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Phragmén–Lindelöf principle

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In complex analysis, the Phragmén–Lindelöf principle (or method), first formulated by Lars Edvard Phragmén (1863–1937) and Ernst Leonard Lindelöf (1870-1946) in 1908, is a technique in which an auxiliary, parameterized factor is used to prove the boundedness of a holomorphic function (i.e, ) on an unbounded domain when an additional (usually mild) condition constraining the growth of on is given. It is a generalization of the maximum modulus principle, which usually only applies to bounded domains.

Background

In the theory of complex functions, it is known that the modulus (absolute value) of a holomorphic (complex differentiable) function in the interior of a bounded region is bounded by its modulus on the boundary of the region. More precisely, if a non-constant function is holomorphic in a bounded region[1] and continuous on its closure , then for all . This is known as the maximum modulus principle. (In fact, since is compact and is continuous, there actually exists some such that .) The maximum modulus principle is generally used to conclude that a holomorphic function is bounded in a region after showing that it is bounded on the boundary of that region.

However, the maximum modulus principle cannot be applied to an unbounded region of the complex plane. As a concrete example, let us examine the behavior of the holomorphic function in the unbounded strip

.

Although , so that is bounded on boundary , grows rapidly without bound when along the positive real axis. The difficulty here stems from the extremely fast growth of along the positive real axis. If the growth rate of is guaranteed to not be "too fast," as specified by an appropriate growth condition, the Phragmén–Lindelöf principle can be applied to show that boundedness of on the region's boundary implies that is in fact bounded in the whole region, effectively extending the maximum modulus principle to unbounded regions.

The technique: Suppose we are given a holomorphic function and an unbounded region . In a typical Phragmén–Lindelöf argument, we introduce a certain multiplicative factor satisfying to "subdue" the growth of , such that on the boundary of a bounded subregion . This allows us to apply the maximum modulus principle to and conclude that it is bounded on . We then argue that the subregion could be expanded at will so as to encompass all of , establishing the boundedness of on . Finally, we let so that in order to conclude that must also be bounded on .

In the literature of complex analysis, there are many examples of the Phragmén–Lindelöf principle applied to unbounded regions of differing types, and also a version of this principle may be applied in a similar fashion to subharmonic and superharmonic functions.

Example of application

To continue the example above, we can impose a growth condition on a holomorphic function that prevents it from "blowing up" and allows the Phragmén–Lindelöf principle to be applied. To this end, we now include the condition that

for some real constants and , for all . It can then be shown that for all implies that in fact holds for all . Thus, we have the following proposition:

Proposition. Let

.

Let be holomorphic on and continuous on , and suppose there exist real constants such that

for all and for all . Then for all .

Note that this conclusion fails when , precisely as the motivating counterexample in the previous section demonstrates. The proof of this statement employs a typical Phragmén–Lindelöf argument:[2]

Sketch of Proof: We fix and define for each the auxiliary function by . We consider the function . The growth properties of allow us to find an such that whenever and . In particular, holds for all , where is the open rectangle in the complex plane defined by the vertices . Because is a bounded region, the maximum modulus principle implies that for all . But since can be made arbitrarily large, this result extends to all of , and for all . Finally, since for all as , we conclude that for all .

Phragmén–Lindelöf principle for a sector in the complex plane

A particularly useful statement proven using the Phragmén–Lindelöf principle is the statement for a sector of the complex plane. This statement can be used to give a complex analytic proof of the Hardy's Uncertainty Principle.[3]

Let be a function that is holomorphic in a sector

of central angle , and continuous on its boundary. If

for , and

for all , where and , then (1) holds also for all .

Remarks

  • The condition (2) can be relaxed to

with the same conclusion.

Phragmén–Lindelöf principle for strips

In practice the point 0 is often transformed into the point ∞ of the Riemann sphere. This gives a version of the principle that applies to strips, for example bounded by two lines of constant real part in the complex plane. This special case is sometimes known as Lindelöf's theorem.

Other special cases

  • Carlson's theorem is an application of the principle to functions bounded on the imaginary axis.

Applications

The principle is used to prove Hardy's uncertainty principle, which states that a function and its Fourier transform cannot both decay faster than exponentially.

References

  1. ^ The term region is not uniformly employed in the literature; here, a region is taken to mean a nonempty connected open subset of the complex plane.
  2. ^ Rudin, Walter (1987). Real and Complex Analysis (PDF). New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 257–259. ISBN 0070542341.
  3. ^ Tao, Terence (2009-02-18). "Hardy's Uncertainty Principle". Updates on my research and expository papers, discussion of open problems, and other maths-related topics. By Terence Tao. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)