The Landau kernel is named after the German number theorist Edmund Landau. The kernel is a summability kernel defined as:[1]
where the coefficients 
 are defined as follows:
Visualisation
Using integration by parts, one can show that:[2]
Hence, this implies that the Landau kernel can be defined as follows: 
Plotting this function for different values of n reveals that as n goes to infinity, 
 approaches the Dirac delta function, as seen in the image,[1] where the following functions are plotted.
Properties
Some general properties of the Landau kernel is that it is nonnegative and continuous on 
. These properties are made more concrete in the following section.
Dirac sequences
Definition: Dirac sequence—A Dirac sequence is a sequence 
 of functions 
 that satisfies the following properities:

 

 
 
 ![{\displaystyle {}\quad \int _{\mathbb {R} \smallsetminus [-\delta ,\delta ]}K_{n}(t)\,dt=\int _{-\infty }^{-\delta }K_{n}(t)\,dt+\int _{\delta }^{\infty }K_{n}(t)\,dt<\varepsilon }](./_assets_/4fa2f22c2f0e299da224c8f308e4d951a6ffd9fb.svg)
 
The third bullet point means that the area under the graph of the function 
 becomes increasingly concentrated close to the origin as n approaches infinity. This definition lends us to the following theorem.
Theorem—The sequence of Landau kernels is a Dirac sequence
 
Proof: We prove the third property only. In order to do so, we introduce the following lemma:
Lemma—The coefficients satsify the following relationship, 
 
Proof of the Lemma:
Using the definition of the coefficients above, we find that the integrand is even, we may write
completing the proof of the lemma. A corollary of this lemma is the following:
Corollary—For all positive, real 
 
 
See also
References