1 / 35

Chap 6 Residues and Poles

Chap 6 Residues and Poles. if f analytic. Cauchy-Goursat Theorem:. What if f is not analytic at finite number of points interior to C Residues. 53. Residues.

coty
Download Presentation

Chap 6 Residues and Poles

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chap 6 Residues and Poles if f analytic. Cauchy-Goursat Theorem: What if f is not analytic at finite number of points interior to C Residues. 53. Residues z0 is called a singular point of a function f if f fails to be analytic at z0 but is analytic at some point in every neighborhood of z0. A singular point z0 is said to be isolated if, in addition, there is a deleted neighborhood of z0 throughout which f is analytic. tch-prob

  2. Ex1. Ex2. The origin is a singular point of Log z, but is not isolated Ex3. not isolated isolated When z0 is an isolated singular point of a function f, there is a R2 such that f is analytic in tch-prob

  3. Consequently, f(z) is represented by a Laurent series and C is positively oriented simple closed contour When n=1, The complex number b1, which is the coefficient of in expansion (1) , is called the residue of f at the isolated singular point z0. A powerful tool for evaluating certain integrals. tch-prob

  4. Ex4. 湊出z-2在分母 tch-prob

  5. Ex5. tch-prob

  6. 54. Residue Theorems Thm1. Let C be a positively oriented simple closed contour. If f is analytic inside and on C except for a finite number of (isolated) singular points zk inside C, then Cauchy’s residue theorem tch-prob

  7. Ex1. tch-prob

  8. Thm2: If a function f is analytic everywhere in the finite plane except for a finite number of singular points interior to a positively oriented simple closed contour C, then Pf: tch-prob

  9. Ex2. tch-prob

  10. 55. Three Types of Isolated Singular points If f has an isolated singular point z0, then f(z) can be represented by a Laurent series tch-prob

  11. (i) Type 1. Ex1. tch-prob

  12. Ex2. (ii) Type 2 bn=0, n=1, 2, 3,…… is known as a removable singular point. * Residue at a removable singular point is always zero. tch-prob

  13. * If we redefine f at z0 so that f(z0)=a0 define Above expansion becomes valid throughout the entire disk * Since a power series always represents an analytic function Interior to its circle of convergence (sec. 49), f is analytic at z0 when it is assigned the value a0 there. The singularity at z0 is therefore removed. Ex3. tch-prob

  14. (iii) Type 3: Infinite number of bn is nonzero. is said to be an essential singular point of f. In each neighborhood of an essential singular point, a function assumes every finite value, with one possible exception, an infinite number of times. ~ Picard’s theorem. tch-prob

  15. Ex4. has an essential singular point at where the residue an infinite number of these points clearly lie in any given neighborhood of the origin. tch-prob

  16. an infinite number of these points clearly lie in any given neighborhood of the origin. tch-prob

  17. 56. Residues at Poles identify poles and find its corresponding residues. Thm. An isolated singular point z0 of a function f is a pole of order m iff f(z) can be written as tch-prob

  18. Pf: “<=“ tch-prob

  19. “=>” tch-prob

  20. Ex1. tch-prob

  21. Ex3. Need to write out the Laurent series for f(z) as in Ex 2. Sec. 55. tch-prob

  22. Ex4. tch-prob

  23. 57. Zeros and Poles of order m Consider a function f that is analytic at a point z0. (From Sec. 40). Then f is said to have a zero of order m at z0. tch-prob

  24. Ex1. Thm. Functions p and q are analytic at z0, and If q has a zero of order m at z0, then has a pole of order m there. tch-prob

  25. Ex2. Corollary: Let two functions p and q be analytic at a point z0. Pf: Form Theorem in sec 56, tch-prob

  26. Ex3. The singularities of f(z) occur at zeros of q, or try tan z tch-prob

  27. Ex4 tch-prob

  28. containing a point z0, then in any neighborhood N0 of z0 throughout which f is analytic. That is, f(z)=0 at each point z in N0. 58. Conditions under which Lemma : If f(z)=0 at each point z of a domain or arc Pf: Under the stated condition, For some neighborhood N of z0 f(z)=0 Otherwise from (Ex13, sec. 57) There would be a deleted neighborhood of z0 throughout which tch-prob

  29. Since in N, an in the Taylor series for f(z) about z0 must be zero. If a function f is analytic throughout a domain D and f(z)=0 at each point z of a domain or arc contained in D, then in D. Thus in neighborhood N0 since that Taylor series also represents f(z) in N0. 圖解 Theorem. tch-prob

  30. Corollary: A function that is analytic in a domain D is uniquely determined over D by its values over a domain, or along an arc, contained in D. Example: along real x-axis (an arc) tch-prob

  31. 59. Behavior of f near Removable and Essential Singular Points Observation : A function f is always analytic and bounded in some deleted neighborhood of a removable singularity z0. tch-prob

  32. Thm 1: Suppose that a function f is analytic and bounded in some deleted neighborhood of a point z0. If f is not analytic at z0, then it has a removable singularity there. Pf: Assume f is not analytic at z0. The point z0 is an isolated singularity of f and f(z) is represented by a Laurent series If C denotes a positively oriented circle tch-prob

  33. Suppose that z0 is an essential singularity of a function f, and let w0 be any complex number. Then, for any positive number , the inequality Thm2. (a function assumes values arbitrarily close to any given number) (3) is satisfied at some point z in each deleted neighborhood tch-prob

  34. Pf: Since z0 is an isolated singularity of f. There is a throughout which f is analytic. Suppose (3) is not satisfied for any z there. Thus is bounded and analytic in According to Thm 1, z0 is a removable singularity of g. We let g be defined at z0 so that it is analytic there, becomes analytic at z0 if it is defined there as But this means that z0 is a removable singularity of f, not an essential one, and we have a contradiction. tch-prob

  35. tch-prob

More Related