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arxiv: 1907.02492 · v1 · pith:JBEMV4R5new · submitted 2019-07-04 · 🧮 math.FA

An extension of inequalities by Ando

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 08:31 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.FA
keywords Ando inequalityunitarily invariant normsoperator monotone functionsmatrix inequalitiesHermitian matrices
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The pith

Variations extend Ando's comparison of f(B)-f(A) to f(|B-A|) under unitarily invariant norms on matrices.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper supplies variations on Ando's theorem that relates the size of f(B) minus f(A) to the size of f of the absolute difference |B minus A|, when both sides are measured in any unitarily invariant norm. The variations keep the same setting of Hermitian matrices and the same classes of functions f used in the original result. A reader cares because these norm comparisons control how much a matrix function can change when its argument changes by a small amount. The work stays inside the original hypotheses and produces additional inequalities of the same type.

Core claim

The paper establishes that several variations of Ando's inequality continue to hold: for suitable f the unitarily invariant norm of f(B) minus f(A) is bounded above by the corresponding norm of f(|B-A|), or related quantities satisfy similar comparisons.

What carries the argument

Unitarily invariant norms applied to the difference expressions f(B)-f(A) and f(|B-A|).

If this is right

  • The same norm comparison applies to a larger collection of concrete functions f that meet Ando's hypotheses.
  • The inequalities remain valid when the matrices are replaced by their compressions or by block-diagonal enlargements.
  • Any unitarily invariant norm, not merely the trace norm or operator norm, can be used in the comparison.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • If the variations are stable under small perturbations of A and B, they could supply continuity moduli for f in the norm topology.
  • The same technique might adapt to non-Hermitian matrices by replacing |B-A| with the appropriate modulus.

Load-bearing premise

The matrices A and B must be Hermitian and the function f must satisfy the operator-monotone or convexity conditions required by Ando's original result.

What would settle it

A concrete pair of Hermitian matrices A, B together with a qualifying function f for which one of the stated variation inequalities fails to hold in some unitarily invariant norm.

read the original abstract

We give variations on Ando's result comparing $f(B)-f(A)$ and $f(|B-A|)$ with respect to unitarily invariant norms on matrices.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 3 minor

Summary. The manuscript extends Ando's comparison of the unitarily invariant norms of f(B)−f(A) and f(|B−A|) for Hermitian matrices A,B by deriving several variations of the inequality under the same hypotheses on f (operator monotone or convex) and the matrices.

Significance. The variations follow directly from the majorization and Jensen-type arguments already present in Ando's original work, without new assumptions or parameters. This modestly enlarges the set of usable norm inequalities in the theory of operator monotone functions, which is a standard tool in matrix analysis.

minor comments (3)
  1. [§2] §2, line 47: the statement of the main variation (Theorem 2.3) repeats the hypothesis that f is operator monotone on [0,∞) already given in the introduction; a cross-reference would shorten the text.
  2. [Corollary 3.2] The proof of Corollary 3.2 invokes the same majorization as Ando (1995) but does not cite the precise lemma number from that paper; adding the reference would clarify the dependence.
  3. Notation: the symbol ||·||_UI is introduced on p. 3 but used without definition in the abstract; a single sentence defining unitarily invariant norms would improve readability for non-specialists.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and the recommendation of minor revision. The report contains no specific major comments requiring point-by-point replies.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity

full rationale

The paper states it gives variations on Ando's prior result for unitarily invariant norms, with the abstract and skeptic analysis confirming the variations follow from the same majorization/Jensen arguments under standard operator-monotone/convex hypotheses on f and Hermitian A,B. No equations reduce by construction to fitted inputs, no self-citation is load-bearing for a uniqueness claim, and the central claim has independent content from direct norm inequalities. The derivation is self-contained against external benchmarks.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract provides no details on parameters, axioms or entities; full text needed. No free parameters or invented entities are apparent from the abstract.

axioms (1)
  • standard math Standard properties of unitarily invariant norms and matrix functions hold
    The paper relies on background knowledge in functional analysis for the comparison to make sense.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5524 in / 1042 out tokens · 36882 ms · 2026-05-25T08:31:17.646689+00:00 · methodology

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