Rouché–Capelli theorem is the theorem in linear algebra that allows computing the number of solutions in a system of linear equations given the ranks of its augmented matrix and coefficient matrix.
Liouville's theorem | Chinese remainder theorem | Shannon–Hartley theorem | Quillen–Suslin theorem | Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem | Hahn–Banach theorem | Fermat's Last Theorem | Buckingham π theorem | Thue–Siegel–Roth theorem | Szemerédi's theorem | Schottky's theorem | Riemann-Roch theorem | Pythagorean theorem | Nash embedding theorem | Müntz–Szász theorem | Malgrange–Ehrenpreis theorem | Kleene fixed-point theorem | Kakutani fixed-point theorem | Gauss–Bonnet theorem | Doob's martingale convergence theorem | Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions | Denjoy theorem | Birch's theorem | Wilkie's theorem | Wick's theorem | Whitney extension theorem | Weierstrass theorem | Wedderburn's little theorem | Vietoris–Begle mapping theorem | Veblen–Young theorem |
Given that the function is analytic within each of these quarters, a nonzero winding number N (always an integer) identifies N zeros of the function inside the quarter in question by Rouché's theorem, each zero counted as many times as its multiplicity.
Theodor Estermann (1902–1991) proved in his book Complex Numbers and Functions the following relation: Let be a bounded region with continuous boundary .