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Advanced Math Problem Solving

The document provides solutions to exercises from a chapter on complex analysis. It first solves problems involving partitioning the natural numbers into arithmetic progressions with distinct steps, and evaluating contour integrals of powers of z around circles centered at the origin or not enclosing the origin. It then solves problems involving extending analytic functions defined on the unit disc to outside the disc, including examples of functions that cannot be extended analytically past the unit circle.

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Araz Cabbarlı
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
436 views5 pages

Advanced Math Problem Solving

The document provides solutions to exercises from a chapter on complex analysis. It first solves problems involving partitioning the natural numbers into arithmetic progressions with distinct steps, and evaluating contour integrals of powers of z around circles centered at the origin or not enclosing the origin. It then solves problems involving extending analytic functions defined on the unit disc to outside the disc, including examples of functions that cannot be extended analytically past the unit circle.

Uploaded by

Araz Cabbarlı
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 1, Exercise 22

Let N = {1, 2, 3, . . .} denote the set of positive integers. A subset S ⊂ N is said


to be in arithmetic progression if

S = {a, a + d, a + 2d, a + 3d, . . .}

where a, d ∈ N. Here d is called the step of S.


Show that N cannot be partitioned into a finite number of subsets that are in
arithmetic progression with distinct steps (except for the trivial case a = d = 1).
za
[Hint: write n∈N z n as a sum of terms of the type 1−z
P
d .]

Solution
Suppose that we can partition N into disjoint arithmetic progressions S1 , . . . , Sn ,
where Sj has smallest element aj and step dj . Then we have

X z
zj =
j=1
1−z

for all |z| < 1. We also have


X ∞
X
zj = z aj +kdj
j∈Sj k=1

X
= z aj z kdj
k=0
z aj
=
1 − z dj

Since the Sj form a partition of N, we get, for |z| < 1, that

X z aj n
z
= .
1−z j=1
1 − z dj

Without loss of generality, assume d1 is the largest of {d1 , . . . , dn }, Because the


dj are distinct, it follows that dj < d1 for j 6= 1. Consider the root of unity
ζ = e2πi/d1 . For this root of unity we have 1 − z d1 = 0, but 1 − z dj 6= 0 for any
j 6= dj . Thus the right hand side of the above equation is unbounded as z → ζ
from inside the unit disk. But 1 − ζ 6= 0 so the left hand side remains bounded
as z → ζ from inside the unit disk. Therefore, the left hand side is not equal to
the right hand side and no such partition exists.

1
Chapter 1, Exercise 25
Part a
Evaluate the integrals Z
zn
γ

for all integers n. Here γ is any circle centered at the origin with the positive
(counterclockwise) orientation.

Solution
We can parameterize γ via the parameterization z(t) = e2πit , where t goes from
0 to 1. Under this parameterization, the integral becomes:
Z 1
2πi e2πint · e2πit dt.
0

Which is Z 1
2πi e2πi(n+1)t .dt
0
This integral can be written as
Z 1
2πi cos(2π(n + 1)t) + i sin(2π(n + 1)t) dt
0

Both trigonometric functions will run through an integer number of periods, and
therefore the integral will vanish unless n + 1 = 0, in which case the integrand is
1 and the integral evaluates to 2πi. So for integers n 6= −1 the integral is zero;
for n = −1 the integral is 2πi.

Part b
Same question as before, but with γ any circle not enclosing the origin.

Solution
Let γ be any such circle. We can parameterize γ with the parameterization
γ(t) = z0 + re2πit where |z0 | > r. In the region enclosed by γ, the function z n
1
has the explicit primitive n+1 z n+1 for n 6= −1. Therefore, the integral along γ
is zero by Corollary 3.3.
If n = −1, then we have, after parametrizing,
Z 1
(z0 + re2πit )−1 e2πit .
0

This is Z 1
z0 (1 + r/z0 e2πit )−1 e2πit .
0

2
Since |r/z0 | < 1, this has a power series expansion
Z 1 X ∞
z0 (−r/z0 )j e2πi(j+1)t
0 j=0

and by absolute convergence of the sum, we can interchange the sum and inte-
gral. Because j + 1 is a positive integer for any nonnegative integer j, each term
in the sum integrates to 0 and the integral is 0.

Part c
Show that if |a| < r < |b|, then
1 2πi
Z
dz = ,
γ (z − a)(z − b) a−b
where γ denotes the counterclockwise circle centered at the origin, of radius r,
with the positive orientation.

Solution
For this problem, it is best to perform a partial fraction decomposition on
1
(z−a)(z−b) . We rewrite
 
1 1 1 1
= − .
(z − a)(z − b) a−b z−a z−b
We then evaluate
1 1 1 1
Z Z
dz − dz.
a−b γ z−a a−b γ z−b
The second integral vanishes, as we computed in part b. For the first integral,
we parameterize γ by γ = re2πiθ :
r2πi 1 2πit
Z
(re − a)−1 e2πit dt
a−b 0
Now, r > |a|, so we can pull out re2πit to get
r2πi 1 1 a
Z
− 2πit (1 − e−2πit )−1 e2πit dt
a−b 0 re r
which gives
1 ∞
r2πi 1 X j −j −2πit(j+1)
Z
a r e dt
a−b 0 r j=0
As before this integral vanishes unless j = 0, so we get
r2πi 2πi
= .
r(a − b) a−b

3
Chapter 2, Problem 1
Here are some examples of analytic functions on the unit disc that cannot be
extended analytically past the unit circle. The following definition is needed.
Let f be a function defined in the unit disc D, with boundary circle C. A point
w on C is said to be regular for f if there is an open neighborhood U of w and
an analytic function g on U , such that f = g on D ∩ U . A function f defined
on D cannot be continued analytically past the unit circle if no point of C is
regular for f .

Part a
Let

X n
f (z) = z 2 for |z| < 1.
n=0

Notice that the radius of convergence of the above series is 1. Show that f cannot
be continued analytically past the unit disc. [Hint: Suppose θ = 2πp/2k , where
p and k are positive integers. Let z = reiθ ; then |f (reiθ )| → ∞ as r → 1.]

Solution
2πp
Let θ = 2k
, and let z = reiθ . Then we have

k−1 ∞
X n 2πi∗2n p X n
f (z) = r2 e 2k + r2 .
n=0 n=k

Where we used the fact that the exponent was an integer multiple of 2πi for
n ≥ k. There are only k summands in the first sum, so the first sum is bounded
by k in absolute value for P|r| < 1. As r → 1 from the left, the sum is therefore
2n
bounded from below by nr − k, which is unbounded as r → 1. Thus
f (z) cannot be analytically extended to any ball containing a point of the form
k
e2πip/2 . Since points of this form are dense in the unit circle, f (z) is not regular
at any point of the unit circle.

Part b
Fix 0 < α < ∞. Show that the analytic function f defined by

X n
f (z) = 2−nα z 2 for |z| < 1
n=0

can be continuously extended to the unit circle, but cannot be analytically


continued past the unit circle. [Hint: There is a nowhere differentiable function
lurking in the background. See Chapter 4 in Book I.]

4
Solution
−nα 2n
The function f (z) = ∞
P
n=0 2 z converges absolutely and uniformly in the
disc |z| < 1; by Abel’s theorem, the function
P∞ f can be extended continuously to
n
the unit circle and is given by f (z) = n=0 2−nα z 2 on the unit circle |z| ≤ 1.
ForP0 < α < 1, The function f (z), restricted to the unit circle z = e2πiθ , is given

by n=0 cos(2n 2πθ) + i sin(2n 2πθ). This is a nowhere differentiable Weierstrass
function. Thus the function f (z) is nowhere differentiable on the unit circle and
therefore cannot be analytically extended past the circle.
For non-integer α > 1, we can define the operator T by T f (z) = zf ′ (z).
Letting k < α < k + 1, we take the function T k f , which an be expanded for
z < 1 as a power series:

X n
T f (z) = 2−n(α−k) z 2 .
n=0

By the previous argument, this cannot be analytically continued past the unit
circle. Since T f (z) is analytic wherever f (z) is analytic, it follows that f (z)
cannot be extended past the unit circle either.
For integers α = k, and for |z| < 1, T k f is given by

X n
z2
n=0

which cannot be analytically extended past the unit circle by part a.

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