Newton's Inequality
Contents
Background
For
, we define the symmetric sum
to be the coefficient of
in the polynomial
(see Viete's sums). We define the symmetric average
to be
.
Statement
For non-negative
and
,
,
with equality exactly when all the
are equal.
Proof
Lemma.
For real
, there exist real
with the same symmetric averages
.
Proof.
We consider the derivative of
. The roots of
are
. Without loss of generality, we assume that the
increase as
increases. Now for any
,
must have a root between
and
by Rolle's theorem if
, and if
, then
is a root of
times, so it must be a root of
times. It follows that
must have
non-positive, real roots, i.e., for some non-negative reals
,
.
It follows that the symmetric sum
for
is
, so the symmetric average
.
Thus to prove Newton's theorem, it is sufficient to prove
for any
. Since this is a homogenous inequality, we may normalize it so that
. The inequality then becomes
.
Expanding the left side, we see that this is
.
But this is clearly equivalent to
,
which holds by the rearrangement inequality.
Proof: without calculus
We will proceed by induction on
.
For
, the inequality just reduces to AM-GM inequality.
Now suppose that for
some positive integer
the inequality holds.
Let
,
,
,
be non-negative numbers and
be the symmetric averages of them.
Let
be the symmetric averages of
,
,
.
Note that
.
\begin{align*}
d_{k-1}d_{k+1} =& \left(\frac{n-k+1}{n} {d'}_{k-1} + \frac{k-1}{n} {d'}_{k-2} x_m \right)\left(\frac{n-k-1}{n} {d'}_{k+1} + \frac{k+1}{n} {d'}_k x_m \right) \\
=& \frac{(n-k+1)(n-k-1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-1}{d'}_{k+1} + \frac{(k-1)(n-k-1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-2} {d'}_{k+1} x_m\\
& + \frac{(n-k+1)(k+1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-1}{d'}_k x_m + \frac{(k-1)(k+1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-2}{d'}_k x_m^2\\
\le & \frac{(n-k+1)(n-k-1)}{n^2} {d'}_k^2 + \frac{(k-1)(n-k-1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-2} {d'}_{k+1} x_m\\
& + \frac{(n-k+1)(k+1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-1}{d'}_k x_m + \frac{(k-1)(k+1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-1}^2 x_m^2\\
\le & \frac{(n-k+1)(n-k-1)}{n^2} {d'}_k^2 + \frac{(k-1)(n-k-1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-1} {d'}_{k} x_m\\
& + \frac{(n-k+1)(k+1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-1}{d'}_k x_m + \frac{(k-1)(k+1)}{n^2} {d'}_{k-1}^2 x_m^2\\
=& \frac{(n-k)^2}{n^2} {d'}_k^2 + \frac{2(n-k)k}{n^2} {d'}_k {d'}_{k-1} x_m +\frac{k^2}{n^2} {d'}_{k-1}^2 x_m^2 - \left(\frac{d_k}{n} - \frac{d_{k-1}x_m}{n}\right)^2\\
\le & \left(\frac{n-k}{n} {d'}_k + \frac{k}{n} {d'}_{k-1} x_m \right)^2\\
=& d_k^2
\end{align*}