In mathematics, Wiener's lemma is a well-known identity which relates the asymptotic behaviour of the Fourier coefficients of a Borel measure on the circle to its atomic part. This result admits an analogous statement for measures on the real line. It was first discovered by Norbert Wiener.[1][2]
- Given a real or complex Borel measure
on the unit circle
, let
be its atomic part (meaning that
and
for
. Then

where
is the
-th Fourier coefficient of
.
- Similarly, given a real or complex Borel measure
on the real line
and called
its atomic part, we have

where
is the Fourier transform of
.
- First of all, we observe that if
is a complex measure on the circle then

with
. The function
is bounded by
in absolute value and has
, while
for
, which converges to
as
. Hence, by the dominated convergence theorem,

We now take
to be the pushforward of
under the inverse map on
, namely
for any Borel set
. This complex measure has Fourier coefficients
. We are going to apply the above to the convolution between
and
, namely we choose
, meaning that
is the pushforward of the measure
(on
) under the product map
. By Fubini's theorem

So, by the identity derived earlier,
By Fubini's theorem again, the right-hand side equals

- The proof of the analogous statement for the real line is identical, except that we use the identity

(which follows from Fubini's theorem), where
.
We observe that
,
and
for
, which converges to
as
. So, by dominated convergence, we have the analogous identity

- A real or complex Borel measure
on the circle is diffuse (i.e.
) if and only if
.
- A probability measure
on the circle is a Dirac mass if and only if
. (Here, the nontrivial implication follows from the fact that the weights
are positive and satisfy
, which forces
and thus
, so that there must be a single atom with mass
.)