The term trigonometric polynomial for the real-valued case can be seen as using the analogy: the functions sin(nx) and cos(nx) are similar to the monomial basis for polynomials. In the complex case the trigonometric polynomials are spanned by the positive and negative powers of , i.e., Laurent polynomials in under the change of variables.
Definition
Any function T of the form
with coefficients and at least one of the highest-degree coefficients and non-zero, is called a complex trigonometric polynomial of degree N.[1] Using Euler's formula the polynomial can be rewritten as
with .
Analogously, letting coefficients , and at least one of and non-zero or, equivalently, and for all , then
is called a real trigonometric polynomial of degree N.[2][3]
Trigonometric polynomials are dense in the space of continuous functions on the unit circle, with the uniform norm;[4] this is a special case of the Stone–Weierstrass theorem. More concretely, for every continuous function and every there exists a trigonometric polynomial such that for all . Fejér's theorem states that the arithmetic means of the partial sums of the Fourier series of converge uniformly to provided is continuous on the circle; these partial sums can be used to approximate .
A trigonometric polynomial of degree has a maximum of roots in a real interval unless it is the zero function.[5]
Fejér-Riesz theorem
The Fejér-Riesz theorem states that every positive real trigonometric polynomial
satisfying for all ,
can be represented as the square of the modulus of another (usually complex) trigonometric polynomial such that:[6]
Or, equivalently, every Laurent polynomial
with that satisfies for all can be written as:
for some polynomial .[7]
Hussen, Abdulmtalb; Zeyani, Abdelbaset (2021). "Fejer-Riesz Theorem and Its Generalization". International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications (IJSRP). 11 (6): 286–292. doi:10.29322/IJSRP.11.06.2021.p11437.