Questions tagged [complex-analysis]

For questions mainly about theory of complex analytic/holomorphic functions of one complex variable. Use [tag:complex-numbers] instead for questions about complex numbers. Use [tag:several-complex-variables] instead for questions about holomorphic functions of more than one complex variables.

Complex analysis is a branch of mathematical analysis that investigates functions of one or several complex variables. Typical topics include Cauchy's integral formula, singularities, poles, holomorphic and meromorphic functions, Laurent and Taylor series, maximum modulus principle, isolated zeros principle, etc.

Independent variable and dependent variable of complex functions are both complex numbers, and may be separated into real (denoted by $\Re$) and imaginary parts (denoted by $\Im$) : $z = x +iy$ and $w = f(z) =u(x,y)+iv(x,y)$ where $x, y \in \mathbb{R}$, $u(x,y)$ and $v(x,y)$ being real-valued functions.

A fundamental result of complex analysis is the Cauchy-Riemann equations, which give the conditions for a function to have a complex derivative, which is a complex generalization of the (real) derivative. If the complex derivative is defined at each point in an open connected subset of $\mathbb C$, the function is called analytic, or holomorphic. If the complex derivative is defined at each point in $\mathbb C$, the function is called entire.

51771 questions
6
votes
3 answers

Why does $\frac{z-i}{z+i}$ map the unit disk onto an open half-plane?

I've been self studying complex analysis, and I read that there is a canonical conformal bijection $$\varphi(z) = \frac{z-i}{z+i}$$ from the open unit disc to the open half-plane. I see why $\varphi$ is analytic, and I was able to show that it is…
6
votes
0 answers

Doubts in the solution of a Riemann Hilbert problem

Consider the following Riemann-Hilbert problem as given on Page 9 of this paper: $$\Phi^+(t)- \Phi^-(t) = 2u(t)$$ $$\Phi^+(t)+ \Phi^-(t) = \frac{P}{\pi i } \int_{t_1}^{t_2} \frac{d\zeta}{\zeta} u(\zeta) \frac{\zeta +t}{\zeta - t} = E(t -…
6
votes
1 answer

Prove that a given meromorphic function is rational

I'm doing some exercises in complex analysis, and I've reached one I simply can't figure out on my own, which is why I'm hoping for some help. The exercise: We assume that $h:\Bbb C\to \Bbb C \cup \{\infty\}$ is meromorphic with finitely many poles…
MBrown
  • 551
6
votes
2 answers

For a polynomial $p(z)$, prove there exist $R>0$, such that if $|z|=R$, then $|p(z)|\geq |a_n|R^n/2$

For a polynomial $p(z)=a_0+\ldots+a_nz^n$, prove there exist $R>0$, such that if $|z|=R$, then $|p(z)|\geq |a_n|R^n/2$. I get $|p(z)|\geq |a_n|R^n$, which makes that factor of $1/2$ useless. So I must have done something…
Chao Xu
  • 5,768
6
votes
0 answers

Existence of $R>0$ such that ${\int_{|z|=R}{f'(z)\over f(z)}dz}=0$

I'm trying to solve the following problem: Let $f:\mathbb{C}\rightarrow\mathbb{C}$ be a meromorphic function such that $f({1\over z})$ is analytic at $z=0$ and $\displaystyle{\lim_{z\rightarrow\infty}f(z)}=0$. Show that there exists $R>0$ such that…
6
votes
1 answer

injective holomorphic functions

If I have a bounded, connected, open subset of the complex plane, and a function that is holomorphic on it, continuous on its closure, and injective on its boundary, is my function necessarily injective? It seems it is not true for arbitrary…
wzzx
  • 583
6
votes
3 answers

Recursion relation for Euler numbers

I am trying to solve the following: The Euler numbers $E_n$ are defined by the power series expansion $$\frac{1}{\cos z}=\sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{E_n}{n!}z^n\text{ for }|z|<\pi/2$$ (a) Show that $E_n=0$ when $n$ is an odd integer. (b) Establish a…
6
votes
1 answer

Using calculus of residues to evaluate a trig integral

This is my partial attempt at the solution. I am unsure how to proceed further.
MikeMan
  • 139
6
votes
3 answers

Proving $e^z$ is holomorphic

I read somewhere that $e^z$ is holomorphic function, but I can't think of an easy way to prove that. I thought of using Cauchy Riemann equations, but that's probably overkill. Is there a simple approach to show that this function is holomorphic?
6
votes
3 answers

Is $z\cdot\sin(z)$ (function from $\mathbb{C} \to \mathbb{C}$) surjective?

We know by Picard's theorem that any entire function is either constant, or surjective or misses only 1 point. It is easy to observe that $\sin{z}$, $\cos{z}$ are surjective. Is $f \cdot g$ surjective if $f$ and $g$ are entire and surjective? It is…
rohit
  • 963
6
votes
1 answer

Showing the inequality $\frac{|f^{'}(z)|}{1-|f(z)|^{2}} \leq \frac{1}{1-|z|^{2}}$

I am trying to show if $|f(z)| \leq 1$, $|z| \leq 1$, then \begin{equation} \frac{|f^{'}(z)|}{1-|f(z)|^{2}} \leq \frac{1}{1-|z|^{2}} \end{equation}. I have used Cauchy's Inequality to derive $|f^{'}(z)| \leq \frac{1}{1-|z|}$ yet I still couldn't get…
pel
  • 1,015
6
votes
2 answers

$f$ is analytic on $D$, prove that $f$ is a constant

I've been stuck on this for a while, it is a decade old qualifying exam problem from my university: Let $f$ be a analytic function in the open unit disk $D$ such that $|f(z)|\leq 1$ for all $z\in D$. Let $g$ be the restriction of $f$ to the real…
Simplyorange
  • 1,116
6
votes
1 answer

Classification of holomorphic functions on the right half plane with certain conditions

The following problem comes from an old complex analysis prelim exam: Determine all analytic functions $f: H \rightarrow \mathbb{C}$ on the half-plane $H : = \{ z\in \mathbb{C} : \Re(z) > 0 \}$ that satisfy $f(\sqrt{n}) = n$ and $|f^{(n)}(1)| \leq…
JMill.
  • 393
6
votes
1 answer

entire function with ist imaginary part positive

$f$ is an entire function, and it satisfies $f(\mathbb{C}) \subseteq \{z \in \mathbb{C} \mid \operatorname{Im} z > 0\}$. Show that $f$ is constant. I want to take advantage of the Liouville's Theorem, but I just can't figure out the relationship…
sopin
  • 328
6
votes
3 answers

What is the intuition behind Liouville's theorem in complex analysis?

I'm looking for an intuitive motivation for Liouville's theorem from complex analysis. If somebody could illustrate this with a simple example, that would be great. Thank you so much.
T A O
  • 71