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Chacteristic property of holomorphic functions From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the field of complex analysis in mathematics, the Cauchy–Riemann equations, named after Augustin Cauchy and Bernhard Riemann, consist of a system of two partial differential equations which form a necessary and sufficient condition for a complex function of a complex variable to be complex differentiable.
These equations are
(1a) |
and
(1b) |
where u(x, y) and v(x, y) are real differentiable bivariate functions.
Typically, u and v are respectively the real and imaginary parts of a complex-valued function f(x + iy) = f(x, y) = u(x, y) + iv(x, y) of a single complex variable z = x + iy where x and y are real variables; u and v are real differentiable functions of the real variables. Then f is complex differentiable at a complex point if and only if the partial derivatives of u and v satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann equations at that point.
A holomorphic function is a complex function that is differentiable at every point of some open subset of the complex plane C. It has been proved that holomorphic functions are analytic and analytic complex functions are complex-differentiable. In particular, holomorphic functions are infinitely complex-differentiable.
This equivalence between differentiability and analyticity is the starting point of all complex analysis.
The Cauchy–Riemann equations first appeared in the work of Jean le Rond d'Alembert.[1] Later, Leonhard Euler connected this system to the analytic functions.[2] Cauchy[3] then used these equations to construct his theory of functions. Riemann's dissertation on the theory of functions appeared in 1851.[4]
Suppose that . The complex-valued function is differentiable at any point z in the complex plane. The real part and the imaginary part are and their partial derivatives are
We see that indeed the Cauchy–Riemann equations are satisfied, and .
The Cauchy-Riemann equations are one way of looking at the condition for a function to be differentiable in the sense of complex analysis: in other words, they encapsulate the notion of function of a complex variable by means of conventional differential calculus. In the theory there are several other major ways of looking at this notion, and the translation of the condition into other language is often needed.
First, the Cauchy–Riemann equations may be written in complex form
(2) |
In this form, the equations correspond structurally to the condition that the Jacobian matrix is of the form where and . A matrix of this form is the matrix representation of a complex number. Geometrically, such a matrix is always the composition of a rotation with a scaling, and in particular preserves angles. The Jacobian of a function f(z) takes infinitesimal line segments at the intersection of two curves in z and rotates them to the corresponding segments in f(z). Consequently, a function satisfying the Cauchy–Riemann equations, with a nonzero derivative, preserves the angle between curves in the plane. That is, the Cauchy–Riemann equations are the conditions for a function to be conformal.
Moreover, because the composition of a conformal transformation with another conformal transformation is also conformal, the composition of a solution of the Cauchy–Riemann equations with a conformal map must itself solve the Cauchy–Riemann equations. Thus the Cauchy–Riemann equations are conformally invariant.
Let where and are real-valued functions, be a complex-valued function of a complex variable where and are real variables. so the function can also be regarded as a function of real variables and . Then, the complex-derivative of at a point is defined by provided this limit exists (that is, the limit exists along every path approaching , and does not depend on the chosen path).
A fundamental result of complex analysis is that is complex differentiable at (that is, it has a complex-derivative), if and only if the bivariate real functions and are differentiable at and satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann equations at this point.[5][6][7]
In fact, if the complex derivative exists at , then it may be computed by taking the limit at along the real axis and the imaginary axis, and the two limits must be equal. Along the real axis, the limit is and along the imaginary axis, the limit is
So, the equality of the derivatives implies which is the complex form of Cauchy–Riemann equations at .
(Note that if is complex differentiable at , it is also real differentiable and the Jacobian of at is the complex scalar , regarded as a real-linear map of , since the limit as .)
Conversely, if f is differentiable at (in the real sense) and satisfies the Cauchy-Riemann equations there, then it is complex-differentiable at this point. Assume that f as a function of two real variables x and y is differentiable at z0 (real differentiable). This is equivalent to the existence of the following linear approximation where , , z = x + iy, and as Δz → 0.
Since and , the above can be re-written as
Now, if is real, , while if it is imaginary, then . Therefore, the second term is independent of the path of the limit when (and only when) it vanishes identically: , which is precisely the Cauchy–Riemann equations in the complex form. This proof also shows that, in that case,
Note that the hypothesis of real differentiability at the point is essential and cannot be dispensed with. For example,[8] the function , regarded as a complex function with imaginary part identically zero, has both partial derivatives at , and it moreover satisfies the Cauchy–Riemann equations at that point, but it is not differentiable in the sense of real functions (of several variables), and so the first condition, that of real differentiability, is not met. Therefore, this function is not complex differentiable.
Some sources[9][10] state a sufficient condition for the complex differentiability at a point as, in addition to the Cauchy–Riemann equations, the partial derivatives of and be continuous at the point because this continuity condition ensures the existence of the aforementioned linear approximation. Note that it is not a necessary condition for the complex differentiability. For example, the function is complex differentiable at 0, but its real and imaginary parts have discontinuous partial derivatives there. Since complex differentiability is usually considered in an open set, where it in fact implies continuity of all partial derivatives (see below), this distinction is often elided in the literature.
The above proof suggests another interpretation of the Cauchy–Riemann equations. The complex conjugate of , denoted , is defined by for real variables and . Defining the two Wirtinger derivatives as the Cauchy–Riemann equations can then be written as a single equation and the complex derivative of in that case is In this form, the Cauchy–Riemann equations can be interpreted as the statement that a complex function of a complex variable is independent of the variable . As such, we can view analytic functions as true functions of one complex variable () instead of complex functions of two real variables ( and ).
A standard physical interpretation of the Cauchy–Riemann equations going back to Riemann's work on function theory[11] is that u represents a velocity potential of an incompressible steady fluid flow in the plane, and v is its stream function. Suppose that the pair of (twice continuously differentiable) functions u and v satisfies the Cauchy–Riemann equations. We will take u to be a velocity potential, meaning that we imagine a flow of fluid in the plane such that the velocity vector of the fluid at each point of the plane is equal to the gradient of u, defined by
By differentiating the Cauchy–Riemann equations for the functions u and v, with the symmetry of second derivatives, one shows that u solves Laplace's equation: That is, u is a harmonic function. This means that the divergence of the gradient is zero, and so the fluid is incompressible.
The function v also satisfies the Laplace equation, by a similar analysis. Also, the Cauchy–Riemann equations imply that the dot product (), i.e., the direction of the maximum slope of u and that of v are orthogonal to each other. This implies that the gradient of u must point along the curves; so these are the streamlines of the flow. The curves are the equipotential curves of the flow.
A holomorphic function can therefore be visualized by plotting the two families of level curves and . Near points where the gradient of u (or, equivalently, v) is not zero, these families form an orthogonal family of curves. At the points where , the stationary points of the flow, the equipotential curves of intersect. The streamlines also intersect at the same point, bisecting the angles formed by the equipotential curves.
Another interpretation of the Cauchy–Riemann equations can be found in Pólya & Szegő.[12] Suppose that u and v satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann equations in an open subset of R2, and consider the vector field regarded as a (real) two-component vector. Then the second Cauchy–Riemann equation (1b) asserts that is irrotational (its curl is 0):
The first Cauchy–Riemann equation (1a) asserts that the vector field is solenoidal (or divergence-free):
Owing respectively to Green's theorem and the divergence theorem, such a field is necessarily a conservative one, and it is free from sources or sinks, having net flux equal to zero through any open domain without holes. (These two observations combine as real and imaginary parts in Cauchy's integral theorem.) In fluid dynamics, such a vector field is a potential flow.[13] In magnetostatics, such vector fields model static magnetic fields on a region of the plane containing no current. In electrostatics, they model static electric fields in a region of the plane containing no electric charge.
This interpretation can equivalently be restated in the language of differential forms. The pair u and v satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann equations if and only if the one-form is both closed and coclosed (a harmonic differential form).
Another formulation of the Cauchy–Riemann equations involves the complex structure in the plane, given by This is a complex structure in the sense that the square of J is the negative of the 2×2 identity matrix: . As above, if u(x,y) and v(x,y) are two functions in the plane, put
The Jacobian matrix of f is the matrix of partial derivatives
Then the pair of functions u, v satisfies the Cauchy–Riemann equations if and only if the 2×2 matrix Df commutes with J.[14]
This interpretation is useful in symplectic geometry, where it is the starting point for the study of pseudoholomorphic curves.
Other representations of the Cauchy–Riemann equations occasionally arise in other coordinate systems. If (1a) and (1b) hold for a differentiable pair of functions u and v, then so do
for any coordinate system (n(x, y), s(x, y)) such that the pair is orthonormal and positively oriented. As a consequence, in particular, in the system of coordinates given by the polar representation , the equations then take the form
Combining these into one equation for f gives
The inhomogeneous Cauchy–Riemann equations consist of the two equations for a pair of unknown functions u(x, y) and v(x, y) of two real variables
for some given functions α(x, y) and β(x, y) defined in an open subset of R2. These equations are usually combined into a single equation where f = u + iv and 𝜑 = (α + iβ)/2.
If 𝜑 is Ck, then the inhomogeneous equation is explicitly solvable in any bounded domain D, provided 𝜑 is continuous on the closure of D. Indeed, by the Cauchy integral formula, for all ζ ∈ D.
Suppose that f = u + iv is a complex-valued function which is differentiable as a function f : R2 → R2. Then Goursat's theorem asserts that f is analytic in an open complex domain Ω if and only if it satisfies the Cauchy–Riemann equation in the domain.[15] In particular, continuous differentiability of f need not be assumed.[16]
The hypotheses of Goursat's theorem can be weakened significantly. If f = u + iv is continuous in an open set Ω and the partial derivatives of f with respect to x and y exist in Ω, and satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann equations throughout Ω, then f is holomorphic (and thus analytic). This result is the Looman–Menchoff theorem.
The hypothesis that f obey the Cauchy–Riemann equations throughout the domain Ω is essential. It is possible to construct a continuous function satisfying the Cauchy–Riemann equations at a point, but which is not analytic at the point (e.g., f(z) = z5/|z|4). Similarly, some additional assumption is needed besides the Cauchy–Riemann equations (such as continuity), as the following example illustrates[17]
which satisfies the Cauchy–Riemann equations everywhere, but fails to be continuous at z = 0.
Nevertheless, if a function satisfies the Cauchy–Riemann equations in an open set in a weak sense, then the function is analytic. More precisely:[18]
This is in fact a special case of a more general result on the regularity of solutions of hypoelliptic partial differential equations.
There are Cauchy–Riemann equations, appropriately generalized, in the theory of several complex variables. They form a significant overdetermined system of PDEs. This is done using a straightforward generalization of the Wirtinger derivative, where the function in question is required to have the (partial) Wirtinger derivative with respect to each complex variable vanish.
As often formulated, the d-bar operator annihilates holomorphic functions. This generalizes most directly the formulation where
Viewed as conjugate harmonic functions, the Cauchy–Riemann equations are a simple example of a Bäcklund transform. More complicated, generally non-linear Bäcklund transforms, such as in the sine-Gordon equation, are of great interest in the theory of solitons and integrable systems.
In the Clifford algebra , the complex number is represented as where , (, so ). The Dirac operator in this Clifford algebra is defined as . The function is considered analytic if and only if , which can be calculated in the following way:
Grouping by and :
Hence, in traditional notation:
Let Ω be an open set in the Euclidean space Rn. The equation for an orientation-preserving mapping to be a conformal mapping (that is, angle-preserving) is that
where Df is the Jacobian matrix, with transpose , and I denotes the identity matrix.[19] For n = 2, this system is equivalent to the standard Cauchy–Riemann equations of complex variables, and the solutions are holomorphic functions. In dimension n > 2, this is still sometimes called the Cauchy–Riemann system, and Liouville's theorem implies, under suitable smoothness assumptions, that any such mapping is a Möbius transformation.
One might seek to generalize the Cauchy-Riemann equations instead by asking more generally when are the solutions of a system of PDEs closed under composition. The theory of Lie Pseudogroups addresses these kinds of questions.
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