English possessive in Mathematics

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As a non-native English speaker, I wonder what is the correct way to use the English possessive, also known as Saxon genitive, when dealing with mathematical objects.

It seems to me that there is not an agreement about that, some examples:

Taylor series

Fourier series

Fourier transform

Laplace transform

Euler function

but also...

Cantor's diagonal argument

Euler's totient function

Ramanujan's sum

Kloosterman's sum

D'Alembert's formula

Regarding theorems I think the correct way is:

"AUTHORNAME's theorem"

"FIRSTAUTHORNAME-SECONDAUTHORNAME theorem" (no 's)

Thank you in advance for any suggestion.

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According to "Writing Mathematical Papers in English" by Jerzy Trzeciak the following are correct:

Minkowski's inequality

the Minkowski inequality.

For theorems he suggests the following two forms:

Fefferman and Stein's famous theorem

the famous Fefferman-Stein theorem.