Abstract

In this paper, we introduce and investigate the concept of \(A^{\mathcal{I^{K}}}\)-summability as an extension of \(A^{\mathcal{I^{*}}}\)-summability which was recently (2021) introduced by O.H.H.~Edely, where \(A=(a_{nk})_{n,k=1}^{\infty}\) is a non-negative regular matrix and \(\mathcal{I}\) and \(\mathcal{K}\) represent two non-trivial admissible ideals in \(\mathbb{N}\). We study some of its fundamental properties as well as a few inclusion relationships with some other known summability methods. We prove that \(A^{\mathcal{K}}\)-summability always implies \(A^{\mathcal{I^{K}}}\)-summability whereas \(A^{\mathcal{I}}\)-summability not necessarily implies \(A^{\mathcal{I^{K}}}\)-summability. Finally, we give a condition namely \(AP(\mathcal{I},\mathcal{K})\) (which is a natural generalization of the condition \(AP\)) under which \(A^{\mathcal{I}}\)-summability implies \(A^{\mathcal{I^{K}}}\)-summability.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call