Complex Analysis and Conformal Mapping
Complex Analysis and Conformal Mapping
Complex Analysis and Conformal Mapping
by Peter J. Olver
University of Minnesota
Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2. Complex Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Examples of Complex Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Complex Differentiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Power Series and Analyticity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4. Harmonic Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Applications to Fluid Mechanics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
5. Conformal Mapping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Analytic Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Conformality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Composition and the Riemann Mapping Theorem . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Annular Domains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
6. Applications of Conformal Mapping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Applications to Harmonic Functions and Laplace’s Equation . . . . . . . 44
Applications to Fluid Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Poisson’s Equation and the Green’s Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
7. Complex Integration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Cauchy’s Theorem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Circulation and Lift . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Cauchy’s Integral Formula . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
Derivatives by Integration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Liouville’s Theorem and the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra . . . . . . 73
The Calculus of Residues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Evaluation of Real Integrals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
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1. Introduction.
The term “complex analysis” refers to the calculus of complex-valued functions f (z)
depending on a single complex variable z. To the novice, it may seem that this subject
should merely be a simple reworking of standard real variable theory that you learned
in first year calculus. However, this naı̈ve first impression could not be further from the
truth! Complex analysis is the culmination of a deep and far-ranging study of the funda-
mental notions of complex differentiation and integration, and has an elegance and beauty
not found in the real domain. For instance, complex functions are necessarily analytic,
meaning that they can be represented by convergent power series, and hence are infinitely
differentiable. Thus, difficulties with degree of smoothness, strange discontinuities, subtle
convergence phenomena, and other pathological properties of real functions never arise in
the complex realm.
The driving force behind many of the applications of complex analysis is the remarkable
connection between complex functions and harmonic functions of two variables, a.k.a. solu-
tions of the planar Laplace equation. To wit, the real and imaginary parts of any complex
analytic function are automatically harmonic. In this manner, complex functions provide
a rich lode of additional solutions to the two-dimensional Laplace equation, which can be
exploited in a wide range of physical and mathematical applications. One of the most
useful consequences stems from the elementary observation that the composition of two
complex functions is also a complex function. We re-interpret this operation as a complex
change of variables, producing a conformal mapping that preserves (signed) angles in the
Euclidean plane. Conformal mappings can be effectively used for constructing solutions
to the Laplace equation on complicated planar domains that are used in fluid mechanics,
aerodynamics, thermomechanics, electrostatics, elasticity, and elsewhere.
We assume the reader is familiar with the basics of complex numbers and complex arith-
metic, as in [20; Appendix A], and commence our exposition with the basics of complex
functions and their differential calculus. We then proceed to develop the theory and appli-
cations of conformal mappings. The final section contains a brief introduction to complex
integration and a few of its applications. Further developments and additional details and
results can be found in a wide variety of texts devoted to complex analysis, including
[1, 12, 22, 23].
2. Complex Functions.
Our principal objects of study are complex-valued functions f (z), depending on a single
complex variable z = x + i y ∈ C. In general, the function f : Ω → C will be defined on an
open subdomain, z ∈ Ω ⊂ C, of the complex plane.
Any complex function can be uniquely written as a complex combination
its real part u(x, y) = Re f (z) and its imaginary part v(x, y) = Im f (z).
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For example, the monomial function f (z) = z 3 can be expanded and written as
z 3 = (x + i y)3 = (x3 − 3 x y 2 ) + i (3 x2 y − y 3 ),
and so
Re z 3 = x3 − 3 x y 2 , Im z 3 = 3 x2 y − y 3 .
Many of the well-known functions appearing in real-variable calculus — polynomials,
rational functions, exponentials, trigonometric functions, logarithms, and many more —
have natural complex extensions. For example, complex polynomials
p(z) = an z n + an−1 z n−1 + · · · + a1 z + a0 (2.2)
are complex linear combinations (meaning that the coefficients ak are allowed to be complex
numbers) of the basic monomial functions z k = (x + i y)k . Complex exponentials
ez = ex+ i y = ex cos y + i ex sin y,
are based on Euler’s formula, and are of immense importance for solving differential equa-
tions and in Fourier analysis. Further examples will appear shortly.
There are several ways to motivate the link between harmonic functions u(x, y), meaning
solutions of the two-dimensional Laplace equation
∂ 2u ∂ 2u
∆u = + 2 = 0, (2.3)
∂x2 ∂y
and complex functions f (z). One natural starting point is the d’Alembert solution formula
of the one-dimensional wave equation — see [20] — which was based on the factorization
2 2 2
= ∂t − c ∂x = (∂t − c ∂x ) (∂t + c ∂x )
of the linear wave operator. The two-dimensional Laplace operator ∆ = ∂x2 + ∂y2 has
essentially the same form, except for an ostensibly unimportant change in sign† . The
Laplace operator admits a complex factorization,
∆ = ∂x2 + ∂y2 = (∂x − i ∂y ) (∂x + i ∂y ),
into a product of first order differential operators, with complex “wave speeds” c = ± i .
Mimicking the d’Alembert solution for the wave equation, we anticipate that the solutions
to the Laplace equation (2.3) should be expressed in the form
u(x, y) = f (x + i y) + g(x − i y), (2.4)
i.e., a linear combination of functions of the complex variable z = x + i y and its complex
conjugate z = x − i y. The functions f (x + i y) and g(x − i y) formally satisfy the first
order complex partial differential equations
∂f ∂f ∂g ∂g
=−i , = i , (2.5)
∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y
†
Although this “trivial” change in sign has significant ramifications for the analytical properties
of (real) solutions.
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and hence (2.4) does indeed define a complex-valued solution to the Laplace equation.
In most applications, we are searching for real solutions, and so our complex d’Alembert-
type formula (2.4) is not entirely satisfactory. As we know, a complex number z = x + i y
is real if and only if it equals its own conjugate: z = z. Thus, the solution (2.4) will be
real if and only if
u(x, y) = Re f (x + i y) (2.6)
is a harmonic function.
†
We are ignoring the fact that f and g are not quite uniquely determined since one can add and
subtract a common constant. This does not affect the argument in any significant way.
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1 1
Re z Im z
1
Figure 1. Real and Imaginary Parts of f (z) = z .
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Figure 2. Real and Imaginary Parts of ez .
of complex polynomials provide a large variety of harmonic functions. The simplest case
is
1 x y
= 2 2
−i 2 , (2.11)
z x +y x + y2
whose real and imaginary parts are graphed in Figure 1. Note that these functions have
an interesting singularity at the origin x = y = 0, but are harmonic everywhere else.
A slightly more complicated example is the function
z−1
f (z) = . (2.12)
z+1
To write out (2.12) in standard form (2.1), we multiply and divide by the complex conjugate
of the denominator, leading to
z−1 (z − 1)( z + 1) | z |2 + z − z − 1 x2 + y 2 − 1 2y
f (z) = = = 2
= 2 2
+i .
z+1 (z + 1)( z + 1) |z +1| (x + 1) + y (x + 1)2 + y 2
(2.13)
Again, the real and imaginary parts are both harmonic functions away from the singularity
at x = −1, y = 0. Incidentally, the preceding maneuver can always be used to find the
real and imaginary parts of general rational functions.
(c) Complex Exponentials: Euler’s formula
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Re (log z) = log | z | Im (log z) = ph z
(d) Complex Trigonometric Functions: These are defined in terms of the complex expo-
nential by
e i z + e− i z
cos z = = cos x cosh y − i sin x sinh y,
2 (2.16)
e i z − e− i z
sin z = = sin x cosh y + i cos x sinh y.
2i
The resulting harmonic functions are products of trigonometric and hyperbolic functions,
and can all be written as linear combinations of the harmonic functions (2.15) derived from
the complex exponential. Note that when z = x is real, so y = 0, these functions reduce
to the usual real trigonometric functions cos x and sin x.
(e) Complex Logarithm: In a similar fashion, the complex logarithm is a complex ex-
tension of the usual real natural (i.e., base e) logarithm. In terms of polar coordinates
z = r e i θ , the complex logarithm has the form
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√
Figure 4. Real and Imaginary Parts of z.
of the complex logarithm is the polar angle, known in complex analysis as the phase or
argument of z. (Although most texts use the latter name, we much prefer the former, for
reasons outlined in [19, 20].) It is also not defined at the origin x = y = 0. Moreover,
the phase is a multiply-valued harmonic function elsewhere, since it is only specified up to
integer multiples of 2 π. Each nonzero complex number z 6= 0 has an infinite number of
possible values for its phase, and hence an infinite number of possible complex logarithms
log z, differing from each other by an integer multiple of 2 π i , which reflects the fact that
e2 π i = 1. In particular, if z = x > 0 is real and positive, then log z = log x agrees with
the real logarithm, provided we choose ph x = 0. Alternative choices append some integer
multiple of 2 π i , and so ordinary real, positive numbers x > 0 also have complex logarithms!
On the other hand, if z = x < 0 is real and negative, then log z = log | x | + (2 k + 1) π i , for
k ∈ Z, is complex no matter which value of ph z is chosen. (This explains why one avoids
defining the logarithm of a negative number in first year calculus!)
As the point z circles once around the origin in a counter-clockwise direction, its phase
angle Im log z = ph z = θ increases by 2 π. Thus, the graph of ph z can be likened to a
parking ramp with infinitely many levels, spiraling ever upwards as one circumambulates
the origin; Figure 3 attempts to illustrate it. At the origin, the complex logarithm exhibits
a type of singularity known as a logarithmic branch point, the “branches” referring to the
infinite number of possible values that can be assigned to log z at any nonzero point.
(f ) Roots and Fractional Powers: A similar branching phenomenon occurs with the frac-
tional
√ powers and roots of complex numbers. The simplest case is the square root function
√
z.
√ Every nonzero complex number z 6= 0 has two different possible square roots: z and
− z. Writing z = r e i θ in polar coordinates, we find that
√
√ √ i θ/2
√ θ θ
z= r eiθ = re = r cos + i sin , (2.18)
2 2
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i.e., we take the square root of the modulus and halve the phase:
√ p √ √
z = |z| = r, ph z = 12 ph z = 1
θ.
2
The preceding list of elementary examples is far from exhaustive. Lack of space will
preclude us from studying the remarkable properties of complex versions of the gamma
function, Airy functions, Bessel functions, and Legendre functions that appear later in
the text, as well as the Riemann zeta function, elliptic functions, modular functions, and
many, many other important and fascinating functions arising in complex analysis and its
manifold applications. The interested reader is referred to [18, 19, 24].
3. Complex Differentiation.
The bedrock of complex function theory is the notion of the complex derivative. Complex
differentiation is defined in the same manner as the usual calculus limit definition of the
derivative of a real function. Yet, despite a superficial similarity, complex differentiation
is a profoundly different theory, displaying an elegance and depth not shared by its real
progenitor.
Definition 3.1. A complex function f (z) is differentiable at a point z ∈ C if and only
if the following limiting difference quotient exists:
f (w) − f (z)
f ′ (z) = lim . (3.1)
w→z w−z
The key feature of this definition is that the limiting value f ′ (z) of the difference quotient
must be independent of how w converges to z. On the real line, there are only two
directions to approach a limiting point — either from the left or from the right. These
lead to the concepts of left- and right-handed derivatives and their equality is required for
the existence of the usual derivative of a real function. In the complex plane, there are an
infinite variety of directions to approach the point z, and the definition requires that all
of these “directional derivatives” must agree. This requirement imposes severe restrictions
on complex derivatives, and is the source of their remarkable properties.
To understand the consequences of this definition, let us first see what happens when
we approach z along the two simplest directions — horizontal and vertical. If we set
w = z + h = (x + h) + i y, where h is real,
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z + ik
z z+h
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In this case, the complex derivative of f (z) is equal to any of the following expressions:
∂f ∂u ∂v ∂f ∂v ∂u
f ′ (z) = = +i = −i = −i . (3.3)
∂x ∂x ∂x ∂y ∂y ∂y
The proof of the converse — that any function whose real and imaginary components
satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann equations is differentiable — will be omitted, but can be
found in any basic text on complex analysis, e.g., [1, 12, 23].
Remark : It is worth pointing out that the Cauchy–Riemann equations (3.3) imply that
∂f ∂f
f satisfies = −i , which, reassuringly, agrees with the first equation in (2.5).
∂x ∂y
Example 3.3. Consider the elementary function
z 3 = (x3 − 3 x y 2 ) + i (3 x2 y − y 3 ).
Its real part u = x3 − 3 x y 2 and imaginary part v = 3 x2 y − y 3 satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann
equations (3.2), since
∂u ∂v ∂u ∂v
= 3 x2 − 3 y 2 = , = −6xy = − .
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂x
Theorem 3.2 implies that f (z) = z 3 is complex differentiable. Not surprisingly, its deriva-
tive turns out to be
∂u ∂v ∂v ∂u
f ′ (z) = +i = −i = (3 x2 − 3 y 2 ) + i (6 x y) = 3 z 2 .
∂x ∂x ∂y ∂y
Fortunately, the complex derivative obeys all of the usual rules that you learned in
real-variable calculus. For example,
d n d cz d 1
z = n z n−1 , e = c ec z , log z = , (3.4)
dz dz dz z
and so on. Here, the power n can be non-integral — or even, in view of the identity
z n = en log z , complex, while c is any complex constant. The exponential formulae (2.16)
for the complex trigonometric functions implies that they also satisfy the standard rules
d d
cos z = − sin z, sin z = cos z. (3.5)
dz dz
The formulae for differentiating sums, products, ratios, inverses, and compositions of com-
plex functions are all identical to their real counterparts, with similar proofs. Thus, thank-
fully, you don’t need to learn any new rules for performing complex differentiation!
Remark : There are many examples of seemingly reasonable functions which do not have
a complex derivative. The simplest is the complex conjugate function
f (z) = z = x − i y.
Its real and imaginary parts do not satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann equations, and hence z
does not have a complex derivative. More generally, any function f (z, z) that explicitly
depends on the complex conjugate variable z is not complex-differentiable.
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Power Series and Analyticity
In practice, the standard ratio or root tests for convergence of (real) series that you
learned in ordinary calculus, [1, 2], can be applied to determine where a given (complex)
power series converges. We note that if f (z) and g(z) are analytic at a point z0 , so is their
sum f (z) + g(z), product f (z) g(z) and, provided g(z0 ) 6= 0, ratio f (z)/g(z).
Example 3.5. All of the real power series found in elementary calculus carry over to
the complex versions of the functions. For example,
X∞
z 1 2 zn 1 3
e = 1+z + z + z + ··· =
2 6
(3.7)
n=0
n!
is the power series for the exponential function based at z0 = 0. A straightforward appli-
cation of the ratio test proves that the series converges for all z. On the other hand, the
power series
X∞
1 2 4 6
= 1−z +z −z + ··· = (−1)k z 2 k , (3.8)
z2 + 1
k=0
converges inside the unit disk, where | z | < 1, and diverges outside, where | z | > 1. Again,
convergence is established through the ratio test. The ratio test is inconclusive when
| z | = 1, and we shall leave the more delicate question of precisely where on the unit disk
this complex series converges to a more advanced treatment, e.g., [1, 12, 23].
In general, there are three possible options for the domain of convergence of a complex
power series (3.6):
(a) The series converges for all z.
(b) The series converges inside a disk | z − z0 | < ρ of radius ρ > 0 centered at z0 and
diverges for all | z − z0 | > ρ outside the disk. The series may converge at some
(but not all) of the points on the boundary of the disk where | z − z0 | = ρ.
(c) The series only converges, trivially, at z = z0 .
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The number ρ is known as the radius of convergence of the series. In case (a), we say
ρ = ∞, while in case (c), ρ = 0, and the series Pdoes nnot represent an analytic function.
An example that has ρ = 0 is the power series n! z .
Remarkably, the radius of convergence for the power series of a known analytic function
f (z) can be determined by inspection, without recourse to any fancy convergence tests!
Namely, ρ is equal to the distance from z0 to the nearest singularity of f (z), meaning
a point where the function fails to be analytic. In particular, the radius of convergence
ρ = ∞ if and only if f (z) is an entire function, meaning that it is analytic for all z ∈ C
and has no singularities; examples include polynomials, ez , cos z, and sin z. On the other
hand, the rational function
1 1
f (z) = =
z2 +1 (z + i )(z − i )
has singularities at z = ± i , and so its power series (3.8) has radius of convergence ρ = 1,
which is the distance from z0 = 0 to the singularities. Thus, the extension of the theory
of power series to the complex plane serves to explain the apparent mystery of why, as
a real function, (1 + x2 )−1 is well-defined and analytic for all real x, but its power series
only converges on the interval ( −1, 1 ). It is the complex singularities that prevent its
convergence when | x | > 1. If we expand (z 2 + 1)−1 in a power series at some other point,
say z0 = 1 + 2 i , then we√ need to determine which singularity √ is closest. We compute
| i − z0 | = | −1 − i | = 2, while | − i − z0 | = | −1 − 3 i | = 10, and so the radius of
√
convergence ρ = 2 is the smaller. This allows us to determine the radius of convergence
in the absence of any explicit formula for its (rather complicated) Taylor expansion at
z0 = 1 + 2 i .
There are, in fact, only three possible types of singularities of a complex function f (z):
• Pole. A singular point z = z0 is called a pole of order 0 < n ∈ Z if and only if
h(z)
f (z) = , (3.9)
(z − z0 )n
log z at z0 = 0. The degree of the branch point is n in the first case and ∞ in the
second. In general, the power function z a = ea log z is analytic at z0 = 0 if a ∈ Z is
an integer; has an algebraic branch point of degree q the origin if a = p/q ∈ Q \ Z is
rational, non-integral with 0 6= p ∈ Z and 2 ≤ q ∈ Z having no common factors, and
a logarithmic branch point of infinite degree at z = 0 when a ∈ C \ Q is not rational.
• Essential singularity. By definition, a singularity is essential if it is not a pole or a
branch point. The quintessential example is the essential singularity of the function
e1/z at z0 = 0. The behavior of a complex function near an essential singularity is
quite complicated, [1].
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Example 3.6. The complex function
ez ez
f (z) = =
z3 − z2 − 5 z − 3 (z − 3)(z + 1)2
is analytic everywhere except for singularities at the points z = 3 and z = −1, where its
denominator vanishes. Since
h1 (z) ez
f (z) = , where h1 (z) =
z−3 (z + 1)2
1 3
is analytic at z = 3 and h1 (3) = 16 e 6= 0, we conclude that z = 3 is a simple (order 1)
pole. Similarly,
h2 (z) ez
f (z) = , where h2 (z) =
(z + 1)2 z−3
is analytic at z = −1 with h2 (−1) = − 41 e−1 6= 0, we see that the point z = −1 is a double
(order 2) pole.
A complicated complex function can have a variety of singularities. For example, the
function 2
e− 1/(z−1)
f (z) = 2 (3.10)
(z + 1) (z + 2)2/3
has simple poles at z = ± i , a branch point of degree 3 at z = −2, and an essential
singularity at z = 1.
As in the real case, onvergent power series can always be repeatedly term-wise differen-
tiated. Therefore, given the convergent series (3.6), we have the corresponding series for
its derivatives:
f ′ (z) = a1 + 2 a2 (z − z0 ) + 3 a3 (z − z0 )2 + 4 a4 (z − z0 )3 + · · ·
X∞
= (n + 1) an+1 (z − z0 )n ,
n=0
(3.11)
f (z) = 2 a2 + 6 a3 (z − z0 ) + 12 a4 (z − z0 )2 + 20 a5 (z − z0 )3 + · · ·
′′
X∞
= (n + 1)(n + 2) an+2 (z − z0 )n ,
n=0
and so on. Moreover, the differentiated series all have the same radius of convergence as
the original. As a consequence, we deduce the following important result.
Theorem 3.7. Any analytic function is infinitely differentiable.
In particular, when we substitute z = z0 into the successively differentiated series, we
discover that a0 = f (z0 ), a1 = f ′ (z0 ), a2 = 21 f ′′ (z0 ), and, in general,
f (n) (z)
an = . (3.12)
n!
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z0
ρ
Ω
Therefore, a convergent power series (3.6) is, inevitably, the Taylor series
X∞
f (n) (z0 )
f (z) = (z − z0 )n , (3.13)
n=0
n!
Theorem 3.8. Let Ω ⊂ C be an open set. The following properties are equivalent:
(a) The function f (z) has a continuous complex derivative f ′ (z) for all z ∈ Ω.
(b) The real and imaginary parts of f (z) have continuous partial derivatives and satisfy
the Cauchy–Riemann equations (3.2) in Ω.
(c) The function f (z) is analytic for all z ∈ Ω, and so is infinitely differentiable and has a
convergent power series expansion at each point z0 ∈ Ω. The radius of convergence
ρ is at least as large as the distance from z0 to the boundary ∂Ω, as in Figure 6.
From now on, we reserve the term complex function to signify one that satisfies the
conditions of Theorem 3.8. Sometimes one of the equivalent adjectives “analytic” or “holo-
morphic” is added for emphasis. From now on, all complex functions are assumed to be
analytic everywhere on their domain of definition, except, possibly, at certain singularities.
4. Harmonic Functions.
We already noted the remarkable connection between complex functions and the solu-
tions to the two-dimensional Laplace equation, which are known as harmonic functions.
Let us now formalize the precise relationship.
Theorem 4.1. If f (z) = u(x, y) + i v(x, y) is any complex analytic function, then its
real and imaginary parts, u(x, y), v(x, y), are both harmonic functions.
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Proof : Differentiating† the Cauchy–Riemann equations (3.2), and invoking the equality
of mixed partial derivatives, we find that
∂ 2u ∂ ∂u ∂ ∂v ∂ 2v ∂ ∂v ∂ ∂u ∂ 2u
= = = = = − = − .
∂x2 ∂x ∂x ∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y ∂y ∂x ∂y ∂y ∂y 2
Therefore, u is a solution to the Laplace equation uxx + uyy = 0. The proof for v is
similar. Q.E.D.
Thus, every complex function gives rise to two harmonic functions. It is, of course, of
interest to know whether we can invert this procedure. Given a harmonic function u(x, y),
does there exist a harmonic function v(x, y) such that f = u + i v is a complex analytic
function? If so, the harmonic function v(x, y) is known as a harmonic conjugate to u. The
harmonic conjugate is found by solving the Cauchy–Riemann equations
∂v ∂u ∂v ∂u
=− , = , (4.1)
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂x
which, for a prescribed function u(x, y), constitutes an inhomogeneous linear system of
partial differential equations for v(x, y). As such, it is usually not hard to solve, as the
following example illustrates.
Example 4.2. As the reader can verify, the harmonic polynomial
u(x, y) = x3 − 3 x2 y − 3 x y 2 + y 3
satisfies the Laplace equation everywhere. To find a harmonic conjugate, we solve the
Cauchy–Riemann equations (4.1). First of all,
∂v ∂u
=− = 3 x2 + 6 x y − 3 y 2 ,
∂x ∂y
and hence, by direct integration with respect to x,
v(x, y) = x3 + 3 x2 y − 3 x y 2 + h(y),
where h(y) — the “constant of integration” — is a function of y alone. To determine h we
substitute our formula into the second Cauchy–Riemann equation:
∂v ∂u
3 x2 − 6 x y + h′ (y) = = = 3 x2 − 6 x y − 3 y 2 .
∂y ∂x
Therefore, h′ (y) = − 3 y 2 , and so h(y) = − y 3 + c, where c is a real constant. We conclude
that every harmonic conjugate to u(x, y) has the form
v(x, y) = x3 + 3 x2 y − 3 x y 2 − y 3 + c.
Note that the corresponding complex function
u(x, y) + i v(x, y) = (x3 − 3 x2 y − 3 x y 2 + y 3 ) + i (x3 + 3 x2 y − 3 x y 2 − y 3 + c)
= (1 + i ) z 3 + c
turns out to be a complex cubic polynomial.
†
Theorem 3.8 allows us to differentiate u and v as often as desired.
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Remark : On a connected domain Ω ⊂ R 2 , a function v0 (x, y) satisfies the homogeneous
form of the Cauchy–Riemann equations ∂v0 /∂x = ∂v0 /∂y = 0 if and only if it is constant:
v0 (x, y) ≡ c ∈ C. Thus, all harmonic conjugates (if any) to a given function u(x, y) differ
from each other by a constant: ve(x, y) = v(x, y) + c.
Remark : The Cauchy–Riemann equations (3.2) form an overdetermined system of par-
tial differential equations, and will be solvable only if the integrability conditions obtained
by cross differentiation are satisfied:
∂ 2u ∂ ∂v ∂ 2v ∂ ∂v ∂ 2u
= = = = − .
∂x2 ∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y ∂y ∂x ∂y 2
Thus, a necessary condition for the existence of a solution v is that u be harmonic, i.e.,
that it satisfy the Laplace equation.
Although most harmonic functions have harmonic conjugates, unfortunately this is not
always the case. Interestingly, the existence or non-existence of a harmonic conjugate
can depend on the underlying topology of its domain of definition. If the domain is
simply connected , meaning that it contains no holes or, equivalently, every closed curve
contained therein can be continuously contracted to a single point, then one can always
find a harmonic conjugate. On non-simply connected domains, there may not exist a
single-valued harmonic conjugate that can serve as the imaginary part of a well-defined
complex function f (z).
Example 4.3. The simplest example where the latter possibility occurs is the loga-
rithmic potential
u(x, y) = log r = 12 log(x2 + y 2 ).
This function is harmonic on the non-simply connected domain Ω = C \ {0} — known as
the punctured plane, since it has a “hole” at the origin — but is not the real part of any
single-valued complex function. Indeed, according to (2.17), the logarithmic potential is
the real part of the multiply-valued complex logarithm log z, and so its harmonic conjugate†
is ph z = θ, which cannot be consistently and continuously defined on all of Ω. On the
other hand, on any simply connected subdomain Ω e ⊂ Ω, one can select a continuous,
single-valued branch of the angle θ = ph z, which is then a bona fide harmonic conjugate
to log r when restricted to this subdomain.
The harmonic function
x
u(x, y) = 2
x + y2
is also defined on the same non-simply connected domain Ω = C \ {0} with a singularity
at x = y = 0. In this case, there is a single-valued harmonic conjugate, namely
y
v(x, y) = − ,
x2 + y 2
†
We can, by the preceding remark, add in any constant to the harmonic conjugate, but this does
not affect the subsequent argument.
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which is defined on all of Ω. Indeed, according to (2.11), these functions define the real
and imaginary parts of the complex function u + i v = 1/z. Alternatively, one can directly
check that they satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann equations (3.2).
Theorem 4.4. Every harmonic function u(x, y) defined on a simply connected domain
Ω is the real part of a complex valued function f (z) = u(x, y) + i v(x, y) which is defined
for all z = x + i y ∈ Ω.
Proof : We first rewrite the Cauchy–Riemann equations (4.1) in vectorial form as an
equation for the gradient of v:
⊥ ⊥ − uy
∇v = ∇ u, where ∇ u= (4.2)
ux
is known as the skew gradient of u. It is everywhere orthogonal to the gradient of u and
of the same length:
∇u · ∇⊥ u = 0, k ∇u k = k ∇⊥ u k.
Thus, we have established the important observation that the gradient of a harmonic
function and that of its harmonic conjugate are mutually orthogonal vector fields having
the same Euclidean lengths:
∇u · ∇v ≡ 0, k ∇u k ≡ k ∇v k. (4.3)
Now, given the harmonic function u, our goal is to construct a solution v to the gradi-
ent equation (4.2). A well-known result from vector calculus, [2], states the vector field
defined by ∇⊥ u has a potential function v if and only if the corresponding line integral is
independent of path, which means that
I I I
⊥
0= ∇v · dx = ∇ u · dx = ∇u · n ds, (4.4)
C C C
for every closed curve C ⊂ Ω. Indeed, if this holds, then a potential function can be
devised† by integrating the vector field:
Z x Z x
v(x, y) = ∇v · dx = ∇u · n ds. (4.5)
a a
Here a ∈ Ω is any fixed point, and, in view of path independence, the line integral can be
taken over any curve that connects a to x = (x, y)T .
If the domain Ω is simply connected then every simple closed curve C ⊂ Ω bounds a
subdomain D ⊂ Ω with C = ∂D. Applying the divergence form of Green’s Theorem,
I ZZ ZZ
∇u · n ds = ∇ · ∇u dx dy = ∆u dx dy = 0,
C D D
†
This assumes that the domain Ω is connected; if not, we apply our reasoning to each connected
component.
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Figure 7. Level Curves of the Real and Imaginary Parts of z 2 and z 3 .
because u is harmonic. Thus, in this situation, we have proved† the existence of a harmonic
conjugate function. Q.E.D.
∂u ∂u ∂v ∂v
f ′ (z) = −i = +i . (4.6)
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂x
Thus, the individual components of the gradients ∇u and ∇v appear as the real and
imaginary parts of the complex derivative f ′ (z).
The orthogonality (4.2) of the gradient of a function and of its harmonic conjugate
has the following important geometric consequence. Recall, [2], that, when nonzero, the
gradient ∇u of a function u(x, y) points in the normal direction to its level curves, that is,
the sets { u(x, y) = c } where it assumes a fixed constant value. Since ∇v is orthogonal to
∇u, this must mean that ∇v is tangent to the level curves of u. Vice versa, ∇v is normal
to its level curves, and so ∇u is tangent to the level curves of its harmonic conjugate
v. Since their tangent directions ∇u and ∇v are orthogonal, the level curves of the real
and imaginary parts of a complex function form a mutually orthogonal system of plane
curves — but with one key exception. If we are at a critical point, where ∇u = 0,
then ∇v = ∇⊥ u = 0, and the vectors do not define tangent directions. Therefore, the
orthogonality of the level curves does not necessarily hold at critical points. It is worth
pointing out that, in view of (4.6), the critical points of u are the same as those of v and
also the same as the critical points of the corresponding complex function f (z), i.e., those
points where its complex derivative vanishes: f ′ (z) = 0.
In Figure 7, we illustrate the preceding paragraph by plotting the level curves of the real
and imaginary parts of the functions f (z) = z 2 and z 3 . Note that, except at the origin,
where the derivative vanishes, the level curves intersect everywhere at right angles.
†
Technically, we have only verified path-independence (4.4) when C is a simple closed curve, but
this suffices to establish it for arbitrary closed curves; see the proof of Proposition 7.5 for details.
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Remark : On the punctured plane Ω = C \ {0}, the logarithmic potential is, in a sense,
the only obstruction to the existence of a harmonic conjugate. It can be shown, [14], that
if u(x, y) is a harmonic function defined on a punctured disk ΩR = 0 < | z | < R , for
p
0 < R ≤ ∞, then there exists a constant c such that u e(x, y) = u(x, y) − c log x2 + y 2
is also harmonic and possess a single-valued harmonic conjugate ve(x, y). As a result, the
function fe = u e + i ve is analytic on all of ΩR , and so our original function u(x, y) is the
real part of the multiply-valued analytic function f (z) = fe(z) + c log z. This fact will be
of importance in our subsequent analysis of airfoils.
Consider a planar steady state fluid flow, with velocity vector field
u(x, y) x
v(x) = at the point x = ∈ Ω.
v(x, y) y
Here Ω ⊂ R 2 is the domain occupied by the fluid, while the vector v(x) represents the
instantaneous velocity of the fluid at the point x ∈ Ω. The flow is incompressible if and
only if it has vanishing divergence:
∂u ∂v
∇·v = + = 0. (4.7)
∂x ∂y
Incompressibility means that the fluid volume does not change as it flows. Most liquids,
including water, are, for all practical purposes, incompressible. On the other hand, the
flow is irrotational if and only if it has vanishing curl† :
∂v ∂u
∇×v = − = 0. (4.8)
∂x ∂y
Irrotational flows have no vorticity, and hence no circulation. A flow that is both incom-
pressible and irrotational is known as an ideal fluid flow . In many physical regimes, liquids
(and, although less often, gases) behave as ideal fluids.
Observe that the two constraints (4.7–8) are almost identical to the Cauchy–Riemann
equations (3.2); the only difference is the change in sign in front of the derivatives of v.
But this can be easily remedied by replacing v by its negative − v. As a result, we establish
a profound connection between ideal planar fluid flows and complex functions.
T
Theorem 4.5. The velocity vector field v = ( u(x, y), v(x, y) ) induces an ideal planar
fluid flow if and only if
f (z) = u(x, y) − i v(x, y) (4.9)
†
The curl of a two-dimensional vector field v is a scalar field, as defined by the following equation.
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Thus, the components u(x, y) and − v(x, y) of the velocity vector field for an ideal fluid
flow are necessarily harmonic conjugates. The corresponding complex function (4.9) is,
not surprisingly, known as the complex velocity of the fluid flow. When using this result,
do not forget the minus sign that appears in front of the imaginary part of f (z).
T
Under the flow induced by the velocity vector field v = ( u(x, y), v(x, y) ) , the fluid
particles follow the trajectories z(t) = x(t) + i y(t) obtained by integrating the system of
ordinary differential equations
dx dy
= u(x, y), = v(x, y). (4.10)
dt dt
In view of the representation (4.9), we can rewrite the preceding system in complex form:
dz
= f (z) . (4.11)
dt
In fluid mechanics, the curves parametrized by the solutions z(t) are known as the stream-
lines of the fluid flow. Each fluid particle’s motion z(t) is uniquely prescribed by its
position z(t0 ) = z0 = x0 + i y0 at an initial time t0 . In particular, if the complex velocity
vanishes, f (z0 ) = 0, then the solution z(t) ≡ z0 to (4.11) is constant, and hence z0 is a
stagnation point of the flow. Our steady state assumption, which is reflected in the fact
that the ordinary differential equations (4.10) are autonomous, i.e., there is no explicit
t dependence, means that, although the fluid is in motion, the stream lines and stagna-
tion points do not change over time. This is a consequence of the standard existence and
uniqueness theorems for solutions to ordinary differential equations, [4, 5, 11].
Example 4.6. The simplest example is when the velocity is constant, corresponding
to a uniform, steady flow. Consider first the case
f (z) = 1,
T
which corresponds to the horizontal velocity vector field v = ( 1, 0 ) . The actual fluid flow
is found by integrating the system†
z = 1, or x = 1, y = 0.
Thus, the solution z(t) = t +z0 represents a uniform horizontal fluid motion whose stream-
lines are straight lines parallel to the real axis; see Figure 8.
Consider next a more general constant velocity
f (z) = c = a + i b.
The fluid particles will solve the ordinary differential equation
z = c = a − i b, so that z(t) = c t + z0 .
†
We will sometimes use the Newtonian dot notation for time derivatives: z = dz/dt.
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f (z) = 1 f (z) = 4 + 3 i f (z) = z
Figure 8. Complex Fluid Flows.
The streamlines remain parallel straight lines, but now at an angle θ = ph c = − ph c with
the horizontal. The fluid particles move along the streamlines at constant speed | c | = | c |.
The next simplest complex velocity function is
f (z) = z = x + i y. (4.12)
The corresponding fluid flow is found by integrating the system
z = z, y = − y.
or, in real form, x = x,
The origin x = y = 0 is a stagnation point. The trajectories of the nonstationary solutions
f (z) = − i z = y − i x,
then the induced flow is the solution to
z = i z, y = x.
or, in real form, x = y,
The solutions
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Figure 9. Flow Inside a Corner.
origin). Since these are streamlines of the flow with complex velocity (4.12), its restriction
to Q represents an ideal flow past a 90◦ interior corner, as illustrated in Figure 9. The
individual fluid particles move along hyperbolas as they flow past the corner.
Remark : We can also restrict the preceding flow to the domain Ω = C \ { x < 0, y < 0 }
consisting of three quadrants, corresponding to a 90◦ exterior corner. However, the latter
flow is not as relevant owing to its unphysical behavior; for example, the positive x and
y axes are streamlines emanating from the corner, dividing the flow into three hyperbolic
quadrants. A more realistic flow around an exterior corner can be found using the method
of conformal mapping, as discussed in Example 6.5 below.
Now, suppose that the complex velocity f (z) admits a single-valued complex anti-
derivative, i.e., a complex analytic function
dχ
χ(z) = ϕ(x, y) + i ψ(x, y) that satisfies = f (z). (4.14)
dz
Using formula (4.6) for the complex derivative,
dχ ∂ϕ ∂ϕ ∂ϕ ∂ϕ
= −i = u − i v, so = u, = v.
dz ∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y
Thus, ∇ϕ = v, and hence the real part ϕ(x, y) of the complex function χ(z) defines a
velocity potential for the fluid flow. For this reason, the anti-derivative χ(z) is known as a
complex potential function for the given fluid velocity field.
On a connected domain, any two complex potentials differ by a (complex) constant
χ
e(z) = χ(z) + c. In exceptional situations, a complex velocity may not admit a single-
valued complex potential. The prototypical example is the complex velocity
T
1 x y
f (z) = whose velocity vector field v= , 2
z x + y x + y2
2 2
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defines an ideal fluid flow on the punctured plane Ω = C \ {0}. It admits the multiply-
valued complex potentials χ(z) = log z + c for any c ∈ C, but there is no single-valued
complex potential function defined on the entire domain Ω. On the other hand, a complex
potential function is guaranteed to exist when the domain of definition of the complex
velocity is simply connected; for details, see the discussion following Theorem 7.2. In
particular, in the neighborhood of any point, any complex velocity field locally admits a
complex potential.
Since the complex potential is analytic, its real part — the potential function — is
harmonic, and therefore satisfies the Laplace equation ∆ϕ = 0. Conversely, any harmonic
function can be viewed as the potential function for some fluid flow. The real fluid velocity
is its gradient v = ∇ϕ, and is automatically incompressible and irrotational. (Why?)
The harmonic conjugate ψ(x, y) to the velocity potential, which is the imaginary part
of the complex potential function, also plays an important role. In fluid mechanics, it is
known as the stream function. It also satisfies the Laplace equation ∆ψ = 0, and the
potential and stream function are related by the Cauchy–Riemann equations (3.2):
∂ϕ ∂ψ ∂ϕ ∂ψ
=u= , =v=− . (4.15)
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂x
The level sets of the velocity potential, { ϕ(x, y) = c }, where c ∈ R is fixed, are known
as equipotential curves. The velocity vector v = ∇ϕ points in the normal direction to the
equipotentials. On the other hand, as we noted above, v = ∇ϕ is tangent to the level
curves { ψ(x, y) = d } of its harmonic conjugate stream function. But v is the velocity
field, and so tangent to the streamlines followed by the fluid particles. Thus, these two
systems of curves must coincide, and we infer that the level curves of the stream function
are the streamlines of the flow , whence its name! Summarizing, for an ideal fluid flow, the
equipotentials { ϕ = c } and streamlines { ψ = d } form two mutually orthogonal families of
plane curves. The fluid velocity v = ∇ϕ is tangent to the stream lines and normal to the
equipotentials, whereas the gradient of the stream function ∇ψ = ∇⊥ ϕ is tangent to the
equipotentials and normal to the streamlines.
The discussion in the preceding paragraph implicitly relied on the fact that the velocity
is nonzero, v = ∇ϕ 6= 0, which means we are not at a stagnation point, where the fluid
is not moving. While streamlines and equipotentials might begin or end at a stagnation
point, there is no guarantee, and, indeed, it is not generally the case that they meet at
mutually orthogonal directions there.
Example 4.7. The simplest example of a complex potential function is
χ(z) = z = x + i y.
Thus, the velocity potential is ϕ(x, y) = x, while its harmonic conjugate stream function
is ψ(x, y) = y. The complex derivative of the potential is the complex velocity,
dχ
f (z) = = 1,
dz
which corresponds to the uniform horizontal fluid motion considered first in Example 4.6.
Note that the horizontal stream lines coincide with the level sets { y = d } of the stream
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Figure 10. Equipotentials and Streamlines for χ(z) = z.
1
Figure 11. Equipotentials and Streamlines for χ(z) = 2
z2 .
function, whereas the equipotentials { x = c } are the orthogonal system of vertical lines;
see Figure 10.
Next, consider the complex potential function
χ(z) = 1
2 z2 = 1
2 (x2 − y 2 ) + i x y.
f (z) = χ′ (z) = z = x + i y
leads to the hyperbolic flow (4.13). The hyperbolic streamlines x y = d are the level curves
of the stream function ψ(x, y) = x y. The equipotential lines 12 (x2 − y 2 ) = c form a system
of orthogonal hyperbolas. Figure 11 shows (some of) the equipotentials in the first plot,
the stream lines in the second, and combines them together in the third picture.
Example 4.8. Flow Around a Disk . Consider the complex potential function
1 x y
χ(z) = z + = x + 2 + i y− 2 , (4.16)
z x + y2 x + y2
whose real and imaginary parts are individually solutions to the two-dimensional Laplace
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1
Figure 12. Equipotentials and Streamlines for z + .
z
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everywhere tangent to the unit circle, and hence satisfies the no flux condition v · n = 0
along the boundary
of
the unit disk. Thus, we can interpret (4.17), when restricted to the
domain Ω = | z | > 1 , as the complex velocity of a uniformly moving fluid around the
outside of a solid circular disk of radius 1, as illustrated in Figure 13. In three dimensions,
this would correspond to the steady flow of a fluid around a solid cylinder.
Remark : In this section, we have focused on the fluid mechanical roles of a harmonic
function and its conjugate. An analogous interpretation applies when ϕ(x, y) represents
an electromagnetic potential function; the level curves of its harmonic conjugate ψ(x, y)
are the paths followed by charged particles under the electromotive force field v = ∇ϕ.
Similarly, if ϕ(x, y) represents the equilibrium temperature distribution in a planar domain,
its level lines represent the isotherms — curves of constant temperature, while the level
lines of its harmonic conjugate are the curves along which heat energy flows. Finally,
if ϕ(x, y) represents the height of a deformed membrane, then its level curves are the
contour lines of elevation. The level curves of its harmonic conjugate are the curves of
steepest descent, that is, the paths followed by, say, a stream of water flowing down the
membrane† .
5. Conformal Mapping.
As we now know, complex functions provide an almost inexhaustible supply of harmonic
functions, that is, solutions to the the two-dimensional Laplace equation. Thus, to solve
an associated boundary value problem, we “merely” find the complex function whose real
part matches the prescribed boundary conditions. Unfortunately, even for relatively simple
domains, this remains a daunting task.
The one case where we do have an explicit solution is that of a circular disk, where the
Poisson integral formula, [20; Theorem 4.6], provides a complete solution to the Dirichlet
boundary value problem. Thus, an evident solution strategy for the corresponding bound-
ary value problem on a more complicated domain would be to transform it into a solved
case by an inspired change of variables.
Analytic Maps
The intimate connections between complex analysis and solutions to the Laplace equa-
tion inspires us to look at changes of variables defined by complex functions. To this end,
we will re-interpret a complex analytic function
†
This interpretation ignores any inertial effects in the fluid flow.
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g
Ω D
will play a crucial role in the development of the method. Finally, in order to match
the boundary conditions, we will assume that the mapping extends continuously to the
boundary ∂Ω and maps it, one-to-one, to the boundary ∂D of the image domain.
Before trying to apply this idea to solve boundary value problems for the Laplace equa-
tion, let us look at some of the most basic examples of analytic mappings.
Example 5.1. The simplest nontrivial analytic maps are the translations
ζ = z + β = (x + a) + i (y + b), (5.4)
where β = a + i b is a fixed complex number. The effect of (5.4) is to translate the entire
complex plane in the direction and distance prescribed by the vector (a, b)T . In particular,
(5.4) maps the disk Ω = { | z + β | < 1 } of radius 1 and center at the point − β to the unit
disk D = { | ζ | < 1 }.
Example 5.2. There are two types of linear analytic maps. First are the scalings
ζ = ρ z = ρ x + i ρ y, (5.5)
where ρ 6= 0 is a fixed nonzero real number. This maps the disk | z | < 1/| ρ | to the unit
disk | ζ | < 1. Second are the rotations
which rotates the complex plane around the origin by a fixed (real) angle φ. These all map
the unit disk to itself.
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Figure 15. The mapping ζ = ez .
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and is one-to-one provided | b − a | < 2 π. In particular, the horizontal strip
S− π/2,π/2 = − 21 π < Im z < 12 π
of width π centered around the real axis is mapped, in a one-to-one manner, to the right
half plane
R = Ω− π/2,π/2 = − 21 π < ph ζ < 21 π = { Im ζ > 0 },
while the horizontal strip S− π,π = − π < Im z < π of width 2 π is mapped onto the
domain
Ω∗ = Ω− π,π = { − π < ph ζ < π } = C \ { Im z = 0, Re z ≤ 0 }
obtained by slitting the complex plane along the negative real axis.
On the other hand, vertical lines Re z = a are mapped to circles | ζ | = ea . Thus, a
vertical strip a < Re z < b is mapped to an annulus ea < | ζ | < eb , albeit many-to-
one, since the strip is effectively wrapped around and around the annulus. The rectangle
R = { a < x < b, − π < y < π } of height 2 π is mapped in a one-to-one fashion on an
annulus that has been cut along the negative real axis, as illustrated in Figure 15. Finally,
we note that no domain is mapped to the unit disk D = { | ζ | < 1 } (or, indeed, any other
domain that contains 0) because the exponential function is never zero: ζ = ez 6= 0.
ζ = g(z) = z 2 , or ξ = x2 − y 2 , η = 2 x y, (5.10)
√
is analytic on all of C, but is not one-to-one. Its inverse is the square root function z = ζ ,
which, as we noted in Section 2, is doubly-valued, except at the origin z = 0. Furthermore,
its derivative g ′ (z) = 2 z vanishes at z = 0, violating the invertibility condition (5.3).
However, once we restrict g(z) to a simply connected subdomain Ω that does not contain √
0, the function g(z) = z 2 does define a one-to-one mapping, whose inverse z = g −1 (ζ) = ζ
is a well-defined, analytic and single-valued branch of the square root function.
The effect of the squaring map on a point z is to square its modulus, | ζ | = | z |2 , while
doubling its phase, ph ζ = ph z 2 = 2 ph z. Thus, for example, the upper right quadrant
Q = { x > 0, y > 0 } = 0 < ph z < 12 π
is mapped onto the upper half plane
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Figure 16. The Effect of ζ = z 2 on Various Domains.
of radius ρ2 . On the other hand, the unit square S = { 0 < x < 1, 0 < y < 1 } is mapped
to a curvilinear triangular domain, as indicated in Figure 16; the edges of the square on
the real and imaginary axes map to the two halves of the straight base of the triangle,
while the other two edges become its curved sides.
Example 5.7. A particularly important example is the analytic map
z−1 x2 + y 2 − 1 2y
ζ= = 2 2
+ i , (5.11)
z+1 (x + 1) + y (x + 1)2 + y 2
where we established the formulae for its real and imaginary parts in (2.13). The map is
one-to-one with analytic inverse
1+ζ 1 − ξ 2 − η2 2η
z= = 2 2
+ i , (5.12)
1−ζ (1 − ξ) + η (1 − ξ)2 + η 2
provided z 6= −1 and ζ 6= 1. This particular analytic map has the important property
of mapping the right half plane R = { x = Re z > 0 } to the unit disk D = { | ζ |2 < 1 }.
Indeed, by (5.12)
1 − ξ 2 − η2
| ζ |2 = ξ 2 + η 2 < 1 if and only if x= > 0.
(1 − ξ)2 + η 2
Note that the denominator does not vanish on the interior of the disk D.
The complex functions (5.7, 8, 11) are all particular examples of linear fractional trans-
formations
αz + β
ζ= , (5.13)
γz +δ
which form one of the most important classes of analytic maps. Here α, β, γ, δ are complex
constants, subject only to the restriction
α δ − β γ 6= 0,
since otherwise (5.13) reduces to a trivial constant (and non-invertible) map. (Why?) The
map is well defined except when γ 6= 0 and z = − δ/γ, which, by convention, is said to
be mapped to the point ζ = ∞. On the other hand, the linear fractional transformation
maps z = ∞ to ζ = α/γ (or ∞ when γ = 0), the value following from an evident limiting
process. Thus, every linear fractional transformation defines a one-to-one, analytic map
from the Riemann sphere S ≡ C ∪ { ∞ } obtained by adjoining the point at infinity to
the complex plane. The resulting space is identified with a two-dimensional sphere via
stereographic projection π: S → C, [1, 23], which is one-to-one (and conformal) except at
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Figure 17. Stereographic Projection.
the north pole, where it is not defined and which is thus identified with the point ∞; see
Figure 17. In complex analysis, one treats the point at infinity on an equal footing with
all other complex points, using the map ζ = 1/z, say, to analyze the behavior of analytic
functions there.
There is a unique linear fractional transformation mapping any three distinct points in
the Riemann sphere to any other three distinct points. In particular,
(b − c) (z − a)
ζ= (5.14)
(b − a) (z − c)
is the unique linear fractional transformation mapping the point a, b, c ∈ C to the respective
points 0, 1, ∞.
Another important property of linear fractional transformations is that they always
map circles to circles, where, to be completely accurate, one must view a straight line as a
“circle of infinite radius”; indeed, the images of circles and straight lines are all circles on
the Riemann sphere, the latter corresponding to circles that go through the north pole.
Each linear fractional
transformation
(5.13) can be identified with a nonsingular 2 × 2
α β
complex matrix A = . The matrices A and B define the same linear fractional
γ δ
transformation if and only if A = λ B for some 0 6= λ ∈ C. If A, B respectively represent
linear fractional transformations w = f (z), ζ = g(w), then their product matrix C = B A
represents the composed linear fractional transformation ζ = g ◦ f (z). Consequently the
inverse of a linear fractional transformation is the linear fractional transformation identified
with the inverse matrix A−1 .
z−α
ζ= , with | α | < 1, (5.15)
αz −1
maps the unit disk to itself, in particular moving the origin z = 0 to the point ζ = α. To
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f
θ
θ
Conformality
A remarkable geometrical property enjoyed by all complex analytic functions is that, at
non-critical points, they preserve angles, and therefore define conformal mappings.
Definition 5.10. A function g: R n → R n is called conformal if it preserves angles.
But what does it mean to “preserve angles”? In the Euclidean norm, the angle between
two vectors is defined by their dot product. However, most analytic maps are nonlinear,
and so will not map vectors to vectors since they will typically map straight lines to curves.
However, if we interpret “angle” to mean the angle between two curves† , as illustrated in
Figure 18, then we can make sense of the conformality requirement. Thus, in order to
†
Or, more precisely, the angle between their tangent vectors at the point of intersection; see
below for details.
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z
ph z
realize complex functions as conformal maps, we first need to understand their effect on
curves.
In general, a curve C ∈ C in the complex plane is parametrized by a complex-valued
function
z(t) = x(t) + i y(t), a ≤ t ≤ b, (5.17)
that depends on a real parameter t. Note that there is no essential difference between
a complex curve (5.17) and a real plane curve; we have merely switched from vector
notation x(t) = (x(t), y(t))T to complex notation z(t) = x(t) + i y(t). All the usual
vectorial curve terminology — closed, simple (non-self intersecting), piecewise smooth,
etc. — is employed without modification. In particular, the tangent vector to the curve at
the point z(t) = x(t)+ i y(t) can be identified with the complex number z(t) = x(t)+ i y (t).
Smoothness of the curve is guaranteed by the requirement that z (t) 6= 0.
1 + i t 1 − i −t
z(t) = cosh t + i sinh t = e + e , −∞ < t < ∞,
2 2
parametrizes the right hand branch of the hyperbola Re z 2 = x2 − y 2 = 1. Its complex
tangent vector is z (t) = sinh t + i cosh t = i z(t).
When we interpret the curve as the trajectory of a particle in the complex plane, so that
z(t) is the position of the particle at time t, theptangent z(t) represents its instantaneous
velocity. The modulus of the tangent, | z | = x2 + y 2 , indicates the particle’s speed,
while its phase ph z measures the direction of motion, as prescribed by the angle that the
curve makes with the horizontal; see Figure 19.
The (signed) angle between between two curves is defined as the angle between their
tangents at the point of intersection z = z1 (t1 ) = z2 (t2 ). If the curve C1 is at angle
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θ1 = ph z 1 (t1 ) while the curve C2 is at angle θ2 = ph z 2 (t2 ), then the angle θ between C1
and C2 at z is their difference
z
θ = θ2 − θ1 = ph z 2 − ph z 1 = ph 2 .
(5.18)
z1
Now, consider the effect of an analytic map ζ = g(z). A curve C parametrized by z(t)
will be mapped to a new curve Γ = g(C) parametrized by the composition ζ(t) = g(z(t)).
The tangent to the image curve is related to that of the original curve by the chain rule:
dζ dg dz
ζ(t) = g ′ (z(t)) z(t).
= , or (5.19)
dt dz dt
Therefore, the effect of the analytic map on the tangent vector z is to multiply it by the
complex number g ′ (z). If the analytic map satisfies our key assumption g ′ (z) 6= 0, then
ζ 6= 0, and so the image curve is guaranteed to be smooth.
According to equation (5.19),
| ζ | = | g ′ (z) z | = | g ′ (z) | | z |.
(5.20)
Thus, the speed of motion along the new curve ζ(t) is multiplied by a factor ρ = | g ′ (z) | > 0.
Observe that the magnification factor ρ depends only upon the point z and not how the
curve passes through it. All curves passing through the point z are speeded up (or slowed
down if ρ < 1) by the same factor! Similarly, the angle that the new curve makes with the
horizontal is given by
ph ζ = ph g ′ (z) z = ph g ′ (z) + ph z .
(5.21)
Therefore, the tangent angle of the curve is increased by an amount φ = ph g ′ (z), i.e.,
its tangent has been rotated through angle φ. Again, the increase in tangent angle only
depends on the point z, and all curves passing through z are rotated by the same amount
φ. This immediately implies that the angle between any two curves is preserved. More
precisely, if C1 is at angle θ1 and C2 at angle θ2 at a point of intersection, then their images
Γ1 = g(C1 ) and Γ2 = g(C2 ) are at angles ψ1 = θ1 + φ and ψ2 = θ2 + φ. The angle between
the two image curves is the difference
ψ2 − ψ1 = (θ2 + φ) − (θ1 + φ) = θ2 − θ1 ,
which is the same as the angle between the original curves. This establishes the confor-
mality or angle-preservation property of analytic maps.
Remark : The converse is also valid: Every planar conformal map comes from a complex
analytic function with nonvanishing derivative.
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Figure 20. Conformality of z 2 .
The conformality of analytic functions is all the more surprising when one revisits ele-
mentary examples. In Example 5.6, we discovered that the function w = z 2 maps a quarter
plane to a half plane, and therefore doubles the angle between the coordinate axes at the
origin! Thus g(z) = z 2 is most definitely not conformal at z = 0. The explanation is, of
course, that z = 0 is a critical point, g ′ (0) = 0, and Theorem 5.12 only guarantees confor-
mality when the derivative is nonzero. Amazingly, the map preserves angles everywhere
else! Somehow, the angle at the origin is doubled, while angles at all nearby points are
preserved. Figure 20 illustrates this remarkable and counter-intuitive feat. The left hand
figure shows the coordinate grid, while on the right are the images of the horizontal and
vertical lines under the map z 2 . Note that, except at the origin, the image curves continue
to meet at 90◦ angles, in accordance with conformality.
Example 5.13. A particularly interesting example is the Joukowski map
1 1
ζ= z+ . (5.22)
2 z
It was first employed to study flows around airplane wings by the pioneering Russian aero-
and hydro-dynamics researcher Nikolai Zhukovskii (Joukowski). Since
dζ 1 1
= 1− 2 =0 if and only if z = ± 1,
dz 2 z
the Joukowski map is conformal except at the critical points z = ± 1 as well as the singu-
larity z = 0, where it is not defined.
If z = e i θ lies on the unit circle, then
ζ = 21 e i θ + e− i θ = cos θ,
lies on the real axis, with −1 ≤ ζ ≤ 1. Thus, the Joukowski map squashes the unit circle
down to the real line segment [ −1, 1 ]. The images of points outside the unit circle fill the
rest of the ζ plane, as do the images of the (nonzero) points inside the unit circle. Indeed,
if we solve (5.22) for p
z = ζ ± ζ2 − 1 , (5.23)
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Figure 21. The Joukowski Map.
Figure 22. Airfoils Obtained from Circles via the Joukowski Map.
we see that every ζ except ± 1 comes from two different points z; for ζ not on the critical
line segment [ − 1, 1 ], one point (with the minus sign) lies inside and one (with the plus
sign) lies outside the unit circle, whereas if −1 < ζ < 1, both points lie on the unit circle
and a common vertical line. Therefore,
(5.22) defines a one-to-one conformal map from the
exterior of the unit circle | z | > 1 onto the exterior of the unit line segment C \ [ −1, 1 ].
Under the Joukowski map, the concentric circles | z | = r 6= 1 are mapped to ellipses with
foci at ±1 in the ζ plane; see Figure 21. The effect on circles not centered at the origin is
quite interesting. The image curves take on a wide variety of shapes; several examples are
plotted in Figure 22. If the circle passes through the singular point z = 1, then its image is
no longer smooth, but has a cusp at ζ = 1; this happens in the last 6 of the figures. Some
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of the image curves assume the shape of the cross-section through an idealized airplane
wing or airfoil. Later, we will see how to determine the physical fluid flow around such an
airfoil, a construction that was important in early aircraft design.
One of the hallmarks of conformal mapping is that one can assemble a large repertoire
of complicated examples by composing elementary mappings. This relies on the fact that
the composition of two complex analytic functions is also complex analytic.
The proof that the composition of two differentiable functions is differentiable is identical
to the real variable version, [2, 21], and need not be reproduced here. The derivative of
the composition is explicitly given by the usual chain rule:
d dζ dζ dw
g ◦ f (z) = g ′ (f (z)) f ′ (z), or, in Leibnizian notation, = . (5.24)
dz dz dw dz
If both f and g are one-to-one, so is their composition h = g ◦ f . Moreover, the composition
of two conformal maps is also conformal, a fact that is immediate from the definition, or
by using the chain rule (5.24) to show that
w = ez
maps the horizontal strip S = { − 21 π < Im z < 12 π } conformally onto the right half plane
R = { Re w > 0 }. On the other hand, Example 5.7 tells us that the linear fractional
transformation
w−1
ζ=
w+1
maps the right half plane R conformally to the unit disk D = { | ζ | < 1 }. Therefore, the
composition
ez − 1
ζ= z (5.25)
e +1
is a one-to-one conformal map from the horizontal strip S to the unit disk D, which we
illustrate in Figure 23.
†
Of course, to properly define the composition, we need to ensure that the range of the function
w = f (z) is contained in the domain of the function ζ = g(w).
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w−1
ζ=
w = ez w+1
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Indeed, the conformal map (5.11) takes the unbounded right half plane R = { Re z > 0 }
to the unit disk.
The standard proof of this important theorem relies on some more advanced topics in
complex analysis, and can be found, for instance, in [1]. More recently, Levi, [17], has
provided a more elementary “constructive” proof, based on the Green’s function† of the
domain. In outline, let
u(z) = log | z − z0 | + u0 (z) (5.28)
be the Green’s function for the homogeneous Dirichlet boundary value problem based at
a point z0 ∈ Ω. Let ϕt (z) denote the flow induced by the system of first order ordinary
differential equations
dz − ∇u , z 6= z0 ,
= F (z), where F (z) = | ∇u |2 (5.29)
dt
0, z = z0 ,
that governs the (rescaled) gradient descent associated with the Green’s function u. Then
a conformal mapping from Ω to D is given by
h i
u0 (z0 ) t
g(z) = e lim e ϕt (z) − z0 , z ∈ Ω. (5.30)
t→∞
The proof that formula (5.30) produces the desired Riemann map requires showing first
that ∇u 6= 0 at all z 6= z0 so that F (z) is analytic on Ω \ { z0 } and continuous at z0 . This
implies that, as t → ∞, the flow ϕt (z) asymptotically shrinks Ω down to the base point z0 .
The second step is to prove that the limiting map (5.30) is indeed analytic and one-to-one
from Ω to the unit disk. The key intuition is that, for large t ≫ 0, the gradient descent
flow maps the level sets of u to asymptotically small circles centered at z0 , and hence a
suitably rescaled version — namely, et ϕt (z) — will, as t → ∞, map Ω to a disk centered
at z0 of radius R = e− u0 (z0 ) . The final manipulations in formula (5.30) merely map this
disk to the unit disk centered at the origin.
Moreover, it is not difficult to prove that g(z) is the unique conformal map from Ω to
D that satisfies g(z0 ) = 0, g ′ (z0 ) > 0, and hence, by Proposition 5.9, all other conformal
maps from Ω to D are obtained by composing g with a linear fractional transformation of
the form (5.16). Full details can be found in the above reference [17].
Since the formula for the conformal map g guaranteed by the Riemann Mapping The-
orem 5.17 is not completely explicit, in practical applications one assembles a collection
of useful conformal maps for particular domains of interest. More complicated maps can
then be built up by composition of the basic examples. An extensive catalog can be found
in [14], while numerical schemes for constructing conformal maps are surveyed in [7].
Example 5.18. The goal of this example is to construct a conformal map that takes
a half disk
D+ = { | z | < 1, Im z > 0 } (5.31)
†
See (6.28) below for the definition of the Green’s function.
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to the full unit disk D = { | ζ | < 1 }. The answer is not ζ = z 2 because the image
of D+ omits the positive real axis, resulting in a disk that has a slit cut out of it:
{ | ζ | < 1, 0 < ph ζ < 2 π }. To obtain the entire disk as the image of the conformal map,
we must work a little harder.
The first observation is that the map z = (w − 1)/(w + 1) that we analyzed in Exam-
ple 5.7 takes the right half plane R = { Re w > 0 } to the unit disk. Moreover, it maps the
upper right quadrant Q = 0 < ph w < 21 π to the half disk (5.31). Its inverse,
z+1
w= (5.32)
z−1
will therefore map the half disk, z ∈ D+ , to the upper right quadrant w ∈ Q.
On the other hand, we just constructed a conformal map (5.27) that takes the upper
right quadrant Q to the unit disk D. Therefore, if compose the two maps — replacing z
by w in (5.27) and then using (5.32) — we obtain the desired conformal map:
z+1 2
i +1
i w2 + 1 z−1 ( i + 1)(z 2 + 1) + 2( i − 1)z
ζ= = = .
i w2 − 1 z+1 2 ( i − 1)(z 2 + 1) + 2( i + 1)z
i −1
z−1
The formula can be further simplified by multiplying numerator and denominator by i +1,
and so
z2 + 2 i z + 1
ζ = −i 2 .
z − 2iz +1
The leading factor − i is unimportant and can be omitted, since it merely rotates the disk
by − 90◦ , and so
z2 + 2 i z + 1
ζ= 2 (5.33)
z − 2iz + 1
is an equally valid solution to our problem.
Finally, as noted in the preceding example, the conformal map guaranteed by the Rie-
mann Mapping Theorem is not unique. Since the linear fractional transformations (5.16)
map the unit disk to itself, we can compose them with any conformal Riemann mapping to
produce additional conformal maps from a simply connected domain to the unit disk. For
example, composing with (5.33) produces the two parameter family of conformal mappings
z 2 + 2 i z + 1 − α (z 2 − 2 i z + 1)
ζ = eiφ , (5.34)
α (z 2 + 2 i z + 1) − z 2 + 2 i z − 1
which, for any | α | < 1, − π < φ ≤ π, take the half disk onto the unit disk. Proposition 5.9
implies that this is the only ambiguity, and so, in this instance, (5.34) forms a complete
list of one-to-one conformal maps from D+ to D.
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Figure 24. An Annulus.
Annular Domains
The Riemann Mapping Theorem does not apply to non-simply connected domains. For
purely topological reasons, a hole cannot be made to disappear under a one-to-one continu-
ous mapping — much less a conformal map — and so it is impossible to map a non-simply
connected domain in a one-to-one manner onto the unit disk.
The simplest non-simply connected domain is an annulus consisting of the points be-
tween two concentric circles
Ar,R = r < | ζ | < R , (5.35)
which, for simplicity, is centered around the origin; see Figure 24. The case r = 0 cor-
responds to a punctured disk, while setting R = ∞ gives the exterior of a disk of radius
r. It can be proved, [14], that any other domain with a single hole can be conformally
mapped to one of these annuli. The radii r, R are not uniquely specified; indeed the linear
map ζ = α z maps the annulus (5.35) to a rescaled annulus Aρ r,ρ R whose inner and outer
radii have both been scaled by the factor ρ = | α |. However, the ratio r/R of the inner to
outer radius of the annulus is uniquely specified, and annuli with different ratios cannot
be mapped to each other by a conformal map. Here, if r = 0 or R = ∞, but not both,
then r/R = 0 by convention, while the punctured plane, where r = 0 and R = ∞ remains
a separate case.
Example 5.19. Let c > 0. Consider the domain
Ω = | z | < 1 and | z − c | > c (5.36)
contained between two nonconcentric circles. To keep the computations simple, we take
the outer circle to have radius 1 (which can always be arranged by rescaling, anyway) while
the inner circle has center at the point z = c on the real axis and radius c, which means
that it passes through the origin. We must restrict c < 12 in order that the inner circle be
strictly inside the outer circle. Our goal is to find a conformal map ζ = g(z) that takes
this non-concentric annular domain to a concentric annulus of the form
Ar,1 = r < | ζ | < 1 . (5.37)
Now, according to Example 5.8, a linear fractional transformation of the form
z−α
ζ = g(z) = with |α| < 1 (5.38)
αz − 1
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Figure 25. Conformal Map for a Non-Concentric Annulus.
maps the unit disk to itself. Moreover, as noted above, linear fractional transformations
always map circles to circles. Therefore, we seek a particular value of α that maps the
inner circle | z − c | = c to a circle of the form | ζ | = r centered at the origin. We choose α
to be real and try to map the points 0 and 2 c on the inner circle to the points r and − r
on the circle | ζ | = r. This requires
2c − α
g(0) = α = r, g(2 c) = = − r. (5.39)
2cα − 1
Substituting the first into the second leads to the quadratic equation
c α2 − α + c = 0,
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6. Applications of Conformal Mapping.
Let us now apply what we have learned about analytic/conformal maps. We begin with
boundary value problems for the Laplace equation, and then present some applications
in fluid mechanics. We conclude by explaining how to use conformal maps to construct
Green’s functions for the two-dimensional Poisson equation.
Applications to Harmonic Functions and Laplace’s Equation
We are interested in solving a boundary value problem for the Laplace equation on a
domain Ω ⊂ R 2 . Our strategy is to map it to a boundary value problem on the unit disk
D that we know how to solve. To this end, suppose we know a conformal map ζ = g(z)
that takes z ∈ Ω to ζ ∈ D. As we know, the real and imaginary parts of an analytic
function F (ζ) defined on D are harmonic. Moreover, according to Proposition 5.14, the
composition f (z) = F (g(z)) defines an analytic function whose real and imaginary parts
are harmonic functions on Ω. Thus, the conformal mapping can be regarded as a change
of variables that preserves harmonicity. In fact, this property does not even require the
harmonic function to be the real part of an analytic function, i.e., we need not assume the
existence of a harmonic conjugate.
Proposition 6.1. If U (ξ, η) is a harmonic function of ξ, η, and
ζ = ξ + i η = ξ(x, y) + i η(x, y) = g(z) (6.1)
is any analytic function, then the composition
u(x, y) = U (ξ(x, y), η(x, y)) (6.2)
is a harmonic function of x, y.
Proof : This is a straightforward application of the chain rule:
∂u ∂U ∂ξ ∂U ∂η ∂u ∂U ∂ξ ∂U ∂η
= + , = + ,
∂x ∂ξ ∂x ∂η ∂x ∂y ∂ξ ∂y ∂η ∂y
∂ 2u ∂ 2 U ∂ξ 2 ∂ 2 U ∂ξ ∂η ∂ 2 U ∂η 2 ∂U ∂ 2 ξ ∂U ∂ 2η
= + 2 + + + ,
∂x2 ∂ξ 2 ∂x ∂ξ ∂η ∂x ∂x ∂η 2 ∂x ∂ξ ∂x 2 ∂η ∂x2
2 2
2 2
∂ u ∂ U ∂ξ ∂ 2 U ∂ξ ∂η 2
∂ U ∂η 2
∂U ∂ ξ ∂U ∂ 2η
= + 2 + + + .
∂y 2 ∂ξ 2 ∂y ∂ξ ∂η ∂y ∂y ∂η 2 ∂y ∂ξ ∂y 2 ∂η ∂y 2
Using the Cauchy–Riemann equations
∂ξ ∂η ∂ξ ∂η
=− , = ,
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂x
for the analytic function ζ = ξ + i η, we find, after some algebra,
2 2 2
∂ 2u ∂ 2u ∂ξ ∂η ∂ U ∂ 2U
∆u = + 2 = + + = | g ′ (z) |2 ∆U, (6.3)
∂x2 ∂y ∂x ∂x ∂ξ 2 ∂η 2
the final expression following from the first formula for the complex derivative in (3.3). We
conclude that whenever U (ξ, η) is harmonic, and so solves the Laplace equation ∆U = 0
in the ξ, η variables, then u(x, y) solves the Laplace equation ∆u = 0 in the x, y variables,
and is thus also harmonic. Q.E.D.
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This observation has immediate consequences for boundary value problems arising in
physical applications. Suppose we wish to solve the Dirichlet problem
∆U = 0 in D, U =H on ∂D. (6.6)
But we know how to solve the Dirichlet problem (6.6) on the unit disk. The solution is
given by the well known Poisson integral formula, [20; Theorem 4.6], which we write in
terms of polar coordinates r, θ.
Theorem 6.2. The solution to the Laplace equation in the unit disk subject to Dirich-
let boundary conditions u(1, θ) = h(θ) is
Z π
1 1 − r2
u(r, θ) = h(φ) dφ. (6.7)
2 π −π 1 + r 2 − 2 r cos(θ − φ)
We conclude that the solution to the originalboundary value problem is given by the
composition formula u(x, y) = U p(x, y), q(x, y) . In summary, the solution to the Dirich-
let problem on a unit disk can be used to solve the Dirichlet problem on more complicated
planar domains — provided we are in possession of a suitable conformal map.
Example 6.3. According to Example 5.7, the analytic function
z−1 x2 + y 2 − 1 2y
ξ + iη = ζ = = 2 2
+i (6.8)
z+1 (x + 1) + y (x + 1)2 + y 2
maps the right half plane R = { x = Re z > 0 } to the unit disk D = { | ζ | < 1 }. Proposi-
tion 6.1 implies that if U (ξ, η) is a harmonic function in the unit disk, then
2
x + y2 − 1 2y
u(x, y) = U , (6.9)
(x + 1)2 + y 2 (x + 1)2 + y 2
is a harmonic function on the right half plane. (This can, of course, be checked directly
by a rather unpleasant chain rule computation.)
To solve the Dirichlet boundary value problem
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on the right half plane, we adopt the change of variables (6.8) and use the Poisson integral
formula to construct the solution to the transformed Dirichlet problem
1+ζ (1 + ζ)(1 − ζ) 1 + ζ − ζ − | ζ |2 1 − ξ 2 − η2 + 2 i η
x+ iy = z = = = =
1−ζ | 1 − ζ |2 | 1 − ζ |2 (ξ − 1)2 + η 2
for the inverse map, we see that the boundary point ζ = ξ + i η = e i φ on the unit circle
∂D will correspond to the boundary point
2iη 2 i sin φ φ
iy = 2 2
= 2 = i cot (6.12)
(ξ − 1) + η (cos φ − 1)2 + sin φ 2
on the imaginary axis ∂R = { Re z = 0 }. Thus, the boundary data h(y) on ∂R corresponds
to the boundary data
H(φ) = h cot 21 φ
on the unit circle. The Poisson integral formula (6.7) can then be applied to solve (6.11),
from which we are able to reconstruct the solution (6.9) to the boundary value problem
(6.9) on the half plane.
Let’s look at an explicit example. If the boundary data on the imaginary axis is provided
by the step function
1, y > 0,
u(0, y) = h(y) ≡
0, y < 0,
then the corresponding boundary data on the unit disk is a (periodic) step function
1, 0 < φ < π,
H(φ) =
0, − π < φ < 0.
According to [20; eq. (4.130)], the corresponding solution in the unit disk is
1 1 − ξ 2 − η2
1 − tan −1
, ξ 2 + η 2 < 1, η > 0,
π 2η
1
U (ξ, η) = , ξ 2 + η 2 < 1, η = 0,
2
2 2
1 1 − ξ − η
− tan −1
, ξ 2 + η 2 < 1, η < 0.
π 2η
After some tedious algebra, we find that the corresponding solution in the right half plane
is simply
1 1 1 1 y
u(x, y) = + ph z = + tan−1 ,
2 π 2 π x
an answer that, in hindsight, we should have been able to guess.
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Figure 26. A Non–Coaxial Cable.
Remark : The solution to the preceding Dirichlet boundary value problem is not, in fact,
unique, owing to the unboundedness of the domain. The solution that we pick out by using
the conformal map to the unit disk is the one that remains bounded at ∞. The unbounded
solutions would correspond to solutions on the unit disk that have a singularity in their
boundary data at the point −1.
Example 6.4. A non-coaxial cable. The goal of this example is to determine the elec-
trostatic potential inside a non-coaxial cylindrical cable with prescribed constant potential
values on the two bounding cylinders, as illustrated in Figure 26. Assume for definiteness
that the larger cylinder has radius 1, and is centered at the origin, while the smaller cylin-
der has radius 52 , and is centered at z = 52 . The resulting electrostatic potential will be
independent of the longitudinal coordinate, and so can be viewed as a planar potential in
the annular domain contained between two circles representing the cross-sections of our
cylinders. The desired potential must satisfy the Dirichlet boundary value problem
∆u = 0 when | z | < 1 and z − 25 > 25 ,
u = a, when | z | = 1, and u = b when z − 2 = 2 . 5 5
According to Example 5.19, the linear fractional transformation
2z − 1
ζ= (6.13)
z−2
maps this non-concentric annular domain to the annulus A1/2,1 = 21 < | ζ | < 1 , which
is the cross-section of a coaxial cable. The corresponding transformed potential U (ξ, η)
has the constant Dirichlet boundary conditions
U = a, when | ζ | = 21 , and U = b when | ζ | = 1. (6.14)
Clearly the coaxial potential U must be a radially symmetric solution to the Laplace
equation, and hence of the form
U (ξ, η) = α log | ζ | + β,
for constants α, β. A short computation shows that the particular potential function
b−a b−a
U (ξ, η) = log | ζ | + b = log(ξ 2 + η 2 ) + b
log 2 2 log 2
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Figure 27. Electrostatic Potential Between Coaxial and Non-Coaxial Cylinders.
satisfies the prescribed boundary conditions (6.14). Therefore, the desired non-coaxial
electrostatic potential
1 2 2
b−a 2z − 1 4 x − 2 + 4y
u(x, y) = log + b = b − a log +b (6.15)
log 2 z−2 2 log 2 (x − 2)2 + y 2
is obtained by composition with the conformal map (6.13). The particular case a = 0,
b = 1, is plotted in Figure 27.
Remark : The same harmonic function determines the equilibrium temperature of an
annular plate whose inner boundary is kept at a temperature u = a while the outer
boundary is kept at temperature u = b. One could also interpret this solution as the
equilibrium temperature of a three-dimensional cylindrical body contained between two
non-coaxial cylinders that are held at fixed temperatures. In this circumstance, the body’s
temperature (6.15) only depends upon the transverse coordinates x, y, and not upon the
longitudinal coordinate z.
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χ(z) = ( i z)2/3 χ(z) = z 2
ζ = ( i z)2/3
takes the region Ω = { − 12 π < ph z < π } = C \ { x < 0, y < 0 } that is exterior to the
lower left quadrant to the upper half plane D = { Im ζ > 0 }. As noted above, the complex
potential Θ(ζ) = ζ corresponds to the uniform horizontal flow on D with fluid velocity
v = (1, 0). Composing with the conformal map produces the complex potential χ(z) =
Θ ◦ g(z) = ( i z)2/3 on Ω, with associated complex velocity field f (z) = χ′ (z) = 32 i 2/3 z −1/3
for an ideal fluid flow around an exterior corner. Note that this is quite different from the
flow induced by the potential χ(z) = 12 z 2 with complex velocity f (z) = z that was noted
above; see the Remark on page 23. Both are mathematically valid fluid flows, but differ
dramatically in the geometric structure induced by their distinct asymptotic behaviors at
large distances, as illustrated in the plots of their streamlines in Figure 28. The former is
clearly the more plausible fluid motion from a physical standpoint; the slight kinks that
can be observed in the streamlines that pass near the corner are intriguing.
Let us now concentrate on how a fluid flows around a solid object. The ideal flow
assumptions of incompressibility and irrotationality are reasonably accurate if the flow is
laminar , meaning far away from exhibiting turbulence. In three dimensions, the object
is assumed to have a uniform shape in the axial direction, and so we can restrict our
attention to a planar fluid flow around a closed, bounded subset D ⊂ R 2 ≃ C representing
the cross-section of our cylindrical object, as in Figure 29. The (complex) velocity and
potential are defined on the complementary domain Ω = C \ D occupied by the fluid. The
velocity potential ϕ(x, y) will satisfy the Laplace equation ∆ϕ = 0 in the exterior domain
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Figure 29. Cross Section of Cylindrical Object.
Ω. For a solid object, we should impose the homogeneous Neumann boundary conditions
∂ϕ
=0 on the boundary ∂Ω = ∂D, (6.17)
∂n
indicating that there is no fluid flux into the object. We note that, since it preserves
angles and hence the normal direction to the boundary, a conformal map will automatically
preserve the Neumann boundary conditions.
In addition, since the flow is taking place on an unbounded domain, we need to specify
the fluid motion at large distances. We shall assume our object is placed in a uniform
horizontal flow, e.g., a wind tunnel, as sketched in Figure 30. Thus, far away, the object
will not affect the flow, and so the fluid velocity should approximate the uniform velocity
T
field v = ( 1, 0 ) , where, for simplicity, we choose our physical units so that the fluid
moves from left to right with an asymptotic speed equal to 1. Equivalently, the velocity
potential should satisfy
ϕ(x, y) ≈ x, so ∇ϕ ≈ ( 1, 0 ) when x2 + y 2 ≫ 0.
An alternative physical interpretation is that we are located on an object that is moving
horizontally to the left at unit speed through a fluid that is initially at rest. Think of an
airplane flying through the air at constant speed. If we adopt a moving coordinate system
by sitting inside the airplane, then the effect is as if the plane is sitting still while the air
is moving towards us at unit speed.
.
Example 6.6. Horizontal plate. The simplest example is a flat plate moving hori-
zontally through the fluid. The plate’s cross-section is a horizontal line segment, and, for
simplicity, we take it to be the segment D = [ −1, 1 ] lying on the real axis. If the plate is
very thin and smooth, it will have no appreciable effect on the horizontal flow of the fluid,
and, indeed, the velocity potential is given by
ϕ(x, y) = x, for x + i y ∈ Ω = C \ [ −1, 1 ].
T
Note that ∇ϕ = ( 1, 0 ) , and hence this flow satisfies the Neumann boundary conditions
(6.17) on the horizontal segment D = ∂Ω. The corresponding complex potential is χ(z) =
z, with complex velocity f (z) = χ′ (z) = 1.
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Figure 30. Flow Past a Solid Object.
Example 6.7. Circular disk . Recall, from Example 5.13, that the Joukowski conformal
map
1 1
ζ = g(z) = z+ (6.18)
2 z
squashes the unit circle | z | = 1 down to the real line segment [ −1, 1 ] in the ζ plane.
Therefore, it will map the fluid flow outside a unit disk to the fluid flow past the line
segment, which, according to the previous example, has complex potential Θ(ζ) = ζ. The
resulting complex potential on the exterior of the disk is
1 1
χ(z) = Θ ◦ g(z) = g(z) = z+ . (6.19)
2 z
Except for a factor of 21 , indicating that the corresponding flow past the disk is half as
fast, this agrees with the potential we derived in Example 4.8; see Figure 13 for a plot of
the streamlines.
Example 6.8. Tilted plate. Let us next consider the case of a tilted plate in a uniformly
horizontal fluid flow. The cross-section will be the line segment
z(t) = t e− i φ , −1 ≤ t ≤ 1,
obtained by rotating the horizontal line segment [ −1, 1 ] through an angle − φ, as illus-
trated in Figure 31. The goal is to construct a fluid flow past the tilted segment that is
asymptotically horizontal at large distance. As before, the air flow will be going from left
to right, and so φ is called the attack angle of the plate or airfoil relative to the flow.
The key observation is that, while the effect of rotating a plate in a fluid flow is not so
evident, rotating a circularly symmetric disk has no effect on the flow around it. Thus, the
rotation w = e i φ z through angle φ maps the disk potential (6.19) to the complex potential
−iφ 1 −iφ eiφ
Υ(w) = χ(e w) = e w+ . (6.20)
2 w
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φ = 0◦ φ = 15◦ φ = 30◦
Figure 31. Fluid Flow Past a Tilted Plate.
The streamlines of the induced flow are no longer asymptotically horizontal, but rather at
an angle φ. If we now apply the original Joukowski map (6.18) (with w replacing z) to
the rotated flow, the circle is again squashed down to the horizontal line segment, but the
stream lines continue to be at angle φ at large distances. Thus, if we subsequently rotate
the resulting flow through an angle − φ, the net effect will be to tilt the segment to the
desired angle while rotating the streamlines to be asymptotically horizontal. Putting the
pieces together, we deduce the final complex potential to have the form
p
iφ 2 −2 i φ
χ(z) = e z cos φ − i sin φ z − e . (6.21)
Sample streamlines for the flow at several attack angles are plotted in Figure 31.
|w − β | ≤ |α| (6.23)
with center β and radius | α |. In particular, the boundary circle will continue to pass
through the point w = 1 provided | α | = | 1 − β |. Moreover, as noted in Example 5.3, the
angular component of α has the effect of a rotation, and so the streamlines around the
new disk will, asymptotically, be at an angle φ = ph α with the horizontal. We then apply
the Joukowski transformation
1 1 1 1
ζ= w+ = αz + β + (6.24)
2 w 2 αz + β
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φ = 0◦ φ = 15◦ φ = 30◦
Figure 32. Flow Past a Tilted Airfoil.
to map the disk (6.23) to the airfoil shape. The resulting complex potential for the flow
past the airfoil is obtained by substituting the inverse map
p
w−β ζ − β + ζ2 − 1
z= = ,
α α
into the disk potential (4.16), whereby
p p
ζ − β + ζ2 − 1 α ζ − β − ζ2 − 1
Θ(ζ) = + . (6.25)
α β2 + 1 − 2 β ζ
Finally, to make the streamlines asymptotically horizontal, we replace ζ by e i φ ζ in the
final formula (6.25), which produces an airfoil tilted by the attack angle φ to the horizontal
flow. Sample streamlines for the airfoil generated by the circle centered at −.1 + .2 i and
passing through 1, at several attack angles, are shown in Figure 32.
Unfortunately, there is a major flaw with the airfoils that we have just designed. As
we will discover, potential flows do not produce lift, and hence an airplane with such
a wing would not fly. Fortunately, for both birds and the travel industry, physical air
flow is not of this nature! In order to understand how lift enters into the picture, we
need to study complex integration, and this will be the topic of the final section. For
more extensive developments of the applications on conformal maps in fluid mechanics,
see [3, 12, 13, 15, 16].
Poisson’s Equation and the Green’s Function
Although designed for solving the homogeneous Laplace equation, the method of con-
formal mapping can also be used to solve its inhomogeneous counterpart — the Poisson
equation
− ∆u = f (x, y), for (x, y) ∈ Ω, (6.26)
on a domain Ω ⊂ R 2 , where the right hand side is a prescribed forcing function. We
include homogeneous boundary conditions (Dirichlet or mixed) on the boundary of the
∂Ω. (We exclude pure Neumann boundary conditions due to lack of existence/uniqueness,
[20]; however, [9] discusses how to extend the Green’s function formalism to this case.)
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One can then extend to inhomogeneous boundary conditions by linearly superimposing
the solution to the homogeneous Laplace equation that satisfies them.
To handle such a forced boundary value problem it suffices to solve the problem when
the right hand side is a delta function concentrated at a single point (ξ, η) ∈ Ω in the
domain:
− ∆u = δζ (x, y) = δ(x − ξ) δ(y − η), (6.27)
subject to the given homogeneous boundary conditions. The solution
For the planar Poisson equation, the important observation is that conformal mappings
preserve Green’s functions. Specifically:
Theorem 6.10. Let w = g(z) be a one-to-one conformal map that maps the domain Ω
to the domain D, which is also continuous on the boundary: g: ∂Ω → ∂D. Let G(w;e ω) be
the Green’s function for the homogeneous Dirichlet boundary value problem for the Poisson
equation on D. Then G(z; ζ) = G e g(z); g(ζ) is the corresponding Green’s function on Ω.
e
Proof : Fixing ω = ϕ+ i ψ, we are given that H(u, v) = G(w; ω), with w = u + i v, solves
e
− ∆H(u, v) = δω (u, v) = δ(u − ϕ, v − ψ), (6.30)
where we use ∆ e to denote the Laplacian in the u, v variables, along with the homogeneous
Dirichlet boundary conditions on ∂D. We now apply the change of variables u = p(x, y),
v = q(x, y), provided by the real and imaginary parts of our conformal map. According to
(6.3), the function h(x, y) = H p(x, y), q(x, y) satisfies
2 2
∂p ∂q
∆h(x, y) = + e
∆H p(x, y), q(x, y) . (6.31)
∂x ∂x
On the other hand, at ω = g(ζ) with ζ = ξ + i η, the change of variables formula for the
two-dimensional delta function, cf. [20; eq. (6.126)], implies that
δζ (x, y)
δω p(x, y), q(x, y) = (6.32)
| J(ξ, η) |
where J(x, y) is the Jacobian determinant of the transformation, namely
2 2
∂p ∂q ∂p ∂q ∂p ∂q
J(x, y) = − = + , (6.33)
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂x ∂x ∂x
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where the second expression follows from the Cauchy–Riemann equations (3.2) for the
analytic function g(z). Combining the preceding four formulas (6.30–33), we conclude
that
p (x, y)2 + qx (x, y)2
− ∆h = x δ (x, y) = δζ (x, y), (6.34)
px (ξ, η)2 + qx (ξ, η)2 ζ
since the delta function vanishes except when (x, y) = (ξ, η), at which point the numerator
and denominator in the fraction coincide. Thus, the Laplacian of the transformed function
has the correct delta function singularity at the point ζ = ξ + i η. The fact that h(x, y)
also satisfies homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions on ∂Ω is immediate. Q.E.D.
Remark : Theorem 6.10 also applies to the mixed boundary value problem, provided the
conformal map is C1 on the Neumann part of the boundary, which, by the angle-preserving
property of conformality, implies that it preserves the normal direction to the boundary.
The logarithmic potential function
1 1 1
U (u, v) = Re − log w = − log | w | = − log (u2 + v 2 ), (6.35)
2π 2π 4π
solves the Dirichlet problem
e = δ(u, v),
− ∆U (u, v) ∈ D, U =0 on ∂D,
on the unit disk D for a delta impulse concentrated at the origin. According to Example 5.8,
the linear fractional transformation
z−ζ
w = g(z) = , where | ζ | < 1, (6.36)
ζz−1
maps the unit disk to itself, moving the point z = ζ to the origin w = g(ζ) = 0. The proof
of Theorem 6.10 then implies that the transformed function u(x, y) will satisfy
− ∆u = δζ (x, y), (x, y) ∈ D, u=0 on ∂D,
and hence defines the Green’s function at the point ζ = ξ + i η. We conclude that
1 ζz−1
G(z; ζ) = log (6.37)
2π z−ζ
is the Green’s function for the Dirichlet boundary value problem on the unit disk.
Now that we know the Green’s function on the unit disk, we can use the Riemann
Mapping Theorem 5.17 and Theorem 6.10 to produce the Green’s function for any other
simply connected domain Ω ( C.
Corollary 6.11. Suppose Ω ( C be a simply connected domain. Let w = g(z) denote
a conformal map that takes z ∈ Ω to the unit disk w ∈ D. Then the Green’s function for
the homogeneous Dirichlet boundary problem for the Poisson equation on Ω is explicitly
given by
1
g(ζ) g(z) − 1
G(z; ζ) = log . (6.38)
2π g(z) − g(ζ)
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Remark : When Ω is unbounded, the Green’s function singles out the solution that is
asymptotically zero at large distances, reflecting the homogeneous Dirichlet boundary con-
dition “at ∞”.
One can then write an integral formula for the solution to the Poisson equation on the
right half plane in the form of a superposition as in (6.29).
7. Complex Integration.
The magic and power of calculus ultimately rests on the amazing fact that differentiation
and integration are mutually inverse operations. And, just as complex functions enjoy
remarkable differentiability properties not shared by their real counterparts, so the sublime
beauty of complex integration goes far beyond its real progenitor.
Let us begin by motivating the definition of the complex integral. Basic calculus tells us
Z b
that the (definite) integral of a real function, f (t) dt, is to be evaluated on an interval
a
[ a, b ] ⊂ R. In complex function theory, integrals are taken along curves in the complex
plane, and are akin to the line integrals appearing in real vector calculus. Indeed, the
T
identification of a complex number z = x + i y with a planar vector x = ( x, y ) will serve
to connect the two constructions.
Consider a curve† C ⊂ C in the complex plane, parametrized by z(t) = x(t) + i y(t) for
a ≤ t ≤ b. We will always assume C s sufficiently smooth, meaning either continuously
differentiable, or continuous and piecewise smooth. We define the integral of the complex
function f (z) along C to be the complex number
Z Z b
dz
f (z) dz = f (z(t)) dt, (7.1)
C a dt
†
Usually C is simple meaning it has no self intersections, other than closed curves that are joined
at the endpoints. However, most constructions easily carry over to non-simple curves.
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the right hand side being an ordinary real integral of a complex-valued function; in other
words, if
Z b Z b Z b
g(t) = p(t) + i q(t), then g(t) dt = p(t) dt + i q(t) dt.
a a a
We shall always assume that the integrand f (z) is a well-defined complex function at each
point on the curve, and hence the integral is well-defined. Let us write out the integrand
f (z) = u(x, y) + i v(x, y)
in terms of its real and imaginary parts, as well as the differential
dz dx dy
dz = dt = +i dt = dx + i dy.
dt dt dt
As a result, the complex integral (7.1) splits up into a pair of real line integrals:
Z Z Z Z
f (z) dz = (u + i v)(dx + i dy) = (u dx − v dy) + i (v dx + u dy). (7.2)
C C C C
of the monomial function f (z) = z n along several different curves. We begin with a straight
line segment I along the real axis connecting the points −1 and 1, which we parametrize
by z(t) = t for −1 ≤ t ≤ 1. The defining formula (7.1) implies that the complex integral
(7.3) reduces to an elementary real integral:
Z Z 1 0, 0 < n = 2 k + 1 odd,
n n
z dz = t dt = 2
I −1 , 0 ≤ n = 2 k even.
n+1
If n ≤ −1 is negative, then the singularity of the integrand at the origin implies that the
integral diverges, and so the complex integral is not defined.
Let us evaluate the same complex integral, but now along the parabolic arc P parame-
trized by
z(t) = t + i (t2 − 1), −1 ≤ t ≤ 1.
Note that, as we see in Figure 33, the parabola connects the same two points in C. We
again refer back to the basic definition (7.1) to evaluate the integral, so
Z Z 1
n
n
z dz = t + i (t2 − 1) (1 + 2 i t) dt.
P −1
We could, at this point, expand the resulting complex polynomial integrand, and then
integrate term by term. A more elegant approach is to recognize that it is an exact
derivative: n+1
d t + i (t2 − 1) n
= t + i (t2 − 1) (1 + 2 i t),
dt n+1
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S+
C
−1 1
as long as n 6= −1. Therefore, we can use the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus (which
works equally well for real integrals of complex-valued functions), to evaluate
Z 2
n+1 1 0, −1 6= n = 2 k + 1 odd,
t + i (t − 1)
z n dz = = 2
P n+1 , n = 2 k even.
t = −1 n+1
Thus, when n ≥ 0 is a positive integer, we obtain the same result as before. Interestingly,
in this case the complex integral is well-defined even when n is a negative integer because,
unlike the real line segment, the parabolic path does not go through the singularity of z n
at z = 0. The case n = −1 needs to be done slightly differently, and integration of 1/z
along the parabolic path is left as an exercise for the reader — one that requires some
care. We recommend trying the exercise now, and then verifying your answer once we
have become a little more familiar with basic complex integration techniques.
Finally, let us try integrating around a semi-circular arc, again with the same endpoints
−1 and 1. If we parametrize the semi-circle S + by z(t) = e i t , 0 ≤ t ≤ π, we find
Z Z π Z π Z π
n n dz i nt it
z dz = z dt = e i e dt = i e i (n+1)t dt
S + 0 dt 0
0
π 0, −1 6= n = 2 k + 1 odd,
e i (n+1)t 1 − e i (n+1)π
= = = 2
n + 1 t = 0 n+1 − , n = 2 k even.
n+1
This value is the negative of the previous cases — but this can be explained by the fact
that the circular arc is oriented to go from 1 to −1 whereas the line segment and parabola
both go from −1 to 1. Just as with line integrals, the direction of the curve determines
the sign of the complex integral; if we reverse direction, replacing e i t by e− i t , we end up
with the same value as the preceding two complex integrals. Moreover — again provided
n 6= −1 — it does not matter whether we use the upper semicircle or lower semicircle to go
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from −1 to 1 — the result is exactly the same. However, the case n = −1 is an exception
to this “rule”. Integrating along the upper semicircle S + from 1 to −1 yields
Z Z π
dz
= i dt = π i , (7.4)
S+ z 0
whereas integrating along the lower semicircle S − from 1 to −1 yields the negative
Z Z −π
dz
= i dt = − π i . (7.5)
S− z 0
Hence, when integrating the function 1/z, it makes a difference which direction we go
around the origin.
Integrating z n for any integer n 6= −1 around an entire circle gives zero — irrespective of
the radius. This can be seen as follows. We parametrize a circle of radius r by z(t) = re i t
for 0 ≤ t ≤ 2 π. Then, by the same computation† ,
I Z 2π Z 2π 2 π
n n i nt it n+1 i (n+1)t r n+1 i (n+1)t
z dz = (r e )(r i e ) dt = ir e dt = e = 0,
C 0 0 n+1 t=0
(7.6)
provided n 6= −1. The circle on the integral sign serves to remind us that we are integrating
around a closed curve. The case n = −1 remains special. Integrating once around the
circle in the counter-clockwise direction yields a nonzero result
I Z 2π
dz
= i dt = 2 π i . (7.7)
C z 0
Let us note that a complex integral does not depend on the particular parametrization
of the curve C. It does, however, depend upon its orientation: if we traverse the curve in
the reverse direction, then the complex integral changes its sign:
Z Z
f (z) dz = − f (z) dz. (7.8)
−C C
For instance, the integral (7.7) of 1/z around the circle is the difference of the individual
semicircular integrals (7.4, 5); the lower semicircular integral acquires a negative sign to
flip its orientation so as to agree with that of the entire circle. All these facts are immediate
consequences of the well-known properties of line integrals, or can be proved directly from
the defining formula (7.1).
†
The circle on the line integral sign is to indicate that it is around a closed contour.
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Note: In complex integration theory, a simple closed curve is often referred to as a con-
tour , and so complex integration is sometimes referred to as contour integration. Typically,
unless explicitly stated otherwise, we always go around contours in the counter-clockwise
direction, or, more accurately, so that the enclosed domain is always to our left.
Further experiments lead us to suspect that complex integrals are usually path-independent,
and hence evaluate to zero around closed curves. One must be careful, though, as the in-
tegral (7.7) makes clear. Path independence, in fact, follows from the complex version of
the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus.
Theorem 7.2. Let f (z) = F ′ (z) be the derivative of a single-valued complex function
F (z) defined on a domain Ω ⊂ C. Let C ⊂ Ω be any curve with initial point α and final
point β. Then Z Z
f (z) dz = F ′ (z) dz = F (β) − F (α). (7.10)
C C
Proof : This follows immediately from the definition (7.1) and the chain rule:
Z Z b Z b
′ ′ dz d
F (z) dz = F (z(t)) dt = F (z(t)) dt = F (z(b)) − F (z(a)) = F (β) − F (α),
C a dt a dt
where α = z(a) and β = z(b) are the endpoints of the curve. Q.E.D.
For example, when n 6= −1, the function f (z) = z n is the derivative of the single-valued
1
function F (z) = z n+1 . Hence
n+1
Z
β n+1 αn+1
z n dz = −
C n+1 n+1
whenever C is (almost) any curve connecting α to β. The only restriction is that, when
n < 0, the curve is not allowed to pass through the singularity at the origin z = 0. Setting
β = 1, α = −1, we recover our previous computations of this integral.
In contrast, the function f (z) = 1/z is the derivative of the complex logarithm
log z = log | z | + i ph z,
which is not single-valued on all of C \ {0}, and so Theorem 7.2 cannot be applied directly.
However, if our curve is contained within a simply connected subdomain that does not
include the origin, 0 6∈ Ω ⊂ C, then we can employ any single-valued branch of the
complex logarithm to evaluate the integral
Z
dz
= log β − log α,
C z
where α, β are the endpoints of the curve. Since the common multiples of 2 π i cancel, the
answer does not depend upon which particular branch of the complex logarithm is selected
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Figure 34. Orientation of Domain Boundary.
as long as we are consistent in our choice. For example, on the upper semicircle S + of
radius 1 going from 1 to −1,
Z
dz
= log(−1) − log 1 = π i ,
S+ z
where we use the branch of log z = log | z | + i ph z with 0 ≤ ph z ≤ π. On the other hand,
if we integrate on the lower semi-circle S − going from 1 to −1, we need to adopt a different
branch, say that with − π ≤ ph z ≤ 0. With this choice, the integral becomes
Z
dz
= log(−1) − log 1 = − π i ,
S− z
thus reproducing (7.4, 5). Pay particular attention to the different values of log(−1) used
in the two cases!
Cauchy’s Theorem
The preceding considerations suggest the following fundamental theorem, due in its
general form to Cauchy. Before stating it, we introduce the convention that a complex
function f (z) is to be deemed analytic on a domain Ω ⊂ C provided it is analytic at every
point inside Ω and, in addition, remains (at least) continuous on the boundary ∂Ω. When
Ω is bounded, its boundary ∂Ω consists of one or more simple closed curves. In general,
we orient ∂Ω so that the domain is always on our left hand side. This means that the
outermost boundary curve is traversed in the counter-clockwise direction, but those around
interior holes take on a clockwise orientation. Our convention is depicted in Figure 34.
Theorem 7.3. If f (z) is analytic on a bounded domain Ω ⊂ C, then
I
f (z) dz = 0. (7.11)
∂Ω
Proof : Application of Green’s Theorem to the two real line integrals in (7.2) yields
I ZZ I ZZ
∂v ∂u ∂u ∂v
u dx − v dy = − − = 0, v dx + u dy = − = 0,
∂Ω Ω ∂x ∂y ∂Ω Ω ∂x ∂y
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C
S C
Ω
S
K
Proof : If C and S do not cross each other, we let Ω denote the domain contained
between them, so that ∂Ω = C ∪ S; see the first plot in Figure 35. According to Cauchy’s
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I
Theorem 7.3, f (z) dz = 0. Now, our orientation convention for ∂Ω means that the
∂Ω
outer curve, say C, is traversed in the counter-clockwise direction, while the inner curve S
assumes the opposite, clockwise orientation. Therefore, if we assign both curves the same
counter-clockwise orientation,
I I I
0= f (z) dz = f (z) dz − f (z) dz,
∂Ω C S
proving (7.13).
If the two curves cross, we can construct a nearby curve K ⊂ Ω that neither crosses, as
in the second sketch in Figure 35. By the preceding paragraph, each integral is equal to
that over the third curve,
I I I
f (z) dz = f (z) dz = f (z) dz,
C K S
is an integer multiple of 2 π i . The integer k is called the winding number of the curve
C, and measures the total number of times C goes around the origin. For instance, if
C winds three times around 0 in a counter-clockwise fashion, then k = 3, while k = − 5
†
When n is fractional or irrational, the integrals are not well-defined owing to the multi-valued
branch point at the origin.
‡
Such a curve is undoubtedly not simple and must necessarily cross over itself.
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k=0 k=3 k = −5
Figure 36. Winding Numbers.
indicates that the curve winds 5 times around 0 in a clockwise direction, as in Figure 36.
In particular, a winding number k = 0 indicates that C is not wrapped around the origin.
If C represents a loop of string wrapped around a pole (the pole of 1/z at 0) then a winding
number k = 0 would indicate that the string can be disentangled from the pole without
cutting; nonzero winding numbers would indicate that the string is truly entangled§ .
Lemma 7.7. If C is a simple closed curve, and a is any point not lying on C, then
I
dz 2π i , a inside C
= (7.16)
C z−a 0, a outside C.
If a ∈ C, then the integral does not converge.
Proof : Note that the integrand f (z) = 1/(z − a) is analytic everywhere except at z = a,
where it has a simple pole. If a is outside C, then Cauchy’s Theorem 7.3 applies, and the
integral is zero. On the other hand, if a is inside C, then Proposition 7.5 implies that the
integral is equal to the integral around a circle centered at z = a. The latter integral can
be computed directly by using the parametrization z(t) = a + r e i t for 0 ≤ t ≤ 2 π, as in
(7.7). Q.E.D.
Example 7.8. Let D ⊂ C be a closed and connected domain. Let a, b ∈ D be two
points in D. Then
I I I
1 1 dz dz
− dz = − =0
C z−a z−b C z−a C z−b
for any closed curve C ⊂ Ω = C \ D lying outside the domain D. This is because,
by connectivity of D, either C contains both points in its interior, in which case both
§
Actually, there are more subtle physical considerations that come into play, and even strings
with zero winding number cannot be removed from the pole without cutting if they are knotted
in some nontrivial manner. Can you think of an example?
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integrals equal 2 π i , or C contains neither point, in which case both integrals are 0. The
conclusion is that, while the individual logarithms are multiply-valued, their difference
z−a
F (z) = log(z − a) − log(z − b) = log (7.17)
z−b
is a consistent, single-valued complex function on all of Ω = C \ D. The function (7.17)
has, in fact, an infinite number of possible values, differing by integer multiples of 2 π i ;
the ambiguity can be resolved by choosing one of its values at a single point in Ω. These
conclusions rest on the fact that D is connected, and are not valid, say, for the twice-
punctured plane C \ { a, b }.
Proposition 7.9. The modulus of the integral of the complex function f along a curve
C is bounded by the integral of its modulus with respect to arc length:
Z Z
f (z) dz ≤ | f (z) | ds. (7.18)
C C
Lemma 7.10. Let f (t) be a complex-valued function depending on the real variable
a ≤ t ≤ b. Then Z
b Z b
f (t) dt ≤ | f (t) | dt. (7.19)
a a
Z b Z b
Proof : If f (t) dt = 0, the inequality is trivial. Otherwise, let θ = ph f (t) dt. Then,
a a
Z " Z b # Z Z b
b b −i θ
−i θ
f (t) dt = Re e f (t) dt = Re e f (t) dt ≤ | f (t) | dt,
a a a a
To prove the proposition, we write out the complex integral, and use (7.19) as follows:
Z Z b
Z b Z
dz dz
f (z) dz = f (z(t)) dt ≤ | f (z(t)) | dt = | f (z) | ds,
dt dt
C a a C
since
dz p
| dz | = dt = x 2 + y 2 dt = ds
dt
is the arc length integral element. Q.E.D.
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Corollary 7.11. If the curve C has length L, and f (z) is an analytic function such
that | f (z) | ≤ M for all points z ∈ C, then
Z
f (z) dz ≤ M L. (7.20)
C
†
!Here ×! denotes the cross product between two-dimensional vectors, which is the scalar
a x
× = a y − b x. The same notation was used for the two-dimensional curl (4.8).
b y
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If the complex velocity admits a single-valued complex potential
for any curve C connecting α to β. Path independence of the complex integral reconfirms
the path independence of the circulation and flux integrals for ideal fluid flow. The real
part of formula (7.24) evaluates the circulation integral
Z Z
v · dx = ∇ϕ · dx = ϕ(β) − ϕ(α), (7.25)
C C
as the difference in the values of the (real) potential at the endpoints α, β of the curve C.
On the other hand, the imaginary part of formula (7.24) computes the flux integral
Z Z
v × dx = ∇ψ · dx = ψ(β) − ψ(α), (7.26)
C C
as the difference in the values of the stream function at the endpoints of the curve. The
stream function acts as a “flux potential” for the flow. Thus, for ideal flows on simply
connected domains or, more generally, those admitting a single valued complex potential,
the fluid flux through a curve depends only upon its endpoints. In particular, if C is a
closed contour, and χ(z) is analytic on its interior, then
I I
v · dx = 0 = v × dx, (7.27)
C C
and so there is no net circulation or flux along any closed curve in this scenario.
Typically, lift on a body requires a nonzero circulation around it. The precise relation
is spelled out by Blasius’ Theorem.
Theorem 7.13. Let D ⊂ C be a bounded, simply connected domain. Let f (z) for
z ∈ C \ D be the complex velocity of an ideal fluid flow, of constant density ρ, exterior to
D. If C ⊂ C \ D is any simple closed contour encircling the body, then the contour integral
I
iρ
F = D − iL = f (z)2 dz, (7.28)
2 C
determines the complex force F experienced by the body, so that D = ReF is the horizontal
component or drag while L = − Im F is the vertical component or lift.
For a derivation of Blasius’ formula (7.28) from physical principles, see [13, 15, 16].
Consequently, the relation between circulation and lift is a bit more subtle than was in-
dicated above. For example, f (z) = 1/z has a nonzero circulation integral around any
contour encircling the origin, while, despite the singularity of f (z)2 = 1/z 2 , the Blasius
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force integral (7.28) is 0, and hence there is no lift nor drag. On the other hand, the
complex velocity f (z) = z −2 + z has zero circulation but non-zero lift around any contour
encircling the origin. Be that as it may, for our airfoil dilemma, we will concentrate on
finding flows with non-zero circulation, from which one can determine the lift coefficient
using Blasius’ formula (7.28).
Let D ⊂ C be a bounded, simply connected domain representing the cross-section of
a cylindrical body, e.g., an airplane wing. The velocity vector field v of a steady state
flow around the exterior of the body is defined on the domain Ω = C \ D. The no flux
boundary conditions v · n = 0 on ∂Ω = ∂D indicate that there is no fluid flowing across the
boundary of theIsolid body. The resulting circulation of the fluid around the body is given
by the integral v · dx, where C ⊂ Ω is any simple closed contour encircling the body.
C
(Cauchy’s theorem, in the form of Proposition 7.5, tells us that the value does not depend
upon the choice of contour.) However, if the corresponding complex velocity f (z) admits
a single-valued complex potential in Ω, then (7.27) tells us that the circulation integral is
automatically zero, and so the body will not experience any lift!
Consider first the flow around a disk, as discussed in Examples 4.8 and 6.7. The disk
potential (4.16) is a single-valued analytic function everywhere except at the origin z = 0.
Therefore, the circulation integral (7.25) around any contour encircling the disk will vanish,
and hence the disk experiences no net lift. This is more or less evident from Figure 13; the
streamlines of the flow are symmetric above and below the disk, and hence there cannot
be any net force in the vertical direction.
Any conformal map will maintain single-valuedness of the complex potentials, and hence
preserve the zero-circulation property. In particular, all the flows past airfoils constructed
in Example 6.9 also admit single-valued potentials, and so also have zero circulation and
complex force integrals. Such an airplane will not fly, because its wings have no lift.
Of course, physical airplanes do fly, and so there must be some physical assumption we
are neglecting in our treatment of flow past a body. Abandoning incompressibility or
irrotationality would banish us from the paradise of complex variable theory to the vastly
more complicated world inhabited by the fully nonlinear partial differential equations of
fluid mechanics. Moreover, although air is slightly compressible, water is, for all practical
purposes, incompressible, and, as we know, hydrofoils do experience lift when traveling
through water.
The only way to introduce lift into the picture is through a (single-valued) complex
velocity with a non-zero circulation integral, and this requires that its complex potential
be multiply-valued. The one function that we know that has such a property is the complex
logarithm
a
λ(z) = log(a z + b), whose derivative λ′ (z) =
az +b
is single-valued away from the singularity at z = − b/a. Thus, we are naturally led to
introduce the family of complex potentials
1
χγ (z) = z + + i γ log z. (7.29)
z
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γ = .25 γ = .5 γ = .75
Figure 37. Flow with Lift Around a Circle.
fγ (e i θ ) = 1
2 − 12 e− 2 i θ + i γ e− i θ = (sin θ + γ) i e− i θ
is a real multiple of the complex tangent vector i e− i θ = sin θ− i cos θ, and hence its normal
velocity or flux vanishes if and only if γ is real. Applying Cauchy’s Theorem 7.3 coupled
with formula (7.16), if C is a curve going once around the disk in a counter-clockwise
direction, then I I
1 iγ
fγ (z) dz = 1− 2 + dz = − 2 πγ. (7.31)
C C z z
Therefore, when γ 6= 0, the circulation integral is non-zero, and the cylinder experiences
a net lift. In Figure 37, the streamlines for the flow corresponding to a few representative
values of γ are plotted. The asymmetry of the streamlines accounts for the lift experienced
by the disk. In particular, assuming | γ | ≤ 2, the stagnation points have moved from ±1
to q
z± = ± 1 − 41 γ 2 − 12 i γ. (7.32)
When we compose the modified potentials (7.29) with the Joukowski transformation
(6.24), we obtain a complex potential for flow around the corresponding airfoil — the
image of the unit disk. Since, according to Theorem 7.12, the conformal mapping does
not affect the value of the circulation, whenever γ 6= 0, there will be a nonzero circulation
around the airfoil under the modified fluid flow, and at last our airplane will fly!
However, we now have a slight embarrassment of riches, having designed flows around
the airfoil with an arbitrary value − 2 πγ for the circulation integral, and hence an arbitrary
amount of lift! Which of these possible flows most closely realizes the true physical version?
In his 1902 thesis, the German mathematician Martin Kutta hypothesized that Nature
chooses the constant γ so as to keep the velocity of the flow at the trailing edge of the
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0◦ 15◦ 30◦
Figure 38. Kutta Flow Past a Tilted Airfoil.
airfoil finite, which requires that the trailing edge, ζ = 1, be a stagnation point. Under
the Joukowski map (6.24), the trailing edge corresponds to w = 1, and hence, under the
affine map (6.22), the corresponding point on the unit circle is
1−β
z= = e i (ψ−φ) , where φ = ph α, ψ = ph(1 − β), (7.33)
α
since, as in Example 6.9, we require | α | = | 1 − β | in order that the image of the unit
circle go through w = 1. Equating (7.33) to (7.32), we deduce Kutta’s formula
γ = 2 sin(φ − ψ) (7.34)
that produces the corresponding circulation via (7.31). Sample flows for the airfoil of
Figure 32 are depicted in Figure 38. As long as the attack angle φ is of moderate size, the
resulting flow and lift is in fairly good agreement with experiments. Further developments
and refinements can be found in [3, 12, 13, 15, 16].
All of the preceding examples can be interpreted as planar cross-sections of three-
dimensional fluid flows past an airplane wing oriented in the longitudinal z direction.
The wing is assumed to have a uniform cross-section shape, and the flow not dependent
upon the axial z coordinate. For sufficiently long wings flying in laminar (non-turbulent)
flows, this model will be valid away from the wing tips and the fuselage. Understanding the
dynamics of more complicated airfoils/airplanes with varying cross-section and/or faster
motion requires a fully three-dimensional fluid model. For such problems, complex analy-
sis is no longer applicable, and, for the most part, one must rely on large scale numerical
integration. Only in recent years have computers become sufficiently powerful to compute
realistic three-dimensional fluid motions — and then only in reasonably mild scenarios† .
The two-dimensional versions that have been analyzed here still provide important clues
to the behavior of a three-dimensional flow, as well as useful initial approximations to the
three-dimensional airplane wing design problem.
†
The definition of “mild” relies on the magnitude of the Reynolds number, [ 3 ], an overall measure
of the flow’s complexity.
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Cauchy’s Integral Formula
Cauchy’s Theorem 7.3 forms the cornerstone of almost all applications of complex in-
tegration. The fact that we can move the contours of complex integrals around freely —
as long as we do not cross over singularities of the integrand — grants us great flexibility
in their evaluation. An important consequence of Cauchy’s Theorem is the justly famous
Cauchy integral formula, which enables us to compute the value of an analytic function at
a point by evaluating a contour integral around a closed curve encircling the point.
Theorem 7.14. Let Ω ⊂ C be a bounded domain with boundary ∂Ω, and let a ∈ Ω.
If f (z) is analytic on Ω, then
I
1 f (z)
f (a) = dz. (7.35)
2 π i ∂Ω z − a
Remark : As always, we traverse the boundary curve ∂Ω so that the domain Ω lies on
our left. In most applications, Ω is simply connected, and so ∂Ω is a simple closed curve
oriented in the counter-clockwise direction.
It is worth emphasizing that Cauchy’s formula (7.35) is not a form of the Fundamental
Theorem of Calculus, since we are reconstructing the function by integration — not its anti-
derivative! The closest real counterpart is the Poisson Integral Formula (6.7) expressing
the value of a harmonic function in a disk in terms of its values on the boundary circle.
Indeed, there is a direct connection between the two results resulting from the intimate
bond between complex and harmonic functions.
Proof : We first prove that the difference quotient
f (z) − f (a)
g(z) =
z−a
is an analytic function on all of Ω. The only problematic point is at z = a where the
denominator vanishes. First, by the definition of complex derivative,
f (z) − f (a)
g(a) = lim = f ′ (a)
z→a z−a
exists and therefore g(z) is well-defined and, in fact, continuous at z = a. Secondly, we
can compute its derivative at z = a directly from the definition:
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where the second integral was evaluated using (7.16). Rearranging terms completes the
proof of the Cauchy formula. Q.E.D.
Remark : The proof shows that if, in contrast, a 6∈ Ω, then the Cauchy integral vanishes:
I
1 f (z)
dz = 0.
2 π i ∂Ω z − a
If a ∈ ∂Ω, then the integral does not converge.
Let us see how we can apply this result to evaluate seemingly intractable complex inte-
grals.
Example 7.15. Suppose that you are asked to compute the contour integral
I
ez dz
2
C z − 2z − 3
where C is a circle of radius 2 centered at the origin. A direct evaluation is not easy, since
the integrand does not have an elementary anti-derivative† . However, we note that
ez ez f (z) ez
2
= = where f (z) =
z − 2z − 3 (z + 1)(z − 3) z+1 z−3
is analytic in the disk | z | ≤ 2 since its only singularity, at z = 3, lies outside the contour
C. Therefore, by Cauchy’s formula (7.35), we immediately obtain the integral
I I
ez dz f (z) πi
2
= dz = 2 π i f (−1) = − .
C z − 2z − 3 C z+1 2e
Note: Path independence implies that the integral has the same value on any other
simple closed contour, provided it is oriented in the usual counter-clockwise direction and
encircles the point z = 1 but not the point z = 3.
Derivatives by Integration
The fact that we can recover values of complex functions by integration is noteworthy.
Even more amazing is the fact that we can compute derivatives of complex functions by
integration — turning the Fundamental Theorem on its head! Let us differentiate both
sides of Cauchy’s formula (7.35) with respect to a. The integrand in the Cauchy formula is
sufficiently nice so as to allow us to bring the derivative inside the integral sign. Moreover,
the derivative of the Cauchy integrand with respect to a is easily found:
∂ f (z) f (z)
= .
∂a z − a (z − a)2
†
At least not one listed in any integration tables, e.g., [ 10 ]. A deeper result, [ 6 ], confirms that
its anti-derivative cannot be expressed in closed form using elementary functions.
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In this manner, we deduce an integral formulae for the derivative of an analytic function:
I
′ 1 f (z)
f (a) = dz, (7.36)
2 π i C (z − a)2
where, as before, C is any simple closed curve that goes once around the point z = a in a
counter-clockwise direction‡ . Further differentiation yields the general integral formulae
I
(n) n! f (z)
f (a) = dz (7.37)
2 π i C (z − a)n+1
that expresses the nth order derivative of a complex function in terms of a contour integral.
These remarkable formulae can be used to prove our earlier claim that an analytic
function is infinitely differentiable, and thereby complete the proof of Theorem 3.8.
around the circle of radius 2 centered at the origin. We use (7.36) with
ez (z − 4) ez
f (z) = , whereby f ′ (z) = .
z−3 (z − 3)2
Since f (z) is analytic inside C, the integral formula (7.36) tells us that
I I
ez dz f (z) 5π i
3 2
= 2
dz = 2 π i f ′ (−1) = − .
C z − z − 5z − 3 C (z + 1) 8e
One application of the preceding formulae is the following remarkable result due to the
nineteenth century French mathematician Joseph Liouville. It says that the only bounded
complex functions are the constants! Again, note the stunning contrast with real analysis,
where there are many bounded, analytic real functions.
Theorem 7.17. If f (z) is analytic at all z ∈ C, and satisfies | f (z) | ≤ M for some
fixed positive number M > 0, then f (z) ≡ c is constant.
‡
Or, more generally, any closed curve that has winding number +1 around the point z = a.
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where we take CR = { z | | z − a | = R } to be a circle of radius R centered at z = a. We
then estimate the complex integral using (7.18), whence
I I I
1 f (z) 1 | f (z) | 1 M M
′
| f (a) | = 2
dz ≤ 2
ds ≤ 2
ds = ,
2π CR (z − a) 2 π CR | z − a | 2 π CR R R
since the length of CR is 2 πR. Since f (z) is analytic everywhere, we can let R → ∞
and conclude that f ′ (a) = 0. Since this occurs for all possible points a, we conclude that
f ′ (z) ≡ 0 is everywhere zero, which suffices to prove constancy of f (z). Q.E.D.
One outstanding application of Liouville’s Theorem 7.17 is a proof of the Fundamental
Theorem of Algebra, first proved by the incomparably influential German mathematician
Carl Friedrich Gauss in 1799; see [8] for an extensive discussion. Although it is, in essence,
a purely algebraic result, this proof relies in an essential way on complex analysis and
complex integration.
Theorem 7.18. Every nonconstant (complex or real) polynomial f (z) has at least one
complex root z0 ∈ C.
Proof : Suppose
f (z) = an (z − z1 ) (z − z2 ) · · · (z − zn )
where z1 , . . . , zn are the roots of f (z), listed in accordance with their multiplicity.
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z=a
Proof : Theorem 7.18 guarantees that there is at least one point z1 ∈ C where f (z1 ) = 0.
Therefore, by the rules of polynomial factorization, we can write
f (z) = (z − z1 ) g(z)
Cauchy’s Theorem and Integral Formulae provide us with some amazingly versatile
tools for evaluating complicated complex integrals. The upshot is that one only needs
to understand the singularities of the integrand within the domain of integration — no
indefinite integration is required! With a little more work, we are led to a general method
for efficiently computing contour integrals, known as the Calculus of Residues. While the
residue method has no counterpart in real integration theory, it can, remarkably, be used
to evaluate a large variety of interesting definite real integrals, including many without an
explicitly known anti-derivative.
Definition 7.20. Let f (z) be an analytic function for all z near, but not equal to a.
The residue of f (z) at the point z = a is defined by the contour integral
I
1
Res f (z) = f (z) dz, (7.39)
z =a 2π i C
where C is any simple, closed curve that contains a in its interior, oriented, as always, in a
counter-clockwise direction, and such that f (z) is analytic everywhere inside C except at
the point z = a; see Figure 39. For example, C could be a small circle centered at a. The
residue is a complex number, and tells us important information about the singularity of
f (z) at z = a.
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The simplest example is the monomial function f (z) = c z n , where c is a complex
constant and the exponent n is assumed to be an integer. (Residues are not defined at
branch points.) According to (7.6),
I
n 1 n 0, n 6= −1,
Res c z = c z dz = (7.40)
z =0 2π i C c, n = −1.
Thus, only the case n = −1 gives a nonzero residue. The residue thus serves to single
out the function 1/z, which, not coincidentally, is the only one with a logarithmic, and
multiply-valued, antiderivative.
Cauchy’s Theorem 7.3, when applied to the integral in (7.39), implies that if f (z) is
analytic at z = a, then it has zero residue at a. Therefore, all the monomials, including
1/z, have zero residue at any nonzero point:
Since integration is a linear operation, the residue is a linear operator, mapping complex
functions to complex numbers:
Res f (z) + g(z) = Res f (z) + Res g(z), Res c f (z) = c Res f (z), (7.42)
z =a z =a z =a z =a z =a
for any complex constant c. Thus, by linearity, the residue of any finite linear combination
of monomials,
n
X
c−m c−m+1 c−1 n
f (z) = + + · · · + + c0 + c1 z + · · · + cn z = ck z k ,
zm z m−1 z
k = −m
is equal to
Res f (z) = c−1 .
z =0
Thus, the residue effectively picks out the coefficient of the term 1/z in such an expansion.
The easiest nontrivial residues to compute are at the poles of a function. According to
(3.9), the function f (z) has a simple pole at z = a if
Proof : We substitute the formula for f (z) into the definition (7.39), and so
I I
1 1 h(z) dz
Res f (z) = f (z) dz = = h(a)
z =a 2π i C 2π i C z − a
by Cauchy’s formula (7.35). Q.E.D.
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Example 7.22. Consider the function
ez ez
f (z) = = .
z2 − 2 z − 3 (z + 1)(z − 3)
From the factorization of the denominator, we see that f (z) has simple pole singularities
at z = −1 and z = 3. The residues are given, respectively, by
ez ez 1 ez ez e3
Res = =− , Res = = .
z = −1 z 2 − 2 z − 3 z − 3 z = −1 4e z = 3 z2 − 2 z − 3 z + 1 z = 3 4
Since f (z) is analytic everywhere else, its residue at any other point is automatically 0.
g(z) = (z − a) k(z)
where k(z) is analytic at z = a and k(a) = g ′ (a) 6= 0. If f (z) is analytic at z = a, then the
quotient
f (z) f (z)
=
g(z) (z − a) k(z)
g (n) (a)
g(z) = (z − a)n k(z), so that k(a) = 6= 0,
n!
then
f (z) 1 dn−1 f (z)
Res = . (7.45)
z = a g(z) (n − 1) ! dz n−1 k(z)
z=a
The proof of the latter formula is left as an exercise for the reader.
Example 7.23. As an illustration, let us compute the residue of sec z = 1/ cos z at the
point z = 21 π. Note that cos z has a simple zero at z = 12 π since its derivative, namely
− sin z, is nonzero there. Thus, according to (7.44) with f (z) ≡ 1,
1 −1
Res sec z = Res = = − 1.
z = π/2 z = π/2 cos z sin 12 π
The direct computation of the residue using the defining contour integral (7.39) is consid-
erably harder.
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C1
a1
C2
a2
C
Residues are the building blocks of a general method for computing contour integrals of
analytic functions. The Residue Theorem says that the value of the integral of a complex
function around a closed curve depends only on its residues at the enclosed singularities.
Since the residues can be computed directly from the function, the resulting formula pro-
vides an effective mechanism for painless evaluation of complex integrals, that completely
avoids the anti-derivative. Indeed, the calculus of residues continues to be effective even
when the integrand does not have an anti-derivative that can be expressed in terms of
elementary functions.
Theorem 7.24. Let C be a simple, closed curve, oriented in the counter-clockwise
direction. Suppose f (z) is analytic everywhere inside C except at a finite number of poles
at the points a1 , . . . , an . Then
I
1
f (z) dz = Res f (z) + · · · + Res f (z). (7.46)
2π i C z = a1 z = an
Keep in mind that only the poles that lie inside the contour C contribute to the residue
formula (7.46). Moreover, these are the only singularities inside C; no branch points or
essential singularities are allowed.
Proof : We draw a small circle Ci around each singularity ai . We assume the circles
all lie inside the contour C and do not cross each other, so that ai is the only singularity
contained within Ci ; see Figure 40. Definition 7.20 implies that
I
1
Res f (z) = f (z) dz, (7.47)
z = ai 2 π i Ci
where the line integral is taken in the counter-clockwise direction around Ci .
Consider the domain Ω consisting of all points z which lie inside the given curve C,
but outside all the small circles C1 , . . . , Cn ; this is the shaded region in Figure 40. By
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our construction, the function f (z) is analytic on Ω, and hence by Cauchy’s Theorem 7.3,
the integral of f (z) around the boundary ∂Ω is zero. The boundary ∂Ω must be oriented
consistently, so that the domain is always lying on one’s left hand side. This means that
the outside contour C should be traversed in a counter-clockwise direction, whereas the
inside circles Ci are taken in a clockwise direction. Therefore, the integral around the
boundary of the domain Ω can be broken up into a difference
I I Xn I
1 1 1
0= f (z) dz = f (z) dz − f (z) dz
2 π i ∂Ω 2π i C i=1
2 π i Ci
I Xn
1
= f (z) dz − Res f (z).
2π i C i=1
z = ai
The minus sign converts the circular integrals to the counterclockwise orientation used in
the definition (7.47) of the residues. Rearranging the final identity leads to the residue
formula (7.46). Q.E.D.
Example 7.25. Let us use residues to evaluate the contour integral
I
ez
2
dz
Cr z − 2 z − 3
where Cr denotes the circle of radius r centered at the origin. According to Example 7.22,
the integrand has two singularities at −1 and 3, with respective residues − 1/(4 e) and
e3 /4. If the radius of the circle is r > 3, then it goes around both singularities, and hence
by the residue formula (7.46)
I
ez dz 1 e3 (e4 − 1) π i
2
= 2 π i − + = , r > 3.
C z − 2z − 3 4e 4 2e
If the circle has radius 1 < r < 3, then it only encircles the singularity at −1, and hence
I
ez πi
2
dz = − , 1 < r < 3.
C z − 2z − 3 2e
If 0 < r < 1, the function has no singularities inside the circle and hence, by Cauchy’s
Theorem 7.3, the integral is 0. Finally, when r = 1 or r = 3, the contour passes through a
singularity, and the integral does not converge.
Example 7.26. A bit more challenging is the problem of evaluating
I r
z−1
I= dz
Cr z+1
where Cr denotes the circle of radius r > 1 centered at the origin. Inside the circle, the
integrand has two branch points at z = ± 1, and hence the Residue Theorem 7.24 cannot
be used. However, replacing z by w = 1/z, we can convert I into a contour integral that
can be evaluated. By the usual change of variables formula for integrals,
I r
1 − w dw
I= , (7.48)
C1/r 1 + w w2
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where the latter integral is over a circle of radius 1/r < 1. (The reader may initially
think we have forgotten the minus sign coming from the change of variables formula dz =
− dw/w2 . However, while the change of variables maps the circle of radius r to the circle
of radius 1/r, it reverses its orientation, so that the image circle C1/r is traversed in
the clockwise direction. However, to apply the Residue Theorem, the contour must be
oriented correctly, and so we need to switch the orientation of the image circle, thereby
producing a second minus sign that cancels the first one, thus establishing the validity of
formula (7.48).)
Moreover, the integrand in (7.48) is clearly analytic inside the circle C1/r , except for
a pole at the origin w = 0, since its branch points are at w = ± 1 which lie outside the
contour. (Incidentally, this also proves that the original integrand is analytic as long as
one stays away from the “branch cut” consisting of the interval [ − 1, 1 ]. Indeed, as one
encircles the two singularities, the two ambiguities in the squarep roots of the numerator
and denominator cancel each other out, and hence the function (z − 1)/(z + 1) is single
valued on the domain D = C \ [ − 1, 1 ], modulo an additive integer multiple of 2 π i , which
does not affect the overall value of the integral.) To evaluate (7.48), we thus only have to
calculate the residue at the pole w = 0, which can be done by a straightforward Taylor
expansion:
r
1 1−w 1 1 1
2
= 2 1 − w + 12 w2 − · · · = 2 − + · · · ,
w 1+w w w w
where the omitted terms represent a function that is analytic at the origin. Thus,
r
1 1−w
Res 2 = −1,
w=0 w 1+w
and hence, applying the Residue Formula (7.46) to (7.48), we deduce that
r
1 1−w
I = 2 π i Res 2 = −2 π i .
w=0 w 1+w
By Cauchy’s Theorem 7.3, the same value is attained for any simple closed contour encir-
cling the branch points z = ±1.
Remark : This calculation based on the change of variables w = 1/z is often viewed as
calculating the residue at z = ∞ of a function f (z) (in this case the original integrand), thus
allowing one to evaluate contour integrals by summing the residues at the poles exterior to
the contour, including z = ∞, assuming either the function is analytic or has a pole there,
which can be checked by looking at the behavior of the transformed function f (1/w)/w2
at w = 0.
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contour integral leads to a direct evaluation via the calculus of residues that sidesteps the
difficulties in finding the antiderivative.
The method treats two basic types of real integral, although numerous variations appear
in more extensive treatments of the subject. The first category are real trigonometric
integrals of the form Z 2π
I= F (cos θ, sin θ) dθ. (7.49)
0
Such integrals can often
be evaluated
by converting them into complex integrals around
the unit circle C = | z | = 1 . If we set
1
z = eiθ so = e− i θ ,
z
then
e i θ + e− i θ 1 1 e i θ − e− i θ 1 1
cos θ = = z+ , sin θ = = z− . (7.50)
2 2 z 2i 2i z
Moreover,
dz
dz = de i θ = i e i θ dθ = i z dθ, and so dθ = . (7.51)
iz
Therefore, the integral (7.49) can be written in the complex form
I
z + z −1 z + z −1 dz
I= F , . (7.52)
C 2 2i iz
If we know that the resulting complex integrand is well-defined and single-valued, except,
possibly, for a finite number of singularities inside the unit circle, then the residue for-
mula (7.46) tells us that the integral can be directly evaluated by adding together its
residues and multiplying by 2 π i .
Example 7.27. We compute the relatively simple example
Z 2π
dθ
.
0 2 + cos θ
Applying the substitution (7.52), we find
Z 2π I I
dθ dz 2 dz
= 1
= −i 2
.
0 2 + cos θ C i z 2 + 2 (z + z
−1 )
C z + 4z + 1
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As you may recall from first year calculus, this particular integral can, in fact, be com-
puted directly via a trigonometric substitution. However, the required integration is not
particularly pleasant, and, with a little practice, the residue method is seen to be an eas-
ier approach. Moreover, it straightforwardly applies to situations where no elementary
anti-derivative exists.
Example 7.28. The goal is to evaluate the definite integral
Z π
cos 2θ
dθ.
0 3 − cos θ
The first thing to note is that the integral only runs from 0 to π and so is not explicitly of
the form (7.49). However, note that the integrand is even, and so
Z π Z
cos 2θ 1 π cos 2θ
dθ = dθ,
0 3 − cos θ 2 − π 3 − cos θ
which will turn into a contour integral around the entire unit circle under the substitution
(7.50). Also note that
e2 i θ + e− 2 i θ 1 2 1
cos 2 θ = = z + 2 ,
2 2 z
and so
Z π I 1 2 −2 I
cos 2θ 2 (z + z ) dz z4 + 1
dθ = 1 = i dz.
−π 3 − cos θ C 3 − 2 (z + z −1 ) iz C z 2 (z 2 − 6 z + 1)
√ √
The denominator has 4 roots, at 0, 3 − 2 2, and 3 + 2 2, but the last one does not lie
inside the unit circle and so can be ignored. We use (7.44) with f (z) = (z 4 + 1)/z 2 and
g(z) = z 2 − 6 z + 1 to compute
z4 + 1 z 4 + 1 17
√
Res√ 2 2 = 2 = − 2,
z = 3−2 2 z (z − 6 z + 1) z (2 z − 6) z = 3−2√2 4
Therefore,
Z π
cos 2θ z4 + 1 z4 + 1
dθ = − π Res 2 2 + Res√ 2 2
0 3 − cos θ z = 0 z (z − 6 z + 1) z = 3−2 2 z (z − 6 z + 1)
√
17 2 − 24 π
= ≈ .032697.
4
A second type of real integral that can often be evaluated by complex residues are
integrals over the entire real line, from −∞ to ∞. Here the technique is a little more
subtle, and we sneak up on the integral by using larger and larger closed contours that
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SR
−R R
include more and more of the real axis. The basic idea is contained in the following
example.
Example 7.29. The problem is to evaluate the real integral
Z ∞
cos x
I= dx. (7.53)
0 1 + x2
The corresponding indefinite integral cannot be evaluated in elementary terms, and so we
are forced to rely on the calculus of residues. We begin by noting that the integrand is
even, and hence the integral I = 21 J is one half the integral
Z ∞
cos x
J= 2
dx
−∞ 1 + x
over the entire real line. Moreover, for x real, we can write
Z ∞
cos x eix eix
= Re , and hence J = Re dx. (7.54)
1 + x2 1 + x2 −∞ 1 + x2
Let CR be the closed contour consisting of a large semicircle of radius R ≫ 0, which
we denote by SR , connected at its ends by the real interval − R ≤ x ≤ R, as plotted in
Figure 41, and having the usual counterclockwise orientation. The corresponding contour
integral
I Z R ix Z
e i z dz e dx e i z dz
2
= 2
+ 2
(7.55)
CR 1 + z −R 1 + x SR 1 + z
breaks up into two pieces: the first over the real interval, and the second over the semicircle.
As the radius R → ∞, the semicircular contour CR includes more and more of the real
axis, and so the first integral gets closer and closer to our desired integral (7.54). If we can
prove that the second, semicircular integral goes to zero, then we will be able to evaluate
the integral over the real axis by contour integration, and hence by the method of residues.
Our hope that the semicircular integral is small seems reasonable, since the integrand
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(1 + z 2 )−1 e i z gets smaller and smaller as | z | → ∞ provided Im z ≥ 0. (Why?) A rigorous
verification of this fact will appear at the end of the example.
According to the Residue Theorem 7.24, the integral (7.55) is equal to the sum of all
the residues at the singularities of f (z) lying inside the contour CR . Now ez is analytic
everywhere, and so the singularities occur where the denominator vanishes, i.e., z 2 = − 1,
and so are at z = ± i . Since the semicircle lies in the upper half plane Im z > 0, only the
singularity z = + i lies inside — and then only when R > 1. To compute the residue, we
use (7.44) to evaluate
eiz e i z e−1 1
Res = = = .
z = i 1 + z2 2z z= i 2i 2ie
Therefore, by (7.46),
I
1 e i z dz 1
2
= , provided R > 1.
2π i CR 1+z 2ie
Thus, assuming the semicircular part of the integral does indeed become vanishingly small
as R → ∞, we conclude that
Z ∞ ix I
e dx e i z dz 1 π
2
= lim 2
= 2 π i = .
−∞ 1 + x R→∞ CR 1 + z 2ie e
Incidentally, the integral is real because its imaginary part,
Z ∞
sin x dx
2
= 0,
−∞ 1 + x
is the integral of an odd function which is automatically zero. Consequently,
Z ∞ Z ∞ ix
cos x dx 1 e dx π
I= 2
= Re 2
= , (7.56)
0 1+x 2 −∞ 1 + x 2e
which is the desired result.
To complete the argument, let us estimate the size of the semicircular integral. Since
| 1 + z 2 | ≥ | z |2 − 1 > 0 for | z | > 1,
while iz
e = e− y ≤ 1 whenever z = x+ iy with y ≥ 0,
the integrand is bounded by
eiz 1 1
1 + z 2 ≤ | z |2 − 1 = R 2 − 1 provided | z | = R > 1, and Im z ≥ 0.
According to Corollary 7.11, the size of the integral of a complex function is bounded by its
maximum modulus along the curve times the length of the semicircle, namely πR. Thus,
in our case,
Z
e i z dz πR
≤ −→ 0 as 1 < R −→ ∞,
2 R2 − 1
SR 1 + z
as required.
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Example 7.30. Here we will use residues to evaluate the real integral
Z ∞
dx
4
. (7.57)
−∞ 1 + x
The indefinite integral can, in fact, be found by the method of partial fractions, but, as
you may know, this is not a particularly pleasant task. Let us try the method of residues.
Let CR denote the same semicircular contour as in Figure 41. The integrand has pole
singularities where the denominator vanishes, i.e., z 4 = −1, and so at the four fourth roots
of −1. These are
1+ i −1 + i 1− i −1 − i
eπ i /4 = √ , e3 π i /4 = √ , e5 π i /4 = √ , e7 π i /4 = √ .
2 2 2 2
Only the first two roots lie inside CR when R > 1. Their residues can be computed using
(7.44):
1 1 e−3 π i /4 −1 − i
Res = = = √ ,
z = eπ i /4 1 + z 4 4 z 3 z = eπ i /4 4 4 2
1 1 e−9 π i /4 1− i
Res 4
= = = √ .
z = e3 π i /4 1 + z 4 z3 z =e 3 π i /4 4 4 2
Therefore, by the residue formula (7.46),
I
dz −1 − i 1− i π
4
= 2π i √ + √ =√ . (7.58)
CR 1 + z 4 2 4 2 2
On the other hand, we can break up the contour integral into an integral along the real
axis and an integral around the semicircle:
I Z R Z
dz dx dz
4
= 4
+ 4
.
CR 1 + z −R 1 + x SR 1 + z
The first integral goes to the desired real integral as the radius R → ∞. On the other
hand, on a large semicircle | z | = R, the integrand is small:
1 1 1
1 + z 4 ≤ | z |4 − 1 = R 4 − 1 when | z | = R > 1.
Thus, using Corollary 7.11, the integral around the semicircle can be bounded by
Z
dz πR
≤ −→ 0 as R −→ ∞.
4 4
SR 1 + z R −1
Thus, the complex integral (7.58) converges to the desired real integral (7.57) as R → ∞,
and so Z ∞
dx π
4
=√ .
−∞ 1 + x 2
Note that the result is real and positive, as it must be.
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Acknowledgments: Thanks to Chuan–Hua Chen, Joe Depner, Zbigniew Kabala, Kushaal
Malde, Sheehan Olver, and Grigory Shepelev for corrections to and comments on earlier
versions of these notes.
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