Using an approach based, amongst other things, on Proposition 1 of Kaluza
(1928), Goldie (1967) and, using a different approach based especially on zeros
of polynomials, Steutel (1967) have proved that each nondegenerate distribution
function (d.f.) F (on \RR, the real line), satisfying F(0−)=0 and F(x)=F(0)+(1−F(0))G(x), x>0, where G is the d.f. corresponding to a
mixture of exponential distributions, is infinitely divisible. Indeed,
Proposition 1 of Kaluza (1928) implies that any nondegenerate discrete
probability distribution px:x=0,1,... that is log-convex or, in
particular, completely monotone, is compound geometric, and, hence, infinitely
divisible. Steutel (1970), Shanbhag & Sreehari (1977) and Steutel & van Harn
(2004, Chapter VI) have given certain extensions or variations of one or more
of these results. Following a modified version of the C.R. Rao et al. (2009,
Section 4) approach based on the Wiener-Hopf factorization, we establish some
further results of significance to the literature on infinite divisibility.Comment: 18 pages, no figures, To appear in the Electronic Journal of
Probabilit