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In mathematics, a Pisot-Vijayaraghavan number is an algebraic integer α which is real and exceeds 1, but such that its conjugate elements are all less than 1 in absolute value. For example, if α is a quadratic irrational there is one other conjugate: α′, obtained by changing the sign of the square root in α; from
with a and b both integers, or in other cases both half an odd integer, we get
The conditions are then
This condition is satisfied by the golden mean φ. We have
and
The general condition was investigated by G. H. Hardy in relation with a problem of diophantine approximation. This work was followed up by Tirukkannapuram Vijayaraghavan (30 November1902 - 20 April1955), an Indian mathematician from the Madras region who came to Oxford to work with Hardy in the mid-1920s. The same condition also occurs in some problems on Fourier series, and was later investigated by Salem number