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This document discusses analytic functions and their properties. It defines what it means for a function to be analytic, and introduces concepts like analytic continuation and the uniqueness of analytic continuation. It also covers properties of analytic functions like the global analytic uniqueness property. Finally it discusses some notable analytic functions like exponential, sine and cosine.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views25 pages

Pred05 Po

This document discusses analytic functions and their properties. It defines what it means for a function to be analytic, and introduces concepts like analytic continuation and the uniqueness of analytic continuation. It also covers properties of analytic functions like the global analytic uniqueness property. Finally it discusses some notable analytic functions like exponential, sine and cosine.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Analytic combinatorics

Lecture 5

April 7, 2021
Global properties of analytic functions

Recall:PA complex function f is analytic in z0 ∈ C, if it is equal to the sum of a power


series ∞ n
n=0 an (z − z0 ) on a neighborhood of z0 .

Definition
Let Ω ⊆ C be an open set. We say that f is analytic on Ω, if f is analytic in every
point of Ω.

Proposition
Let A(z) = ∞ n
P
n=0 an z be a power series
P with nradius of convergence ρ > 0. Define a
function f : N<ρ (0) → C by f (z) = ∞ n=0 an z . Then f is analytic on N<ρ (0).
Moreover, for z0 ∈ N<ρ (0), the series expansion of f with center z0 has radius of
convergence at least ρ − |z0 |.
Global properties of analytic functions

Recall:PA complex function f is analytic in z0 ∈ C, if it is equal to the sum of a power


series ∞ n
n=0 an (z − z0 ) on a neighborhood of z0 .

Definition
Let Ω ⊆ C be an open set. We say that f is analytic on Ω, if f is analytic in every
point of Ω.

Proposition
Let A(z) = ∞ n
P
n=0 an z be a power series
P with nradius of convergence ρ > 0. Define a
function f : N<ρ (0) → C by f (z) = ∞ n=0 an z . Then f is analytic on N<ρ (0).
Moreover, for z0 ∈ N<ρ (0), the series expansion of f with center z0 has radius of
convergence at least ρ − |z0 |.
Global properties of analytic functions

Recall:PA complex function f is analytic in z0 ∈ C, if it is equal to the sum of a power


series ∞ n
n=0 an (z − z0 ) on a neighborhood of z0 .

Definition
Let Ω ⊆ C be an open set. We say that f is analytic on Ω, if f is analytic in every
point of Ω.

Proposition
Let A(z) = ∞ n
P
n=0 an z be a power series
P with nradius of convergence ρ > 0. Define a
function f : N<ρ (0) → C by f (z) = ∞ n=0 an z . Then f is analytic on N<ρ (0).
Moreover, for z0 ∈ N<ρ (0), the series expansion of f with center z0 has radius of
convergence at least ρ − |z0 |.
Analytic continuation

Definition
Let f : M → C be a function, let Ω be an open set with M ⊆ Ω. A function g : Ω → C
is an analytic continuation of f if
for every z ∈ M, f (z) = g (z), and
g is analytic on Ω.

Definition
A set X ⊆ C is . . .
open if for every z ∈ X there is an ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ⊆ X ;
disconnected if there are two disjoint open sets O1 and O2 such that O1 ∩ X 6= ∅,
O2 ∩ X 6= ∅, and X ⊆ O1 ∪ O2 ; otherwise, the set X is connected;
a domain if it is nonempty, open and connected;
discrete if for every z ∈ X there is ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ∩ X = {z}.
Analytic continuation

Definition
Let f : M → C be a function, let Ω be an open set with M ⊆ Ω. A function g : Ω → C
is an analytic continuation of f if
for every z ∈ M, f (z) = g (z), and
g is analytic on Ω.

Definition
A set X ⊆ C is . . .
open if for every z ∈ X there is an ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ⊆ X ;
disconnected if there are two disjoint open sets O1 and O2 such that O1 ∩ X 6= ∅,
O2 ∩ X 6= ∅, and X ⊆ O1 ∪ O2 ; otherwise, the set X is connected;
a domain if it is nonempty, open and connected;
discrete if for every z ∈ X there is ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ∩ X = {z}.
Analytic continuation

Definition
Let f : M → C be a function, let Ω be an open set with M ⊆ Ω. A function g : Ω → C
is an analytic continuation of f if
for every z ∈ M, f (z) = g (z), and
g is analytic on Ω.

Definition
A set X ⊆ C is . . .
open if for every z ∈ X there is an ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ⊆ X ;
disconnected if there are two disjoint open sets O1 and O2 such that O1 ∩ X 6= ∅,
O2 ∩ X 6= ∅, and X ⊆ O1 ∪ O2 ; otherwise, the set X is connected;
a domain if it is nonempty, open and connected;
discrete if for every z ∈ X there is ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ∩ X = {z}.
Analytic continuation

Definition
Let f : M → C be a function, let Ω be an open set with M ⊆ Ω. A function g : Ω → C
is an analytic continuation of f if
for every z ∈ M, f (z) = g (z), and
g is analytic on Ω.

Definition
A set X ⊆ C is . . .
open if for every z ∈ X there is an ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ⊆ X ;
disconnected if there are two disjoint open sets O1 and O2 such that O1 ∩ X 6= ∅,
O2 ∩ X 6= ∅, and X ⊆ O1 ∪ O2 ; otherwise, the set X is connected;
a domain if it is nonempty, open and connected;
discrete if for every z ∈ X there is ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ∩ X = {z}.
Analytic continuation

Definition
Let f : M → C be a function, let Ω be an open set with M ⊆ Ω. A function g : Ω → C
is an analytic continuation of f if
for every z ∈ M, f (z) = g (z), and
g is analytic on Ω.

Definition
A set X ⊆ C is . . .
open if for every z ∈ X there is an ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ⊆ X ;
disconnected if there are two disjoint open sets O1 and O2 such that O1 ∩ X 6= ∅,
O2 ∩ X 6= ∅, and X ⊆ O1 ∪ O2 ; otherwise, the set X is connected;
a domain if it is nonempty, open and connected;
discrete if for every z ∈ X there is ε > 0 such that N<ε (z) ∩ X = {z}.
Global analytic uniqueness

Recall: If f is analytic in z ∈ C with f (z) = 0, then either f is identically zero on a


neighborhood of z, or f is never zero on a punctured neighborhood of z.

Proposition (Global analytic uniqueness)


Let f be a function analytic on a domain Ω. Then the set Zf = {z ∈ Ω; f (z) = 0} is
either discrete or equal to Ω.
Global analytic uniqueness (proof)
Global analytic uniqueness – consequences

Proposition (Global analytic uniqueness)


Let f be a function analytic on a domain Ω. Then the set Zf = {z ∈ Ω; f (z) = 0} is
either discrete or equal to Ω.

Corollary
Let f and g be two functions analytic on a domain Ω. Then the set
{z ∈ Ω; f (z) = g (z)} is either discrete or equal to Ω.

Corollary
Let X ⊆ C be a set which is not discrete, let f : X → C be a function, let Ω be a
domain containing X as a subset. Then f has at most one analytic continuation of
to Ω.
Global analytic uniqueness – consequences

Proposition (Global analytic uniqueness)


Let f be a function analytic on a domain Ω. Then the set Zf = {z ∈ Ω; f (z) = 0} is
either discrete or equal to Ω.

Corollary
Let f and g be two functions analytic on a domain Ω. Then the set
{z ∈ Ω; f (z) = g (z)} is either discrete or equal to Ω.

Corollary
Let X ⊆ C be a set which is not discrete, let f : X → C be a function, let Ω be a
domain containing X as a subset. Then f has at most one analytic continuation of
to Ω.
Global analytic uniqueness – consequences

Proposition (Global analytic uniqueness)


Let f be a function analytic on a domain Ω. Then the set Zf = {z ∈ Ω; f (z) = 0} is
either discrete or equal to Ω.

Corollary
Let f and g be two functions analytic on a domain Ω. Then the set
{z ∈ Ω; f (z) = g (z)} is either discrete or equal to Ω.

Corollary
Let X ⊆ C be a set which is not discrete, let f : X → C be a function, let Ω be a
domain containing X as a subset. Then f has at most one analytic continuation of
to Ω.
Some notable analytic functions

Definition


X zn
exp(z) =
n=0
n!

X z 2n+1
sin(z) = (−1)n
n=0
(2n + 1)!

X z 2n
cos(z) = (−1)n
n=0
(2n)!

Observe:
The three series above have infinite radius of convergence, hence the definitions
are applicable to every z ∈ C, and the three functions are analytic on C.
For any z ∈ C, we have
exp(iz) + exp(−iz)
cos(z) = ,
2
exp(iz) − exp(−iz)
sin(z) = ,
2i
exp(iz) = cos(z) + i sin(z).
Some notable analytic functions

Definition


X zn
exp(z) =
n=0
n!

X z 2n+1
sin(z) = (−1)n
n=0
(2n + 1)!

X z 2n
cos(z) = (−1)n
n=0
(2n)!

Observe:
The three series above have infinite radius of convergence, hence the definitions
are applicable to every z ∈ C, and the three functions are analytic on C.
For any z ∈ C, we have
exp(iz) + exp(−iz)
cos(z) = ,
2
exp(iz) − exp(−iz)
sin(z) = ,
2i
exp(iz) = cos(z) + i sin(z).
Some notable analytic functions

Definition


X zn
exp(z) =
n=0
n!

X z 2n+1
sin(z) = (−1)n
n=0
(2n + 1)!

X z 2n
cos(z) = (−1)n
n=0
(2n)!

Observe:
The three series above have infinite radius of convergence, hence the definitions
are applicable to every z ∈ C, and the three functions are analytic on C.
For any z ∈ C, we have
exp(iz) + exp(−iz)
cos(z) = ,
2
exp(iz) − exp(−iz)
sin(z) = ,
2i
exp(iz) = cos(z) + i sin(z).
Properties of sin, cos and exp

Proposition
The following holds:
For k ∈ Z and z ∈ C: exp(kz) = (exp(z))k .
For z ∈ C: sin(z + 2π) = sin(z), cos(z + 2π) = cos(z), exp(z + 2πi) = exp(z).
For z ∈ C: sin2 (z) + cos2 (z) = 1.
For w , z ∈ C: exp(w + z) = exp(w ) exp(z).
Combining analytic continuations

Proposition
Let X ⊆ C be a set which is not discrete, let f : X → C be a function, let Ω1 and Ω2
be two domains, with X ⊆ Ω1 ∩ Ω2 . Let g1 and g2 be the analytic continuation of f
to Ω1 and Ω2 , respectively. If Ω1 ∩ Ω2 is connected, then g1 and g2 agree on
Ω1 ∩ Ω2 , and together form an analytic continuation of f to Ω1 ∪ Ω2 .

Note: The assumption that Ω1 ∩ Ω2 is connected is essential.


Complex square root

Goal: Let us look for an inverse function to f (z) = z 2 .


Recall: If f is analytic in z0 ∈ C and f 0 (z0 ) 6= 0, then f is maps a neighborhood
N<ε (z0 ) of z0 bijectively to an open set Ω, and its inverse function
f h−1i : Ω → N<ε (z0 ) is analytic in f (z0 ).
Conclusion: f (z) = z 2 has an analytic inverse in a neighborhood of any z0 6= 0, but
this cannot be analytically continued to C \ {0}.

Definition

For any z ∈ C \ (−∞, 0] we let z denote the unique number w with <(w ) > 0
satisfying w 2 = z.
Complex square root

Goal: Let us look for an inverse function to f (z) = z 2 .


Recall: If f is analytic in z0 ∈ C and f 0 (z0 ) 6= 0, then f is maps a neighborhood
N<ε (z0 ) of z0 bijectively to an open set Ω, and its inverse function
f h−1i : Ω → N<ε (z0 ) is analytic in f (z0 ).
Conclusion: f (z) = z 2 has an analytic inverse in a neighborhood of any z0 6= 0, but
this cannot be analytically continued to C \ {0}.

Definition

For any z ∈ C \ (−∞, 0] we let z denote the unique number w with <(w ) > 0
satisfying w 2 = z.
Complex square root

Goal: Let us look for an inverse function to f (z) = z 2 .


Recall: If f is analytic in z0 ∈ C and f 0 (z0 ) 6= 0, then f is maps a neighborhood
N<ε (z0 ) of z0 bijectively to an open set Ω, and its inverse function
f h−1i : Ω → N<ε (z0 ) is analytic in f (z0 ).
Conclusion: f (z) = z 2 has an analytic inverse in a neighborhood of any z0 6= 0, but
this cannot be analytically continued to C \ {0}.

Definition

For any z ∈ C \ (−∞, 0] we let z denote the unique number w with <(w ) > 0
satisfying w 2 = z.
Complex square root

Goal: Let us look for an inverse function to f (z) = z 2 .


Recall: If f is analytic in z0 ∈ C and f 0 (z0 ) 6= 0, then f is maps a neighborhood
N<ε (z0 ) of z0 bijectively to an open set Ω, and its inverse function
f h−1i : Ω → N<ε (z0 ) is analytic in f (z0 ).
Conclusion: f (z) = z 2 has an analytic inverse in a neighborhood of any z0 6= 0, but
this cannot be analytically continued to C \ {0}.

Definition

For any z ∈ C \ (−∞, 0] we let z denote the unique number w with <(w ) > 0
satisfying w 2 = z.
Prigsheim’s theorem

Fact (Pringsheim, Vivanti; 1890’s)


Let ∞ n
P
P radiusn of convergence ρ ∈ (0, +∞), and let us
n=0 an x be a power series with
define f : N<ρ (0) → C by f (z) = ∞ n=0 an z . Then there is at least one point w with
|w | = ρ such that f has no analytic continuation to any domain containing w . If we
additionally assume that an ≥ 0 for all n, then the conclusion holds for w = ρ.
Example

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