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Hsu–Robbins–Erdős theorem

Statement in probability theory From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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In the mathematical theory of probability, the Hsu–Robbins–Erdős theorem states that if is a sequence of i.i.d. random variables with zero mean and finite variance and

then

for every .

The result was proved by Pao-Lu Hsu and Herbert Robbins in 1947.

This is an interesting strengthening of the classical strong law of large numbers in the direction of the Borel–Cantelli lemma. The idea of such a result is probably due to Robbins, but the method of proof is vintage Hsu.[1] Hsu and Robbins further conjectured in [2] that the condition of finiteness of the variance of is also a necessary condition for to hold. Two years later, the famed mathematician Paul Erdős proved the conjecture.[3]

Since then, many authors extended this result in several directions.[4]

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