Jump to content

UMD Analysis Qualifying Exam/Aug06 Complex

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world

Problem 2

[edit | edit source]

For real consider the integral

(a) Compute the Cauchy Principal Value of the integral (when it exists)

(b) For which values of is the integral convergent?

Solution 2

[edit | edit source]

Consider the complex function . This function has a pole at . We can calculate .

Consider the contour composed of the upper half circle centered at the origin with radius traversed counter-clockwise and the other part being the interval on the real axis.

That is,

Let us estimate the integral of along the half circle . We parametrize by the path , for . This gives

Break up the interval into for some . This gives .

Let us evaluate the first of the two integrals on the right-hand side.

which tends to 0 as . NOTE: This argument only works if we assume . If we try this argument for , we bound the integrand by instead of , but this will diverge as we send (which implies that must also diverge as . This answers part b).

As for the other integral, which tends to as .

Therefore, we've shown that . But was arbitrary, hence we can say that the integral vanishes.

Therefore,

Problem 4

[edit | edit source]

Let have boundary . For define

.

(a) Show that if and only if .

(b) Show that has at least one fixed point .

Solution 4

[edit | edit source]

Consider and . Then . We know that is a conformal map from to and moreover, if an only if . The same is true for , that is, if any only if . Therefore, if and only if .

If is a fixed point of , then . Rearranging gives By the fundamental theorem of algebra, we are guaranteed 3 solutions to this equation in the complex plane. All that we need to show is that at least on of these solutions lie on the circle n the circle .

Problem 6

[edit | edit source]

Let be a family of entire functions. For define the domains

.

If is normal (i.e. convergence to is allowed) on each show that is normal on .

Solution 6

[edit | edit source]