9bfe-179b6dc86df3.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71986"><label>(1.16)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\da01bd94-8f77-4af8-b102-ff55e45ea6a5.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where<img src="26-7401226\8daf0ea7-99f5-4558-a48c-1f5e19996fc2.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\11a35685-6544-418a-bd0a-2383ba6c8026.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\360ad4f2-92be-4ff9-946d-96dd86324148.jpg" /> is defined by (1.13).</p><p>While seeking the analogous result of (1.15) in <img src="26-7401226\950024ef-13ac-43fa-81bc-a663f7b00a7a.jpg" /> norm, they [1, Theorem 2] have made an incomplete attempt by claiming to have proved the following result:</p><p>Theorem B. If<img src="26-7401226\01277473-4fec-4ee1-ac2b-d52c340d0467.jpg" />, and <img src="26-7401226\dca1ecdd-0a4a-4036-9a8f-804528ccfb13.jpg" /> does not vanish for <img src="26-7401226\e89e0cec-adbe-40d6-8768-eed3142ed65d.jpg" /> then for each<img src="26-7401226\d42a8ba6-68af-4518-834b-0e77f7e4128b.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\281841bb-c143-40e9-ac74-7fd1437cac95.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71987"><label>(1.17)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\c3fc3860-e19b-4992-b3a9-6fa8b0ad562f.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where<img src="26-7401226\d38609d4-efe8-4ed7-8e67-77dbf72a8ed5.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\8601edeb-e344-46ff-9e78-645b080f3a2e.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\7350caa6-02fc-4aaa-a366-75dc4a25511a.jpg" /> is defined by (1.13).</p><p>Further, it has been claimed in [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref1">1</xref>] to have proved the Inequality (1.17) for self-inversive polynomials as well.</p><p>Unfortunately the proof of Inequality (1.17) and other related results including the key lemma [1, Lemma 4] given by Shah and Liman is not correct. The reason being that the authors in [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref1">1</xref>] deduce:</p><p>1) line 10 from line 7 on page 842) line 19 on page 85 from Lemma 3 [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref1">1</xref>] and3) line 16 from line 14 on page 86by using the argument that if<img src="26-7401226\85dc09ca-ae2d-4d9f-b037-d089aded31c3.jpg" />, then for<img src="26-7401226\28e2a7b9-4366-4385-8d08-309cc8267ec7.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\b32694d5-da4c-40fc-9fa3-5c019854054b.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\cf5a8209-4592-4b7f-a963-45d1abf2f699.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\24a26a01-6443-47b4-a1b2-6b3171daf21b.jpg" /></p><p>which is not true, in general, for every <img src="26-7401226\5a5042b3-f6fe-4e48-9bfd-b3e4654e1f97.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\1e7d098e-c7ec-437d-9761-67afa0ab2393.jpg" />. To see this, let</p><p><img src="26-7401226\3934d05a-bf58-4712-b91b-acc3c064bcce.jpg" /></p><p>be an arbitrary polynomial of degree<img src="26-7401226\76437133-82e1-4737-9001-afd7d378fafd.jpg" />, then</p><p><img src="26-7401226\5d977d6a-841f-42df-8dc8-6dbd36a2b811.jpg" /></p><p>Now with <img src="26-7401226\42775d52-8df8-4f18-8fb6-0c0e3006a6cd.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\238b040f-8407-4169-9d0c-244d6e1b2d1c.jpg" />, we have</p><p><img src="26-7401226\17f6b79b-824b-45bd-9957-13ae444e2308.jpg" /></p><p>and in particular for<img src="26-7401226\e31ff9af-c5b5-4199-875c-d0c99c345c2f.jpg" />, we get</p><p><img src="26-7401226\2d48263f-b3f0-4a5c-845d-21b47d34bfbf.jpg" /></p><p>whence</p><p><img src="26-7401226\55780efd-c929-4f04-a10a-392de888b8bc.jpg" /></p><p>But</p><p><img src="26-7401226\3f988004-5291-4bc0-ad1e-a3206e2cd9fe.jpg" /></p><p>so the asserted identity does not hold in general for every <img src="26-7401226\1948f9d7-8f5d-4453-8717-8df948c6bfc2.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\1ab7c747-2785-4c69-9190-f4f563330630.jpg" /> as e.g. the immediate counterexample of <img src="26-7401226\37347ad2-62c0-4b2f-9d36-f89d8f92f6d9.jpg" /> demonstrates in view of<img src="26-7401226\c2d3e5c2-8841-4a92-8471-26aad3752135.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\c261493a-2a5a-4f75-b161-87fa144ce1e3.jpg" />and</p><p><img src="26-7401226\9d255823-4b0d-4a61-9731-f3efb3273a52.jpg" /></p><p>for <img src="26-7401226\f38918bc-b0e3-45e4-aebf-a4ff365f31dc.jpg" /></p><p>Authors [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref1">1</xref>] have also claimed that Inequality (1.17) and its analogue for self-inversive polynomials are sharp has remained to be verified. In fact, this claim is also wrong.</p><p>The main aim of this paper is to establish <img src="26-7401226\6811409c-3d6b-4771-b595-972d7b2c4fea.jpg" />-mean extensions of the inequalities (1.14) and (1.15) for <img src="26-7401226\965a2fb5-6cc3-44c2-850e-da7d82e924e6.jpg" /> and present correct proofs of the results mentioned in [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref1">1</xref>]. In this direction, we first present the following result which is a compact generalization of the Inequalities (1.1), (1.2), (1.14) and (1.16) and also extend Inequality (1.17) for <img src="26-7401226\3a46cb63-14a4-4a70-81f4-9e541167d80b.jpg" /> as well.</p><p>Theorem 1. If <img src="26-7401226\32e09693-8abb-431a-a462-832a253c8ee0.jpg" /> then for <img src="26-7401226\50efaef7-c992-40ee-ab92-8eded15bc0ee.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\f1f15936-e326-4cf3-b14d-d989c24a0948.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\c5e0468c-6ee1-431d-9418-bdd4a512baae.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\4c2b5aeb-9a3b-452d-bad0-f3a4d3aacc27.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71988"><label>(1.18)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\60a88ddb-52b3-4d8a-b11f-547aabe808d3.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\72f79f3f-9b92-4554-aba0-ef681305b5dd.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\e311ebae-1412-49f5-8914-c8432ef19f1c.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\94eb1454-2bae-4a95-a103-e9a02f30ff35.jpg" /> is given by (1.13). The result is best possible and equality holds in (1.18) for <img src="26-7401226\f368409a-a725-4906-bfc2-c9ea3bb840b7.jpg" /></p><p>If we choose <img src="26-7401226\f4ef9927-58de-4c7d-8a9c-45665fe4a736.jpg" /> in (1.18), we get the following result which extends Theorem A to <img src="26-7401226\f65ab030-4d96-44f7-a356-c403f6091ddc.jpg" /></p><p>Corollary 1. If <img src="26-7401226\85ff724f-8aa0-4a9a-8bc5-9775e7689fed.jpg" /> then for <img src="26-7401226\3dbcd9e0-5f11-478e-9e62-dec4e3ccff4b.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\5bcb9f2c-8713-49b2-a032-337efd201bf2.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71989"><label>(1.19)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\5455f4e0-bb3d-4d00-b148-c501cecacc5a.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\941901bc-dfc3-49b1-a9e7-c5ebbc976964.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\8db01371-3a0c-4ac4-878f-0e8dcb912bbe.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\a8391e0a-be4f-4baa-b582-4e749d31b744.jpg" /> is given by (1.13).</p><p>Remark 1. Taking <img src="26-7401226\57919a48-18ab-4f32-9de7-51af9c008964.jpg" /> in (1.19) and noting that in this case all the zeros of U(z) defined in (1.10) lie in<img src="26-7401226\69a39f9e-69c2-4851-b654-5e2a9a271517.jpg" />, we get for <img src="26-7401226\11ff7f25-cc61-459e-93db-bb68b5e35eef.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\5e9796ca-7106-4794-b775-595fd9a35a02.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\27ec4351-10de-4523-9175-2d2227fc9973.jpg" />which includes (1.4) as a special case. Next if we choose <img src="26-7401226\314ef286-9b40-4592-87f0-0cdc33f09b3f.jpg" /> in (1.19), we get inequality (1.4). Inequality (1.11) also follows from Theorem 1 by letting <img src="26-7401226\2f42c198-d863-41ce-ba82-95b3eea29ae4.jpg" /> in (1.18).</p><p>Theorem 1 can be sharpened if we restrict ourselves to the class of polynomials <img src="26-7401226\c715355d-5377-42ff-9034-5bf890176772.jpg" /> which does not vanish in <img src="26-7401226\40af7903-d703-4162-ad5b-858fb576368b.jpg" /> In this direction, we next present the following interesting compact generalization of Theorem B which yields <img src="26-7401226\1d7a1c0f-c5b2-4848-b5cb-064571ec68f6.jpg" /> mean extension of the inequality (1.12) for <img src="26-7401226\c05c9029-38ab-4b18-a685-ed14afd6f7cf.jpg" /> which among other things includes a correct proof of inequality (1.17) for <img src="26-7401226\4439b8b4-ec9a-4479-9d3a-ba0df17bd2ff.jpg" /> as a special case.</p><p>Theorem 2. If <img src="26-7401226\f85407fa-ce0e-4dca-93c8-d81e73376ae4.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\e2b2e7f0-619c-42d4-87ce-343fe8aa8d98.jpg" /> does not vanish for <img src="26-7401226\c2d84f73-f49b-4e64-99cb-c7290387f135.jpg" /> then for <img src="26-7401226\fa9a4714-4ffd-4e1d-bf65-9ded52e0f01b.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\83be0b5a-6edf-482d-a27c-a5ca04303c41.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\b1475771-bcdf-4f09-8742-4f26af9e76cf.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\30a57cc9-94b9-4845-b431-fc7f9ffb5648.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71990"><label>(1.20)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\11b9d834-7804-42b7-8e41-3cd2336b62af.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\1baad2cb-7674-4cc8-b5ae-b525a299b562.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\397a9508-c67b-4ebf-b32e-3c325bbb72b7.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\16c5983a-3e31-4327-9be7-4193c680bb42.jpg" /> is defined by (1.13). The result is best possible and equality holds in (1.18) for <img src="26-7401226\4762ed70-c28b-4350-baf7-d40f99967f77.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\28afbcc8-e034-42bb-82e7-89d6b3ec640a.jpg" />.</p><p>If we take <img src="26-7401226\41f68462-de3a-4f04-83d1-92ff1292fc31.jpg" /> in (1.20), we get the following result which is the generalization of Theorem B for <img src="26-7401226\f52fcf3c-11e7-49ef-9a58-d2ff8ac9a72c.jpg" /> but also extends it for <img src="26-7401226\d124b8b8-68b1-4301-af6b-89eae9ad1daa.jpg" /></p><p>Corollary 2. If <img src="26-7401226\4e7dc204-a203-4bdb-b3bb-4c6b3a809086.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\d4ccfc07-4e5e-4227-b165-8b8cf61fec34.jpg" /> does not vanish for <img src="26-7401226\b9621087-889e-4df5-9320-5e67a8ae9e3b.jpg" /> then for <img src="26-7401226\1c790d3f-a33b-49c3-94ff-9f44b0a229ec.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\7b1ba8d9-3778-4435-a272-a49d867c996c.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\1152babe-0827-488b-b607-10118c4b2b2f.jpg" /></p><p>(1.21)</p><p><img src="26-7401226\46976ec4-6b7b-481c-aa42-71144aa8c1af.jpg" /><img src="26-7401226\e5e9d253-ed4d-4d0e-bc57-e4a40a818c66.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\0a4770cf-ddbf-404c-a884-d0dedd346689.jpg" /> is defined by (1.13).</p><p>By triangle inequality, the following result is an immediately follows from Corollary 2.</p><p>Corollary 3. If <img src="26-7401226\7f194c6e-9f9a-4b40-972f-30f358f72266.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\d1a76325-7a13-43c9-b6a2-f024593e07d4.jpg" /> does not vanish for <img src="26-7401226\28aabfc4-e3fb-4bcd-84e6-206ce32f4e25.jpg" /> then for <img src="26-7401226\c216fe51-555e-4520-8045-ec046edbfc4d.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\16165fe9-5b8b-43de-ac0b-ff3c55221c58.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71991"><label>(1.22)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\f8fe5b8a-8bb6-4b1b-b022-90238139b254.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p><img src="26-7401226\d4a27248-cde9-42b7-b9a0-96d032f99a45.jpg" /><img src="26-7401226\f83368b7-9c1e-41bd-af1b-f88f37c7423f.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\83d7b213-2b5d-4885-88eb-a76c65ca4ddb.jpg" /> is defined by (1.13).</p><p>Remark 2. Corollary 3 establishes a correct proof of a result due to Shah and Liman [1, Theorem 3] for <img src="26-7401226\598f356d-1d79-466f-ac50-a97ae090a484.jpg" /> and also extends it for <img src="26-7401226\0ee4e246-59b6-46de-b598-9c028eda6b7d.jpg" /> as well.</p><p>Remark 3. If we choose <img src="26-7401226\f3d813eb-9f0c-41f7-8422-f57ac2a2620a.jpg" /> in (1.21), we get for <img src="26-7401226\7070213e-441a-48c6-81bb-af019843f033.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\57e90e53-36ed-431d-98c1-994f9d5197b0.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\5f7ba1d2-a80b-4c57-9f14-d7a1466ac773.jpg" /></p><p>which, in particular, yields Inequality (1.7). Next if we take <img src="26-7401226\302638fe-b4b3-4b32-bf0e-ca66ce57e2c4.jpg" /> in (1.21), we get Inequality (1.8). Inequality (1.12) can be obtained from corollary 2 by letting <img src="26-7401226\d3048981-3583-459f-8c76-9b74aa9c9678.jpg" /> in (1.20).</p><p>By using triangle inequality, the following result immediately follows from Theorem 2.</p><p>Corollary 4. If <img src="26-7401226\af3d5744-c1ae-4b8d-88a9-2d1f8c382302.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\5235aeb6-eb16-4cc9-a71d-e9ef19becf40.jpg" /> does not vanish for <img src="26-7401226\ad25b628-d14a-47be-8927-bb9562752ce7.jpg" /> then for <img src="26-7401226\28cd5e44-7ce0-45bf-9eb0-b6e3c5a4cf7f.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\b574f171-8990-498b-b863-8b1f2933ae31.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\5f96d8f7-5b62-4f90-9b3d-0a2f6d4ac6ef.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\40f56f4a-f83d-48b8-bf34-33edb4942a36.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71992"><label>(1.23)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\40784c27-b226-4b23-8789-a963ba7d8e56.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p><img src="26-7401226\327d3b15-7e73-4414-9466-01681aca92d2.jpg" /><img src="26-7401226\09fb284b-7dc1-4da7-9d97-c332df528607.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\cf6890e7-5727-4b22-a186-6da1b1106932.jpg" /> is defined by (1.13).</p><p>A polynomial <img src="26-7401226\35895417-43d1-4b45-af57-7e426251d3b6.jpg" /> is said be self-inversive if <img src="26-7401226\2c1457f9-e04e-4a8d-81d0-ae50f3586ed9.jpg" /> where <img src="26-7401226\c97f1f9e-695b-402d-b8e1-345c1eba22e3.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\047533eb-9a8a-42f7-ae18-991f15488553.jpg" /> is the conjugate polynomial of<img src="26-7401226\7c4dd172-428a-4119-bd8d-928a3754c59b.jpg" />, that is,<img src="26-7401226\f62e92c0-4d20-40dd-a2be-5b5f80992458.jpg" />.</p><p>Finally in this paper, we establish the following result for self-inversive polynomials , which includes a correct proof of an another result of Shah and Liman [1, Theorem 2] as a special case.</p><p>Theorem 3. If <img src="26-7401226\e2b427d4-6a9c-41bc-b7c7-2c05fd3aa4c9.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\2be23eca-f542-461e-a29b-da379f74423b.jpg" /> is a self-inversive polynomial, then for <img src="26-7401226\1c449d10-ff35-435f-a26c-486f37e05818.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\991d0d53-d897-41f8-94a1-105f1219c563.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\45f91909-eae5-4ab8-ad01-e86f04c2f9c2.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\251b0d40-8034-481b-ae61-98f3b4cc3d5a.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71993"><label>(1.24)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\b3d1e68a-ad04-4396-896d-70c16cc42546.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\215ef608-338b-4a00-b295-842066142747.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\d642dcac-cc49-44f4-924b-6ed11469c159.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\4da7847f-e269-4757-8dc1-626a99dbc657.jpg" /> is given by (1.13). The result is sharp and an extremal polynomial is<img src="26-7401226\88b406c7-3aa1-4e77-8be7-7726f6b0fc30.jpg" />,<img src="26-7401226\dca62b3a-aab8-4a4d-97bb-86f210eceef9.jpg" />.</p><p>For <img src="26-7401226\57f7d2f3-62bc-48cf-97a0-5346da0fa6c4.jpg" /> we get the following result.</p><p>Corollary 5. If <img src="26-7401226\ff1fef94-cfb9-405c-8762-4c53569e1d4f.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\beddf16c-3891-4f61-a72b-d8e70ba1f9e8.jpg" /> is a self-inversive polynomial, then for <img src="26-7401226\046e67e1-f562-4406-81bf-c015ea45da2a.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\08f36837-f62c-4866-bdd3-fd82c51356c7.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71994"><label>(1.25)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\255692dc-5f9e-4e37-9a90-c494d4a6dbe4.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\be17fd5f-5e9b-4369-b0a0-ba43c1ab5d6b.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\86c296e7-f812-42ed-97c7-6e6a7c8b4010.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\5719d46f-33bf-4f1c-b695-8d60efc16373.jpg" /> is given by (1.13).</p><p>The following result is an immediate consequence of Corollary 5.</p><p>Corollary 6 If <img src="26-7401226\9298ed52-b746-43aa-8a85-d99fcaaeb26d.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\992e07a0-ebab-4791-a65d-60307556fd32.jpg" /> is a self-inversive polynomial, then for <img src="26-7401226\be48da09-92e1-48aa-b2d5-84f1f085a173.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\ff0abd9f-3e82-4fd0-b28c-227c2a95a59c.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71995"><label>(1.26)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\e39d9ad0-f44f-4325-b93d-c0624e3e54e7.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\4afee7e1-8154-483a-8de9-f51f0d09c2d2.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\3121d7cd-772e-48c0-af03-7558b128eee7.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\0dcd283d-81d4-4e7c-84e7-3dc9bd3b5d6c.jpg" /> is given by (1.13).</p><p>Remark 4. Corollary 6 establishes a correct proof of a result due to Shah and Liman [1, Theorem 3] for <img src="26-7401226\2264d05a-20c5-4b6c-92c9-170cfbf65688.jpg" /> and also extends it for <img src="26-7401226\7514e250-7bdb-4f64-9aac-1e94d6b55cee.jpg" /> as well.</p><p>Remark 5. A variety of interesting results can be easily deduced from Theorem 3 in the same way as we have deduced from Theorem 2. Here we mention a few of these. Taking <img src="26-7401226\e27362e8-aafa-49b1-a240-0ca4b3b8faee.jpg" /> = in (1.25), we get for <img src="26-7401226\edd51d44-7e15-4b1f-bf40-e2a278297f38.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\4976cb03-81be-42f7-bb40-cfa742efb225.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\52e4481e-ac4e-4e4e-9160-0f71518d82ba.jpg" />which, in particular, yields a result due to Dewan and Govil [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref17">17</xref>] and A. Aziz [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref18">18</xref>] for polynomials<img src="26-7401226\45d2dede-82c7-46ab-ad56-bb0e43e80a8d.jpg" />. Next if we choose <img src="26-7401226\6517c166-919c-4d88-9637-ed0d7495314b.jpg" /> in (1.25), we get for<img src="26-7401226\3d19169a-6249-4ca2-89a1-03d5b4ba9047.jpg" />; <img src="26-7401226\3d18023c-643f-4a02-8838-732def32944c.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\9d8ea140-2753-44d0-a8cd-6c627eabb517.jpg" />.</p><p>The above inequality is a special case of a result proved by Aziz and Rather [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref19">19</xref>].</p><p>Lastly letting <img src="26-7401226\aeb8c04a-5c77-4b28-a5ed-430b427d09b2.jpg" /> in (1.25), it follows that if<img src="26-7401226\8dfdefb8-0354-4ac9-b17a-47b9438f9eb8.jpg" />, is a self-inversive polynomial then</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71996"><label>(1.27)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\e822a91e-4c03-49d6-8b9b-15ad04073176.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where<img src="26-7401226\8fd6554d-0d13-4edb-bee5-b58202430707.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\25220224-d0a1-41a3-8eb0-3330bc61a945.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\54ef3ed6-1451-419f-84f8-c1e7da223afb.jpg" /> is defined by (1.13). The result is sharp.</p><p>Inequality (1.27) is a special case of a result due to Rahman and Schmeisser [4, Cor. 14.5.6].</p></sec><sec id="s2"><title>2. Lemma</title><p>For the proof of above theorems we need the following Lemmas:</p><p>The following lemma follows from Corollary 18.3 of [20, p. 86].</p><p>Lemma 1. If <img src="26-7401226\8e693df8-5a0e-4c03-8659-1fd48f42c077.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\1d0760e1-5b68-496c-8f34-b5011230b356.jpg" /> has all zeros in <img src="26-7401226\57229184-91c8-43f4-abfc-8babbe61b5c1.jpg" /> then all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\ce2ad94e-56c8-4d53-9452-21c26aceb7b3.jpg" /> also lie in <img src="26-7401226\9b141a95-b249-461c-b3b4-5121f9f05a2a.jpg" /></p><p>Lemma 2. If <img src="26-7401226\f9450c92-c2cc-491b-aa75-5261f81ed1be.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\0d6fe816-b305-49e5-b2ea-6517f656163d.jpg" /> have all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\9ba0fa23-a2aa-4e8b-bce0-f80c08cf8622.jpg" /> then for every <img src="26-7401226\e32a2bd9-a884-46da-9ac5-9c3229e5d81b.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\dc8d7634-455a-4f9d-a33e-6f2e777fc294.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\8fe92cc3-195c-44e7-9d9b-8fa72a50ae65.jpg" /></p><p>Proof. Since all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\38086c7c-d5bf-426a-9208-83691ec17b67.jpg" /> lie in<img src="26-7401226\d6efd634-1783-48db-9ade-a7e516625430.jpg" />, we write</p><p><img src="26-7401226\4f1b7bac-e587-446a-8b32-13b9ff062fcf.jpg" /></p><p>where<img src="26-7401226\02ae0946-9ef0-4d63-9bbc-ef6d5bb4313e.jpg" />. Now for<img src="26-7401226\b8f72fe3-0212-4c91-a327-c65387214bf9.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\0f4fe9db-0500-4160-a033-9826f57d450c.jpg" />, we have</p><p><img src="26-7401226\a868ed1a-9871-4505-a119-e468ee1dcab4.jpg" /></p><p>Hence</p><p><img src="26-7401226\ccb96968-43e9-4751-bc94-1b6cc8366c67.jpg" /></p><p>for<img src="26-7401226\1ff59e81-5adc-4e26-be90-e8ac833ef2eb.jpg" />. This implies for <img src="26-7401226\c9d93af0-d19b-43fd-a534-19250e981060.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\f7104567-594d-464d-8630-768ff79c3c8b.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\42709997-5451-4b66-b12b-bbb94843ca13.jpg" /></p><p>which completes the proof of Lemma 2.</p><p>Lemma 3. If <img src="26-7401226\cd41e421-6912-49d2-8d30-dd7e2d5d54b7.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\def15caa-4d96-4b6a-a5a4-d117b32f5ed7.jpg" /> has no zero in <img src="26-7401226\59d530f0-228b-4779-8467-f88034f48fad.jpg" /> then for every <img src="26-7401226\8ff56297-1cc9-4a9a-ae78-8062008f0a19.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\08603a5e-97eb-427e-9077-0c0e2fe343e5.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\401fc2a7-50a7-4956-a77b-4c140ccf0811.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\b2d0dc8f-23c2-4f8d-bd5b-99fcba9d3776.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71997"><label>(2.1)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\0890b42a-951e-4eeb-9b70-8c6deab91cf3.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where <img src="26-7401226\a286756a-2ed9-49d5-9c69-dbccb0dce025.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\a7bf417b-2da5-4fd6-8577-9920e91ef222.jpg" /></p><p>Proof. Since the polynomial <img src="26-7401226\4e4d84c3-1ba4-4e0d-9398-6798e5f2a310.jpg" /> has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\2f7ef680-4123-45dd-ba97-43558dd7e5aa.jpg" /> therefore, for every real or complex number <img src="26-7401226\23d6c81a-20aa-428a-87bb-60839fe4070a.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\639b24f7-aba4-4fbc-9ac7-b958c0963296.jpg" /> the polynomial <img src="26-7401226\e230506e-b843-4447-9916-edffc3d7db3d.jpg" /></p><p>where <img src="26-7401226\482d265c-8247-41d2-ab54-fdc77b08f9db.jpg" /> has all zeros in <img src="26-7401226\142f694d-079a-4007-a718-e7a41fa576e5.jpg" /> Applying Lemma 2 to the polynomial <img src="26-7401226\f15e5605-324f-4b40-98ad-6b81ceb40f58.jpg" /> we obtain for every <img src="26-7401226\585d0001-0332-4307-b74e-11bc27232c9e.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\4790ced9-6b1a-47d2-a22f-224f610c475d.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71998"><label>(2.2)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\3e33514a-3920-4f1c-9742-e595aa4042b3.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Since <img src="26-7401226\66785a2b-3323-4273-a7d6-e52a0b021088.jpg" /> for every <img src="26-7401226\bdaf5d6a-4f45-46a1-90ba-b41534d670a0.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\d666e6b1-3748-48ce-a8d4-75e73c56773b.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\eff489de-49c4-4e3e-8294-18ebf08d70f8.jpg" /> it follows from (2.2) that</p><p><img src="26-7401226\870bb053-13e0-4c48-bf76-fa07cff38cc4.jpg" /></p><p>for every <img src="26-7401226\6032d47d-1292-487f-a9a8-c0411db801aa.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\0d67184e-f0b1-4ab5-a1ca-2359a14e06b8.jpg" /> This gives</p><p><img src="26-7401226\f4aa1dd9-22e6-4ac9-9a99-adcb35258083.jpg" /></p><p>Using Rouche’s theorem and noting that all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\4407a507-20ac-470c-bc00-dcf32c814926.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\7dd61e30-c4b7-404e-83b6-8acd14c9b65c.jpg" /> we conclude that the polynomial</p><p><img src="26-7401226\c5f68930-db38-46c8-b7d8-1da7a5ec6da8.jpg" /></p><p>has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\7844d806-5a1c-47b0-b9cd-ad807757fc18.jpg" /> for every real or complex <img src="26-7401226\0e5b4fef-8d8c-4315-804a-69030c8c4ecc.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\576c2e60-9e33-48eb-8c92-957312bcb16f.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\48391fbf-d8c1-4f82-95d5-f939f49296a6.jpg" /></p><p>Applying Lemma 1 to polynomial <img src="26-7401226\b60454d5-7745-413f-9329-b5139779a9d8.jpg" /> and noting that <img src="26-7401226\5461f466-6804-48ea-8826-19ee166ed218.jpg" /> is a linear operator, it follows that all the zeros of polynomial</p><p><img src="26-7401226\b47e220e-20f6-43e9-abdc-6b1e9944749a.jpg" /></p><p>lie in <img src="26-7401226\94736893-2920-4228-82d5-219f53b9cb6c.jpg" /> where <img src="26-7401226\143c8e37-b8bd-4046-bec6-1ec020ee949d.jpg" /> This implies</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula71999"><label>(2.3)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\f5b2db21-1e1e-436b-9ff4-3f8e6e4d90b8.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>for <img src="26-7401226\efb85a62-feb7-43a3-a667-67ff1029b32b.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\34d609cb-d23d-4482-a006-be3096e56461.jpg" /> If Inequality (2.3) is not true, then there exits a point <img src="26-7401226\dc8310f1-bc94-421d-9891-0ff1c7a9dd45.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\1f668006-3847-40a8-9919-c31193e7aa05.jpg" /> such that</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72000"><label>(2.4)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\bf7a98d4-61f9-4676-ac5f-75a3021cc75f.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>But all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\e72ecb6b-baba-4c68-a998-0f3f5e4bad29.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\9d80bc67-4954-4263-bbe4-63fe50910a99.jpg" /> therefore, it follows (as in case of<img src="26-7401226\aee2ba4c-8b0b-4de3-99e0-54ed71e8f010.jpg" />) that all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\0bfcf858-c083-4591-a01a-10c077f800cd.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\96eb70b7-3810-4ac7-85ed-5bdfd4c93f51.jpg" /> Hence, by Lemma 1, we have</p><p><img src="26-7401226\6dcbeb76-3085-4d6a-84f5-2e06b3938f83.jpg" /></p><p>We take</p><p><img src="26-7401226\d2180f00-2470-4bbe-ac42-c08ad0ba0ebd.jpg" /></p><p>then <img src="26-7401226\e0b83962-bbc3-4a40-8399-a1566ce39438.jpg" /> is well defined real or complex number with <img src="26-7401226\adf3bf6f-3475-43ad-b979-04e0ce273edc.jpg" /> and with this choice of <img src="26-7401226\0da37cd1-570e-4bc9-87f0-6894c72523d1.jpg" /> we obtain <img src="26-7401226\9f81de18-b0f9-4894-8426-d0d5c5092d34.jpg" /> where <img src="26-7401226\bcfa9a96-dad7-4e25-9f8c-2ae84f3acf7b.jpg" /> This contradicts the fact that all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\94e7aed1-6cf3-46ea-9123-c8ed63861263.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\870825a3-c062-4d2a-a5bd-4beae92714d2.jpg" /> Thus (2.3) holds true for <img src="26-7401226\dd4d23bc-15f9-4fef-b409-3b94d07224c4.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\b89494e2-de84-4376-b71a-2187bffdccbf.jpg" /></p><p>Next we describe a result of Arestov [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref11">11</xref>].</p><p>For <img src="26-7401226\f9b64129-9714-46b9-b08b-4d87e038231f.jpg" /> and</p><p><img src="26-7401226\84760053-417d-42b7-8c95-986773484037.jpg" />, we define</p><p><img src="26-7401226\2e342d6d-fab2-42d2-b854-0cd8d041ca90.jpg" /></p><p>The operator <img src="26-7401226\e0861d54-1487-4411-a59f-59e2b7f84e46.jpg" /> is said to be admissible if it preserves one of the following properties:</p><p>1) <img src="26-7401226\caac91dd-b3ec-40ce-9e3b-46f3e8d3e60e.jpg" />has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\35c23deb-4719-4125-a73d-8fcb3930642b.jpg" /></p><p>2) <img src="26-7401226\4d516386-911e-4136-bf5e-8afa56e1c398.jpg" />has all its zeros in<img src="26-7401226\47f6edb3-feee-4420-a40f-ea4464b83664.jpg" /></p><p>The result of Arestov [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.27243-ref11">11</xref>] may now be stated as follows.</p><p>Lemma 4. [11, Theorem 4] Let <img src="26-7401226\78993fd6-a70d-4934-aeab-52bccf99c0f3.jpg" /> where <img src="26-7401226\6e2dff38-8c7f-430b-a501-9057a38d2383.jpg" /> is a convex non decreasing function on <img src="26-7401226\5fac6921-d789-4c7a-979c-0f9e18d84940.jpg" /> Then for all <img src="26-7401226\8f75fb55-70de-4bf9-b905-148e4b9f6217.jpg" /> and each admissible operator<img src="26-7401226\908b8bbd-2e29-43c1-a383-9acd3fe476ee.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\ee70c53c-7f05-48cb-b717-e0c83786c6d3.jpg" /></p><p>where <img src="26-7401226\b13f4203-b0ac-4545-bbc6-5ff777f276a9.jpg" /></p><p>In particular, Lemma 4 applies with <img src="26-7401226\98ad029a-66b8-4f57-8a9f-7e1f9fb6e17a.jpg" /> for every<img src="26-7401226\2d855070-1fae-454c-8160-7c89e2e581f3.jpg" />. Therefore, we have</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72001"><label>(2.5)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\c8429976-221d-4b95-a95c-b55920cf0ef1.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>We use (2.5) to prove the following interesting result.</p><p>Lemma 5. If <img src="26-7401226\decea294-39aa-4797-88d6-0af5ca4dc64c.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\430f5d15-3232-4dc4-bd42-4221a2338322.jpg" /> does not vanish in <img src="26-7401226\4a0067c3-427d-4ea1-abac-10b3bff05ac4.jpg" /> then for every<img src="26-7401226\f036842f-b88b-4778-ae64-3cb62a11259d.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\f143026d-5791-48b6-a166-9c212acbc00c.jpg" />and for <img src="26-7401226\b628454c-5347-4025-9104-db19e10de45a.jpg" /> real, <img src="26-7401226\a255cfb5-a94e-4970-9b3e-e890bbaa9c1a.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72002"><label>(2.6)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\0ae4a315-1afd-4853-81d5-42b75f0bc317.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where<img src="26-7401226\00a031e4-9499-4e97-bc14-c39cd46fb34a.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\936fbcea-278c-43b4-b6bd-bdea8e03e9f1.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\1491c686-3fe5-46d1-8357-c2f9dced719c.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\360c4751-ba7f-48c6-8820-f161e36ccd1b.jpg" /></p><p>is defined by (1.13).</p><p>Proof. Since <img src="26-7401226\ae96da04-d3c0-4aa0-8a19-ccf40b02a9ef.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\a1f2c3f1-2852-4863-8e7f-90be7f4c66ac.jpg" />, by Lemma 3, we have for <img src="26-7401226\63396c56-a1e8-48e7-ac1b-5393c4efba6d.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72003"><label>(2.7)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\67d5bfdf-1e94-49b7-9140-3d0bb08ae969.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Also, since</p><p><img src="26-7401226\df21b798-9009-4cbd-bcb9-1bcfc9928468.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\312835f2-f9b0-4f38-baaf-ac9202b385ec.jpg" /></p><p>and therefore,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\6f273b2f-59e9-497f-9539-991066ac610d.jpg" /></p><p>(2.8)</p><p>Also, for <img src="26-7401226\e9457032-25ea-42ba-96a9-79402159a963.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\fcbdaca2-81ff-4e86-ab4c-13cbffdb9e04.jpg" /></p><p>Using this in (2.7), we get for <img src="26-7401226\6b7f8c91-8478-4937-8863-11bdd6ec1a51.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\8e47617e-a4bb-4f7c-a4d9-5abba895dc35.jpg" /></p><p>As in the proof of Lemma 3, the polynomial</p><p><img src="26-7401226\45d560ae-3ba1-4b2f-adf5-06aadc70918e.jpg" />has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\b92c688f-8a68-4ac5-975c-75bc2980cdf7.jpg" /></p><p>and by Lemma 1, <img src="26-7401226\58b3216e-fc57-40c2-8874-2e4e101b1131.jpg" /></p><p>also has all its zero in <img src="26-7401226\d81b3b78-a3d9-45a3-83f0-1571b7924fc8.jpg" /> therefore,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\098a17f6-2236-4851-95bf-8369e7892fe9.jpg" />has all its zeros in</p><p><img src="26-7401226\d960d69f-e1e0-49ca-b031-f5d91ab2cc1e.jpg" />Hence by the maximum modulus principle, for <img src="26-7401226\b30c678f-b4ba-41e3-b449-ce84ade390d7.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72004"><label>(2.9)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\deb258f4-3e2a-4aba-b28d-48aaf53e2c00.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>A direct application of Rouche’s theorem shows that with <img src="26-7401226\74898087-2260-4740-828e-cdfb5cc1938d.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\3b27801b-4d05-4518-864e-caba4448b28b.jpg" /></p><p>has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\589d4630-ab14-4d88-af8d-21553f5ec8c4.jpg" /> for every real <img src="26-7401226\c343c631-f8fb-47ff-80d0-9ab5fec7a0d3.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\70100183-f8b3-4505-aa19-d27d6457e550.jpg" /> Therefore, <img src="26-7401226\22dc4c86-989d-4297-bad9-7438b9ed2d24.jpg" />is an admissible operator. Applying (2.5) of Lemma 4, the desired result follows immediately for each<img src="26-7401226\440115c0-daeb-4f5e-a4ba-200cd49fc1cc.jpg" />.</p><p>From Lemma 5, we deduce the following more general result.</p><p>Lemma 6. If <img src="26-7401226\4f3555bd-54de-406e-a1d3-9f8595358f1c.jpg" /> then for every <img src="26-7401226\cc74da2b-eb6e-4f31-be41-372787e7eca4.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\9ef221c5-2a3d-40a3-a5d1-926691e41f0e.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\c125ae8a-3955-4e0d-8aaf-10a90288f4ff.jpg" /> real <img src="26-7401226\3c901f03-36bf-45cd-a284-dd2cc09cf227.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72005"><label>(2.10)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\c0e4cf44-b42e-44ab-8a9e-dad494f5e7cb.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Proof. Let <img src="26-7401226\a6a072ab-37d4-44ad-a8f9-2192543e499b.jpg" /> and let <img src="26-7401226\a20e1ee8-5b56-4084-9653-250b2f0feddf.jpg" /> be the zeros of<img src="26-7401226\0fd9a048-b5c0-4e62-9287-edbaca594c88.jpg" />. If <img src="26-7401226\bdf42438-b033-44d1-99be-3f09c5f6069a.jpg" /> for all<img src="26-7401226\710a377a-95c4-43a5-9478-d9ee04b74c97.jpg" />, then the result follows by Lemma 5. Henceforth, we assume that <img src="26-7401226\a406a4d7-0dea-4ae4-a137-18fac346369d.jpg" /> has at least one zero in <img src="26-7401226\799cab9b-7185-4527-8eba-a4e39a94f3d7.jpg" /> so that we can write</p><p><img src="26-7401226\f5b3e46a-6af5-4c50-a302-0a8c7ff31b94.jpg" /></p><p>where the zeros <img src="26-7401226\baba8510-f249-4b2e-be15-b0fada797b15.jpg" /> of <img src="26-7401226\fa3c17ba-64cd-4a12-8ad1-adf548de7f37.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\24e99eb3-efc0-4b1f-9d1e-8a899f7de241.jpg" /> and the zeros <img src="26-7401226\ef53207d-7555-4f87-b3f0-28c0d59f7442.jpg" /> of <img src="26-7401226\d3f796c0-dd5b-41e3-9e28-483c776cb082.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\2f877e7e-1e5a-4604-8eee-97b579fc8ddd.jpg" /> First we suppose that <img src="26-7401226\09dd0eae-cd67-46ad-954f-7c16ce9dda5c.jpg" /> has no zero on <img src="26-7401226\3764001c-8a95-4cbf-8017-c146c1fe8dde.jpg" /> so that all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\c604b686-db52-4c00-9319-8d0df85c3216.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\cc3e4cd2-5ea8-427c-b7c6-5942d25df367.jpg" /> Since all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\f0361ea5-638b-471c-bd4f-0ab63cac5bb0.jpg" />th degree polynomial <img src="26-7401226\954c485f-8b13-4a53-9627-fde7c87995e4.jpg" /> lie in<img src="26-7401226\6a17d3ad-7d07-4460-b702-305f720d5cc7.jpg" />, all the zeroes of its conjugate polynomial</p><p><img src="26-7401226\2d655928-f306-4665-97ae-fcade78e2beb.jpg" />lie in <img src="26-7401226\beb7d93e-8068-4e1a-a540-aefea50e82db.jpg" /> and</p><p><img src="26-7401226\7697de51-2b2f-417f-b06c-3ec177d0d2a4.jpg" />for <img src="26-7401226\846338df-8b99-4ff1-9e70-ddd453da024d.jpg" /> Now consider the polynomial</p><p><img src="26-7401226\d408e6d4-4d1f-42d9-93e0-ef70fc8b96ae.jpg" /></p><p>then all the zeroes of <img src="26-7401226\41d28094-c4be-4656-8fb3-d68d6a7a5d7a.jpg" /> lie in<img src="26-7401226\69c868b9-fa0e-40b9-b768-ae57aeebb6aa.jpg" />, and for <img src="26-7401226\77b09ec0-0ceb-409b-ac17-82ae7396830f.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72006"><label>(2.11)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\a224eb08-180e-49de-87f6-4344927011af.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Therefore, it follows by Rouche’s Theorem that the polynomial <img src="26-7401226\6ad405c0-0e31-45b6-9631-827dbf90e52b.jpg" /> has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\8a61efbb-d042-49b5-bcd1-4ba934e07c44.jpg" /> for every <img src="26-7401226\70fd6de7-4eac-4788-b702-a642189fde29.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\e9029119-0f15-4128-aaf8-890a645b027b.jpg" /> so that all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\5b4981c7-81db-4bc6-95cd-a6d035fc8b95.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\8791257b-817b-4b7e-bd5d-57ac4e6f4752.jpg" /> for some<img src="26-7401226\2e35945e-d91e-44e1-a69e-afc8fdaec160.jpg" />. Applying (2.9) and (2.8) to the polynomial<img src="26-7401226\df295d24-c645-4bca-a568-d571e3cf18eb.jpg" />, we get for <img src="26-7401226\fa7ac8e8-5884-4b0d-b9d8-5a275063b43e.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\cbc9167c-a40c-44d0-9424-7909616ef789.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\2588501e-e3de-406a-8d9c-fded3f91b8de.jpg" /></p><p>that is,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72007"><label>(2.12)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\5c4fa8ea-1520-4728-912e-f5f489339354.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>for <img src="26-7401226\a41b1dda-fb65-4651-a710-67c3850411ee.jpg" /> If<img src="26-7401226\90eb6547-d5e4-4709-8841-7528fc2d3e4c.jpg" />, then <img src="26-7401226\b5452103-91ab-46ce-b875-a5506cb00a94.jpg" /> as <img src="26-7401226\5662ce75-cac3-4637-bcbc-8631688bf54d.jpg" /> and we get</p><p><img src="26-7401226\f2ed34e2-193e-45b8-a585-3c665016ff29.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\2a62cf38-2e40-42dd-9cbc-8e231537af0a.jpg" /></p><p>Equivalently, for <img src="26-7401226\2c1c0636-8f39-4dd8-ac89-c79d924d947e.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\d22efaf2-bde0-434d-97d9-ecac2d333864.jpg" /></p><p>where <img src="26-7401226\8bdf215f-d59e-4da8-830e-67b0dda21c98.jpg" /></p><p>Since <img src="26-7401226\fc92aa44-7f2c-42f1-89c1-a03fd4907b1f.jpg" /> has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\4ac0be85-a0ad-44fa-a919-2fa3524a26f0.jpg" /> it follows that <img src="26-7401226\9e80bb3b-3fab-40d1-9bfd-dec231723b33.jpg" /> has its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\62957403-cfa1-40a7-bae5-d4d576613569.jpg" /> and hence (proceeding similarly as in proof of Lemma 3) the polynomial <img src="26-7401226\3af4c9da-42e1-4775-8753-b9b645c23f04.jpg" /> also has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\49f2b13f-1b96-4c21-be62-aa427b8170d3.jpg" /> By Lemma 1,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\82d16df0-c5f9-4630-933b-66aebea00c6e.jpg" /> has all zeros in</p><p><img src="26-7401226\9bde606b-fb7d-40ca-b492-865521374a13.jpg" />and thus <img src="26-7401226\425eba41-8372-462d-9ad0-a8a9bb8a0615.jpg" /> does not vanish in <img src="26-7401226\e3a7aeff-ae8f-4a5b-82d2-d4871ee4c039.jpg" /></p><p>An application of Rouche’s theorem shows that the polynomial</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72008"><label>(2.13)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\8ee366c8-7820-4d91-850c-4d053696099e.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>has all zeros in <img src="26-7401226\d2263f67-c576-4a47-959e-f845ed11bb08.jpg" /> Writing in</p><p><img src="26-7401226\11314c87-07ad-49f2-a5c6-b12a12cb087d.jpg" />and noting that B is a linear operator, it follows that the polynomial</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72009"><label>(2.14)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\158d5e5e-e00d-4d81-a575-261efa8b7874.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\fa9e3645-e3e4-482a-a5de-2a84a0e478fb.jpg" /> for every <img src="26-7401226\5145dc2d-93c5-4a44-8582-4f9983b5af87.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\f9938921-a7be-4977-9a8d-2cdd68020bb5.jpg" /></p><p>We claim</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72010"><label>(2.15)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\cdb391ac-a2a8-41eb-96d1-af3c57fdb32e.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>for <img src="26-7401226\c39c18e6-c269-4757-a1e9-f9b87b2cfd2b.jpg" /> If Inequality (2.15) is not true, then there exists a point <img src="26-7401226\c97bbc03-d212-4f38-8dc3-6dd03c8a4efb.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\fc4b34a1-b270-4599-80b1-2a523aa52be1.jpg" /> such that</p><p><img src="26-7401226\1512367c-e415-439e-97bb-2d7190e849a7.jpg" /></p><p>Since <img src="26-7401226\30c975a7-1ddb-46e4-b887-a3d9317471a2.jpg" /> has all its zeros in<img src="26-7401226\c81987b4-cbb4-429c-b42e-fb0d68af7a72.jpg" />, proceeding similarly as in the proof of (2.13), it follows that</p><p><img src="26-7401226\26a476e7-b541-4db3-9c3a-21b6982c029f.jpg" />for <img src="26-7401226\45ce7f4d-7b85-4602-bac5-25d2f049380c.jpg" /> We take</p><p><img src="26-7401226\6a44eb79-2005-4ab0-ac8a-8e2309bdcd7d.jpg" /></p><p>so that <img src="26-7401226\2f95abe9-2d0f-434e-b39a-9a390a1c8c45.jpg" /> is a well-defined real or complex number with <img src="26-7401226\2291ed24-62e2-4d8e-bb03-59fd89e88ef2.jpg" /> and with this choice of<img src="26-7401226\c870681a-6852-421f-bf90-2b5713cf6e78.jpg" />, from (2.14), we get<img src="26-7401226\db0ade2d-fc27-4e74-8716-9a019584f439.jpg" />. This clearly is a contradiction to the fact that <img src="26-7401226\d9ece5a0-1dfb-434d-ad6b-047e148fe8c2.jpg" /> has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\6a27d3f1-e03e-4d33-b740-2ae6f15c732d.jpg" /> Thus (2.15) holds, which in particular gives for each <img src="26-7401226\a7317c5f-767a-422f-8af5-3df16a980210.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\61b3509c-0ffa-4549-8014-88b5ed3c0d91.jpg" /> real,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\a4a966bd-b065-43d9-86ac-92a23b7a1ca3.jpg" /></p><p>Lemma 4 and (2.7) applied to <img src="26-7401226\eeacd54a-af48-4643-a928-78bedcbb4d77.jpg" /> gives for each<img src="26-7401226\a8dd12ea-6032-413a-b35a-1d8cf58bccb5.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72011"><label>(2.16)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\a43bfad2-0176-44f5-a1ea-50ae164d848d.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Now if <img src="26-7401226\0b6701ec-3fea-4def-93dd-db790a404fa2.jpg" /> has a zero on<img src="26-7401226\0d4d8549-3ee8-42e9-8a59-cc377014a1e1.jpg" />, then applying (2.16) to the polynomial <img src="26-7401226\07a60c7d-a7fb-4d97-90c5-69280ed0707b.jpg" /> where<img src="26-7401226\9f34997b-b3d7-474a-b6b6-8cac437684bd.jpg" />, we get for each<img src="26-7401226\a87529c5-e8e1-4d69-90dd-316b81207a81.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\9ddca96e-c3dd-4637-823f-750c978a895c.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\3296e7bd-015e-4a8c-917a-ff9767463fb9.jpg" /> real,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72012"><label>(2.17)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\6f25c6d4-ed7b-4300-9c6e-e410ce6f0b8d.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Letting <img src="26-7401226\297d8367-ccd8-4f46-a87c-79e639abb67b.jpg" /> in (2.17) and using continuity, the desired result follows immediately and this proves Lemma 6.</p><p>Lemma 7. If<img src="26-7401226\d636bd78-b31a-4820-b84c-39e5ebefca40.jpg" />, then for every<img src="26-7401226\0f6c7dd6-21d1-4de4-9890-d79b56a8d76f.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\0266f34c-a30e-410e-bb1b-5d7398c8db03.jpg" />and<img src="26-7401226\820ee945-85ab-458c-8430-b8e1234f5a7e.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72013"><label>(2.18)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\e53ed9d2-84fd-4a67-9d6b-ca6c314c88e0.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where<img src="26-7401226\ae84581d-3b44-4a37-8ea9-553e7877a096.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\77bd14b9-9625-4de2-b88f-7785509054b3.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\2f4881c4-24c6-4a4e-a922-915b85348f52.jpg" /> is defined by (1.13). The result is best possible and <img src="26-7401226\5d0f49e4-0959-4f4b-b62d-141f885a799e.jpg" /> is an extremal polynomial for any <img src="26-7401226\cb4ce2b5-7a1b-4d33-b59c-1923889fdf56.jpg" /></p><p>Proof. By Lemma 6, for each<img src="26-7401226\05b682d6-782e-41a3-8c9b-86f697787e8a.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\818020a9-4bc4-4c3f-958b-5aae804bc0ec.jpg" />and<img src="26-7401226\43169852-c918-4998-bb5c-6083cc70a613.jpg" />, the Inequality (2.6) holds. Since</p><p><img src="26-7401226\5bc35d8f-9b2a-4be5-b25f-19e1ed660611.jpg" />is the conjugate polynomial of<img src="26-7401226\f1e2c2c9-6d0b-4113-abc4-6231e3939bd2.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\0ca3ad09-e708-4a9e-9657-a975727a9356.jpg" /></p><p>and therefore for each<img src="26-7401226\bb3832d4-5810-46f3-b5c8-e23099e318aa.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\c44edd3f-0fa5-4d07-a676-455d79bd8449.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\ff69fb1c-328c-4fb2-86e1-656f0ab37331.jpg" /> , we have</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72014"><label>(2.19)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\c5ea50b4-8da4-487c-b504-84fa005fcf05.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Integrating (2.19) both sides with respect to <img src="26-7401226\0e968531-a351-4468-824d-2540b0aa7748.jpg" /> from 0 to <img src="26-7401226\e044e26e-c9a3-4e6a-8e2d-10c6c7420cfc.jpg" /> and using (2.6), we get</p><p><img src="26-7401226\15100857-deca-47ac-968f-2ab489cb087b.jpg" /></p><p>which establishes Inequality (2.18).</p></sec><sec id="s3"><title>3. Proof of Theorems</title><p>Proof of Theorem. By hypothesis<img src="26-7401226\d51589fc-a58f-4ec5-84b4-785ecbd5d24c.jpg" />, we can write</p><p><img src="26-7401226\40d295a3-9365-44d1-8768-89c2251ffadc.jpg" /></p><p>where the zeros <img src="26-7401226\37473042-1fd2-49a5-bfcb-1cce9b1f4a82.jpg" /> of <img src="26-7401226\a3858fa4-9f5f-42fe-a178-5975a1060b31.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\7d4e1660-f771-4c76-a25e-85e28846b51e.jpg" /> and the zeros <img src="26-7401226\54dab754-fc6b-4532-8c83-ae33460bbd7a.jpg" /> of <img src="26-7401226\9b437962-0341-45dc-ae4c-48f4d4ee76ec.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\a79067df-0bb3-4425-8c22-84509cda9386.jpg" /> First, we suppose that all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\57ff0b63-c51a-4ca6-b44a-47f03dbbf406.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\bfc911de-66f1-42a9-83ab-4ea93dfdba4b.jpg" /> Since all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\495be704-1642-4093-a7f7-827dac26c421.jpg" /> lie in<img src="26-7401226\5badd187-46a7-43bf-b176-5043b7c6fb8c.jpg" />, the polynomial <img src="26-7401226\7594be92-4f08-4d52-a66a-908c3dec83ac.jpg" /> has all its zeroes in</p><p><img src="26-7401226\999be424-671e-4b16-871d-961e183c2fdf.jpg" />and <img src="26-7401226\bc6f59ea-a6b3-4be5-a746-cd148ec50708.jpg" /> for <img src="26-7401226\4c43f1d4-a628-4a4e-ad7d-e68079a2cf8b.jpg" /> Now consider the polynomial</p><p><img src="26-7401226\3fc06646-838c-4336-86d4-dbbae22eb107.jpg" /></p><p>then all the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\5d855bc9-8349-4404-8833-8c070c91376c.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\a0182c3a-0907-41a1-9269-6cef01f02c83.jpg" /> and for <img src="26-7401226\fd8b600f-3a5d-4fda-8687-b9061b6f8182.jpg" /></p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72015"><label>(3.1)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\f195a1dc-b1f6-4804-908b-7360493c2155.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Observe that <img src="26-7401226\87944971-f9ca-4973-9b20-0cc69122e1f8.jpg" /> when</p><p><img src="26-7401226\b3ef6e3f-3ee4-41ae-8946-2be416149d65.jpg" />, so it is regular even at <img src="26-7401226\827447ec-ea8e-4236-b2a6-5042ba384420.jpg" /> and thus from (3.1) and by the maximum modulus principle, it follows that</p><p><img src="26-7401226\708c9689-e94b-4b69-be11-8d54e5e11ed4.jpg" /></p><p>Since <img src="26-7401226\2e2065cb-25fc-4c4c-abc1-5f66e9b31540.jpg" /> for <img src="26-7401226\766468b5-9a37-4734-88e0-e8d454b4c701.jpg" /> a direct application of Rouche’s theorem shows that the polynomial <img src="26-7401226\ac5e341d-6ce3-4357-9980-25ab02efeafb.jpg" /> has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\4470eb38-16cf-4ab4-be49-29a722629369.jpg" /> for every <img src="26-7401226\eb5f433d-b86c-4d0c-b453-bdb5b97287da.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\369ba41c-d6e0-48df-bbb0-c1e16e76d1cd.jpg" /> Applying Lemma 2 to the polynomial <img src="26-7401226\a96b0ac7-5bac-4cea-9516-0e60f4dab531.jpg" /> and noting that the zeros of <img src="26-7401226\e63d2583-3bbb-4cdd-9754-ffc69240614f.jpg" /> lie in <img src="26-7401226\6bf7bed6-30fa-4647-baea-51f2be163c46.jpg" /> we deduce (as in Lemma 3) that for every real or complex <img src="26-7401226\489bf732-5d1f-487f-bfbc-54d565abb047.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\16e47889-37f5-4ada-ad7e-1b509bbbd378.jpg" /> all the zeros of polynomial</p><p><img src="26-7401226\c63037e5-443e-4d13-819b-379f1ad28d34.jpg" /></p><p>lie in <img src="26-7401226\5ac407eb-dceb-4c66-a36c-761ebcae48f6.jpg" /> Applying Lemma 1 to <img src="26-7401226\8f582eea-6745-4cf8-8d88-6b63fac31ea8.jpg" /> and noting that <img src="26-7401226\a56ff81e-22f1-4c5c-9f5e-d2bad465cec6.jpg" /> is a linear operator, it follows that all the zeroes of</p><p><img src="26-7401226\dc2f4951-874c-43f9-9e0b-082b487ef27f.jpg" /></p><p>lie in <img src="26-7401226\c2715db9-15a1-4ba7-8b77-09f419263a13.jpg" /> for every <img src="26-7401226\57ff1629-1e83-4c5b-b536-f332e3c18ccc.jpg" /> with <img src="26-7401226\a4c16969-a078-4abf-8850-a16883c735a2.jpg" /> This implies for <img src="26-7401226\7ff03361-0964-4b81-bcf2-fb930e22ef1a.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\afc0734d-abc0-479d-be4e-8cac69700b2d.jpg" /></p><p>which, in particular, gives for each<img src="26-7401226\929f2784-b351-476f-a8f9-f94a05b9e57f.jpg" />, <img src="26-7401226\ace73a59-9125-491a-b081-8476b31c2c39.jpg" />and<img src="26-7401226\6e3294ab-0338-4de2-b9c3-03eb14273d00.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72016"><label>(3.2)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\c6b014d0-57fe-483f-91c7-1c384cd2b0e7.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Again,(as in case of<img src="26-7401226\3fffe24a-0238-4699-9542-495400035d41.jpg" />) <img src="26-7401226\f3081da6-c667-448c-a74b-3642427d2fc0.jpg" />has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\10572d4f-6581-42ed-9937-c792233c81f8.jpg" /> thus by Lemma 1,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\73aca875-dd3f-4b8c-9f68-ac6b5874e44f.jpg" />also has all its zeros in</p><p><img src="26-7401226\03740d8f-e315-43bf-817d-346f1ff0552e.jpg" />Therefore, if <img src="26-7401226\86db553c-4382-48f6-b8d7-6709628f5d78.jpg" /> has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\b4d0c570-9369-46a3-b176-9a94d5ffa17e.jpg" /> then the operator <img src="26-7401226\4a9d0041-9dad-42ac-a44d-4eea479584e1.jpg" /> defined by</p><p><img src="26-7401226\99d4e1e5-d5a4-4e79-82fe-d1959d8ea8db.jpg" /></p><p>(3.3)</p><p>is admissible. Since <img src="26-7401226\4f79d093-da2f-4beb-9118-40fa7d0bb51d.jpg" /> has all its zeros in <img src="26-7401226\efc2b476-dfc6-4ed4-a5f3-e3543236a7dc.jpg" /> in view of (3.3) it follows by (2.5) of Lemma 4 that for each<img src="26-7401226\1a20afd7-cbf6-4cb7-840a-d998eb94dfae.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72017"><label>(3.4)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\96fcfc7e-3645-48a6-974e-f37c8f40278e.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Combining Inequalities (3.3), (3.4) and noting that</p><p><img src="26-7401226\b9db427a-1390-401e-842a-8642aa5672fe.jpg" />, we obtain for each <img src="26-7401226\513d20d0-242a-4ab1-92da-b178b8e762e7.jpg" /> and</p><p><img src="26-7401226\cd2cd2bd-9360-4ba4-a2a6-fdcb9f84a1f6.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72018"><label>(3.5)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\0fd04aed-6683-41c8-aec0-d6b64f040beb.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>In case <img src="26-7401226\51ad4c91-8590-4a11-8a92-7fb093a16ba5.jpg" /> has a zero on<img src="26-7401226\d16463b6-964a-4aeb-ba0b-aa36599f79bd.jpg" />, then Inequality (3.5) follows by continuity. This proves Theorem 1 for<img src="26-7401226\14d5e641-6cae-4d3e-a1c6-97d28d0334dc.jpg" />. To obtain this result for<img src="26-7401226\79566f1b-c557-40a8-b992-e8965c2750ce.jpg" />, we simply make<img src="26-7401226\53f3289c-a5ee-44af-acbc-1ae01a59b605.jpg" />.</p><p>Proof of Theorem 2. By hypothesis <img src="26-7401226\8452d249-9aa0-423c-bb67-7787bc54ca24.jpg" /> does not vanish in <img src="26-7401226\b1d86c6e-0bef-4ec2-87d2-a2d7f58c09bb.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\c3f536b6-81c0-4774-9ac2-b33f6a256bea.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\766c1e6d-6711-4539-b1cc-6c8aece72fb1.jpg" />, therefore, for<img src="26-7401226\06e0bf82-8151-45dc-91b1-166c9ec977cb.jpg" />, (2.1) holds. Also, for each <img src="26-7401226\3c81be48-cd82-46c8-9a0d-fc66aeef51d8.jpg" /> and <img src="26-7401226\eaf27033-662f-4d7a-a82d-279756f641ba.jpg" /> real, (2.18) holds.</p><p>Now it can be easily verified that for every real number <img src="26-7401226\de0d691c-3a16-4da7-b219-7449dbf543bd.jpg" /> and<img src="26-7401226\01d513c5-4025-420e-ae07-4c87c7a33b3a.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\07be1fc3-aaaa-4b5e-833e-eb11103474af.jpg" /></p><p>This implies for each<img src="26-7401226\d9a1484d-011c-4899-a72a-4d59cbbe6cf5.jpg" />,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.27243-formula72019"><label>(3.6)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="26-7401226\55d3ce16-639d-4aee-bf1f-04370ee8c156.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>If<img src="26-7401226\c00719e5-bc15-426f-acb5-554d8986b291.jpg" />, we take</p><p><img src="26-7401226\23a8ab21-a0bd-4b35-a290-07fcbeca5c58.jpg" /></p><p>then by (2.1),<img src="26-7401226\62bbea28-b792-44da-8f4a-5f741203cc54.jpg" /> and we get with the help of (3.6),</p><p><img src="26-7401226\7b27db65-bce0-4acb-afcd-09a2f7d62cf7.jpg" /></p><p>For<img src="26-7401226\29cd70a3-34a2-43d2-8a1e-80aff2105ef9.jpg" />, this inequality is trivially true. Using this in (2.18), we conclude that for each<img src="26-7401226\f600ce55-9480-4156-8bba-acabd6d90ec5.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="26-7401226\b4668059-e3e9-40ea-aa53-d3657d84b062.jpg" /></p><p>from which Theorem 2 follows for<img src="26-7401226\3f11a684-72d7-4b7a-b5b8-119fc51d0407.jpg" />. To establish this result for<img src="26-7401226\e30c0eea-e6cf-4f39-b931-18b6fe0725dd.jpg" />, we simply let<img src="26-7401226\fe48a83c-ea85-467b-a48c-1c6aab6dec70.jpg" />.</p><p>Proof of Theorem 3. Since <img src="26-7401226\e742420f-8813-43f4-a9d7-054e6b0e67c8.jpg" /> is a self-inversive polynomial, then we have for some<img src="26-7401226\aa6be787-a10c-4e17-babf-a24df0806a6c.jpg" />, with <img src="26-7401226\944cff01-2ab2-4f98-9e12-3e8df589d0c6.jpg" /> <img src="26-7401226\97e54338-ae98-42d8-885a-4f1f38533822.jpg" /> for all<img src="26-7401226\32842afe-cb98-434a-a30f-d2e5d33fcae5.jpg" />, where <img src="26-7401226\b2c76cf3-0090-470e-bdd9-5d38fd432c18.jpg" /> is the conjugate polynomial<img src="26-7401226\885b37c3-29b7-4b0c-a6d8-1ce19959e559.jpg" />. This gives, for <img src="26-7401226\c8b038f2-27b4-4832-95a0-0846e7102306.jpg" /></p><p><img src="26-7401226\6e32728c-72ea-4011-ada3-b08a0a9d3ad5.jpg" /></p><p>Using this in place of (2.1) and proceeding similarly as in the proof of Theorem 2, we get the desired result for each<img src="26-7401226\59af50ac-c67b-4025-9b99-3590ba026384.jpg" />. The extension to <img src="26-7401226\328db4ba-35b8-4f28-b410-74b84471237b.jpg" /> obtains by letting<img src="26-7401226\850b1f8e-4dea-435f-b81c-b4cf25271a8f.jpg" />.</p></sec><sec id="s4"><title>REFERENCES</title></sec></body><back><ref-list><title>References</title><ref id="scirp.27243-ref1"><label>1</label><mixed-citation publication-type="other" xlink:type="simple">W. M. Shah and A. Liman, “Integral Estimates for the Family of B-Operators,” Operator and Matrices, Vol. 5, No. 1, 2011, pp. 79-87. doi:10.7153/oam-05-04</mixed-citation></ref><ref id="scirp.27243-ref2"><label>2</label><mixed-citation publication-type="other" xlink:type="simple">Q. I. Rahman, “Functions of Exponential Type,” Transactions of the American Society, Vol. 135, 1969, pp. 295-309. doi:10.1090/S0002-9947-1969-0232938-X</mixed-citation></ref><ref id="scirp.27243-ref3"><label>3</label><mixed-citation publication-type="other" xlink:type="simple">G. Pólya an G. 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