Holomorphic function

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Holomorphic Function

Holomorphic (of gr. ὅλος holos, 'whole' and μορφή morphe, 'form') is a property of certain complex valued functions which are analyzed in the Complex Analysis as a function f:U with an open set U is called holomorphic if f is differentiable at each point of U. In this topic also equivalent criteria for a function being holomorphic are discussed.

Subtopics

  • Criteria - Equivalent criteria for a function being holomorphic

Real and complex differentiation

Even if the definition is analogous to real differentiation, the function theory shows that the holomorphy is a very strong property. It produces a variety of phenomena that do not have a counterpart in the real. For example, each holomorphic function can be differentiated as often as desired (continuous) and can be developed locally at each point into a power series.

Definition: Complex differentiation

It is U an open subset of the complex plane and z0U a point of this subset. A function f:U is called complex differentiable in point z0, if the limit

limh0f(z0+h)f(z0)h

with h{0}. If the limit exists, then the limit is denoted with f(z0).

Definition: Holomorphic in one point

Let U be an open set and f:U a function. f is called holomorphic in point z0U, if a neighbourhood of z0 exists, in which f is complex differentiable.

Definition: Full function

If f: is complexly differentiable to the whole , then f is called a entire function.

Explanatory notes

can be interpreted as a two-dimensional real vector space with the canonical base {1,i} and so one can examine a function f:U on an open set U. In multivariable calculus it is known that f total differentiable in z0 if there exists a -linear mapping L, so that

f(z0+h)=f(z0)+L(h)+r(h)

where r is a function with the property

limh0r(h)|h|=0.

It can now be seen that the function f is complex differentiable in z0, if f is total differentiable in z0 and L is even -linear. The latter is a sufficient condition. It means that the transformation matrix L with respect to the canonical base {1,i} has the form

L(z1+iz2)=C((abba)(z1z2))

with C(y1y2):=y1+iy2.

Jacobi Matrix

Main article: Cauchy-Riemann equations

If a function f(x+iy)=u(x,y)+iv(x,y) is decompose into functions of its real and imaginary parts with real-valued functions u,v, the total derivative L with tranformation matrix has the Jacobian matrix

(uxuyvxvy).


Cauchy-Riemannian differential equations

Consequently, the function f is total differentiable precisely when it can be differentiated relatively and for u,v the Cauchy-Riemann equations

ux=vy
uy=vx

are fulfilled.

Equivalent properties of holomorphic functions of a variableIn neighbourhood of a complex number, the following properties of complex functions are equivalent:

  • (H1) The function can be differentiated in a complex manner.
  • (H2) The function can be varied as often as desired.
  • (H3) Real and imaginary parts meet the Cauchy-Riemann equations and can be continuously differentiated.
  • (H4) The function can be developed into a complex power series.
  • (H5) The function is steady and the path integral of the function disappears via any closed contractible path.
  • (H6) The functional values in the interior of a circular disk can be determined from the functional values at the edge using the Cauchy Integral formula.
  • (H7) f can be differentiated and it applies
    fz¯=0,
    where z¯ the Cauchy-Riemann operator defined by z¯:=12(x+iy)

Examples

Entire Functions

An entire function is holomorphic on the whole . Examples are:

Holomorphic, non-gant functions

Functions - not holomorphic at any point

The following functions are not holomorphic in any z. Examples are:

  • the absolute value function z|z|,
  • the projections on the real part zRe(z) or on the imaginary part zIm(z),
  • complex conjugation zz.

The function z|z|2 is complex differentiable only at the point zo=0, but the function is not' holomorphic in zo, since it is not complex differentiable in a neighborhood of 0.

Properties

Because complex differentiation is linear and obeys the product, quotient, and chain rules, the sums, products and compositions of holomorphic functions are holomorphic, and the quotient of two holomorphic functions is holomorphic wherever the denominator is not zero.[1] That is, if functions f and g are holomorphic in a domain U , then so are f+g , fg , fg , and fg . Furthermore, f/g is holomorphic if g has no zeros in U ; otherwise it is meromorphic.

If one identifies with the real plane 2 , then the holomorphic functions coincide with those functions of two real variables with continuous first derivatives which solve the Cauchy–Riemann equations, a set of two partial differential equations.[2]

Functions for real and imaginary parts

Every holomorphic function can be separated into its real and imaginary parts 1=f(x+iy)=u(x,y)+iv(x,y) , and each of these is a harmonic function on 2 (each satisfies Laplace's equation 1=2u=2v=0 ), with v the harmonic conjugate of u .[3] Conversely, every harmonic function u(x,y) on a simply connected domain Ω2 is the real part of a holomorphic function: If v is the harmonic conjugate of u , unique up to a constant, then 1=f(x+iy)=u(x,y)+iv(x,y) is holomorphic.

Cauchy's integral theorem

Cauchy's integral theorem implies that the contour integral of every holomorphic function along a loop vanishes:[4]

γf(z)dz=0.

Here γ is a rectifiable path in a simply connected complex domain U whose start point is equal to its end point, and f:U is a holomorphic function.

Cauchy's integral formula

Cauchy's integral formula states that every function holomorphic inside a disk is completely determined by its values on the disk's boundary.[4] Furthermore: Suppose U is a complex domain, f:U is a holomorphic function and the closed disk D{z:|zz0|r} is completely contained in U . Let γ be the circle forming the boundary of D . Then for every a in the interior of D :

f(a)=12πiγf(z)zadz

where the contour integral is taken counter-clockwise.

Cauchy's differentiation formula

The derivative f(a) can be written as a contour integral[4] using Cauchy's differentiation formula:

f(a)=12πiγf(z)(za)2dz,

for any simple loop positively winding once around a , and

f(a)=lim\limits γai2𝒜(γ)γf(z)dz¯,

for infinitesimal positive loops γ around a .

Conformal map

In regions where the first derivative is not zero, holomorphic functions are conformal: they preserve angles and the shape (but not size) of small figures.[5]

Analytic - Taylor series

Every holomorphic function is analytic. That is, a holomorphic function f has derivatives of every order at each point a in its domain, and it coincides with its own Taylor series at a in a neighbourhood of a . In fact, f coincides with its Taylor series at a in any disk centred at that point and lying within the domain of the function.

Functions as complex vector space

From an algebraic point of view, the set of holomorphic functions on an open set is a commutative ring and a complex vector space. Additionally, the set of holomorphic functions in an open set U is an integral domain if and only if the open set U is connected. [6] In fact, it is a locally convex topological vector space, with the seminorms being the suprema on compact subsets.

Geometric perspective - infinitely differentiable

From a geometric perspective, a function f is holomorphic at z0 if and only if its exterior derivative df in a neighbourhood U of z0 is equal to f(z)dz for some continuous function f . It follows from

0=d2f=d(fdz)=dfdz

that df is also proportional to dz , implying that the derivative df is itself holomorphic and thus that f is infinitely differentiable. Similarly, 1=d(fdz)=fdzdz=0 implies that any function f that is holomorphic on the simply connected region U is also integrable on U .

Choice of Path - Independency

For a path γ from z0 to z lying entirely in U , define 1=Fγ(z)=F(0)+γfdz ; in light of the Jordan curve theorem and the generalized Stokes' theorem, Fγ(z) is independent of the particular choice of path γ , and thus F(z) is a well-defined function on U having 1=dF=fdz or 1=f=dFdz .

Biholomorphic functions

A function which is holomorphous bijective and whose reverse function is holomorph is called biholomorph. In the case of a complex change, the equivalent is that the image is bijective and conformal. From the Implicit Function Theorem it implies for holomorphic functions of a single variable that a bijective, holomorphic function always has a holomorphic inverse function.

Holomorphy of several variable

In the n-dimensional complex space

LetDn a complex open subset. An illustration f:Dm is called holomorph if f=(f1,,fm) is holomorphous in each sub-function and each variable. With the Wittgenstein-calculus zj and zj a calculus is available, with which it is easier to manage the partial derivations of a complex function. However, holomorphic functions of several changers no longer have so many beautiful properties.For instance, the Cauchy integral set does not apply f:D and the Identity law is only valid in a weakened version. For these functions, however, the integral formula of Cauchy can be generalized by Induction to n dimensions. Salomon Bochner even proved in 1944 a generalization of the n-dimensional Cauchy integral formula. This bears the name Bochner-Martinelli-Formel.

In complex geometry

Holomorphic images are also considered in the Complex Geometry. Thus, holomorphic images can be defined between Riemann surface and between Complex Manifolds analogously to differentiable functions between smooth maifolds. In addition, there is an important counterpart to the smooth Differential forms for integration theory, called holomorphic Differential form.

Literature

  • Bak, J., Newman, D. J., & Newman, D. J. (2010). Complex analysis (Vol. 8). New York: Springer.
  • Lang, S. (2013). Complex analysis (Vol. 103). Springer Science & Business Media.

References

  1. Template:Cite book
  2. Markushevich, A.I. (1965). Theory of Functions of a Complex Variable. Prentice-Hall - in three volumes.
  3. Template:Cite book
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Template:Cite book
  5. Template:Cite book
  6. Gunning, Robert C.; Rossi, Hugo (1965). Analytic Functions of Several Complex Variables. Modern Analysis. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 9780821869536. MR 0180696. Zbl 0141.08601

See also


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