How to determine an infinitely dimensional matrix is positive definite

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I ran into an infinitely dimensional matrix and wanted to show it is positive definite. I think I cannot do so by checking the principal minors as for finitely dimensional matrices... Can someone let me know how to show its positive definiteness? Thanks a ton!
 
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If you've got an inner product in that vector space, maybe you can check whether <Mx, x> > 0 for all x in the space. This implies that a matrix is positive definite in a finite dimensional space (if by positive definite you mean hermitian with non-negative eigenvalues). Not sure if it works in an infinite dimensional space.
 
Positive definite is defined using an inner product, so the post above should be taken as a definition, with the proviso that <Mx,x> > 0 for all non-zero x. The usual way to prove such things is to characterize the eigenvalues. In infinite dimensions, things get quite complicated, so one usually starts by verifying that the operator (matrix) is self-adjoint. Then a theorem states that there's an orthonormal basis of eigenvectors, so positive-definite reduces to showing that all eigenvalues are positive.
 
##\textbf{Exercise 10}:## I came across the following solution online: Questions: 1. When the author states in "that ring (not sure if he is referring to ##R## or ##R/\mathfrak{p}##, but I am guessing the later) ##x_n x_{n+1}=0## for all odd $n$ and ##x_{n+1}## is invertible, so that ##x_n=0##" 2. How does ##x_nx_{n+1}=0## implies that ##x_{n+1}## is invertible and ##x_n=0##. I mean if the quotient ring ##R/\mathfrak{p}## is an integral domain, and ##x_{n+1}## is invertible then...
The following are taken from the two sources, 1) from this online page and the book An Introduction to Module Theory by: Ibrahim Assem, Flavio U. Coelho. In the Abelian Categories chapter in the module theory text on page 157, right after presenting IV.2.21 Definition, the authors states "Image and coimage may or may not exist, but if they do, then they are unique up to isomorphism (because so are kernels and cokernels). Also in the reference url page above, the authors present two...
When decomposing a representation ##\rho## of a finite group ##G## into irreducible representations, we can find the number of times the representation contains a particular irrep ##\rho_0## through the character inner product $$ \langle \chi, \chi_0\rangle = \frac{1}{|G|} \sum_{g\in G} \chi(g) \chi_0(g)^*$$ where ##\chi## and ##\chi_0## are the characters of ##\rho## and ##\rho_0##, respectively. Since all group elements in the same conjugacy class have the same characters, this may be...

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