TransWikia.com

Confusion on analytic continuation.

Mathematics Asked on January 29, 2021

The definition of analytic continuation of holomorphic function is stated as follows:

Let $f_{1}$ and $f_{2}$ be two analytic functions on two domains (open and connected) $Omega_{1}$ and $Omega_{2}$ such that $Omega_{1}capOmega_{2}neqvarnothing$. If $f_{1}$ and $f_{2}$ agree on $Omega_{1}cap Omega_{2}$, we say $f_{2}$ is the analytic continuation of $f_{1}$ on $Omega_{2}$, and vice versa.

A smaller version of it is that:

If $f$ is analytic on a domain $Dsubsetmathbb{C}$ and $F$ is analytic on a bigger domain $Esubsetmathbb{C}$ such that $f=F$ on $Dsubset E,$ then $F$ is the analytic continuation of $f$ on $E$.

From what I read, this kind of technique allows us to define a function in a smaller domain and extend it analytically to a larger domain. But I don’t understand why this definition allows us to do so.

What confuses me is that the definition only guarantees $f=F$ on the intersection $Omega_{1}capOmega_{2}$, so perhaps $fneq F$ on $Omega_{2}$, then how do I know $f$ is analytic on $Omega_{2}setminusOmega_{1}$?

I tried to use the identity theorem as follows:

Let $f$ and $g$ be two holomorphic functions on a domain $D$ such that $f=g$ on a subset $Ssubset D$ that contains a limit point, then $f=g$ on the whole $D$.

But this seems backward. By the hypothesis of analytic continuation, we only have $f=g$ on $S$, and $g$ is analytic on $D$, we do not really know if $f$ is analytic on the whole $D$ (this is the purpose of analytic continuation, right? to extend $f$ analytically to the whole $D$.)

Am I overthinking this and confusing myself?? I guess we should have, say $f_{1}=f_{2}$ on the whole $Omega_{1}cupOmega_{2}$, but I don’t know how to prove it.

Edit 1: (Some Clarification, Possible Answer and Reference)

I am sorry if I am asking a confusion (bad) question. My confusion is that, even though the analytic continuation exists, I don’t think that means anything helpful. It only gives us an analytic function $F$ on a bigger domain $Omega_{2}$ such that $F|_{Omega_{1}}=f$ for $Omega_{1}subsetOmega_{2}$. But it does not say anything about $f$, $f$ is still in $Omega_{1}$. So I do not understand why analytic continuation can extend the domain on which $f$ is analytic.

The book "Complex Analysis and Applications" by Hemant Kumar Pathak, has a chapter about analytic continuation.

As Jose suggested, it does not make sense to say $f=F$ on $Omega_{2}$, because $f$ is on $Omega_{1}$.

The book explains that if we have an analytic continuation of $f_{1}$ from $Omega_{1}$ into $Omega_{2}$ via $Omega_{1}capOmega_{2}$, then the aggregate value of $f_{1}$ in $Omega_{1}$ and $f_{2}$ in $Omega_{2}$ can be regarded as a single function $f(z)$ analytic in $D_{1}cup D_{2}$ such that $$f(z)=left{
begin{array}{ll}
f_{1}(z), zin D_{1}\
f_{2}(z), zin D_{2}
end{array}
right.$$

This actually clarifies things out. This is like what we did when we want to remove the singularity: if $f_{1}$ has a removable singularity at $z_{0}$, then we actually extend $f_{1}$ to $f$ by defining $$f(z)=f_{1}(z), zneq z_{0} text{and} f(z_{0})=lim_{zrightarrow z_{0}}f_{1}(z).$$

Thus, we are actually extending $f_{1}(z)$ to $f(z)$, not to $f_{2}(z)$. We sort of complete $f_{1}(z)$ into $Omega_{2}$ by defining $f(z)$.

I hope my explanation can help other people who study complex analysis and find analytic continuation confusing.

Feel free to add anythings more!

One Answer

Those theorems are not about extending analytic functions, in the sense that they are not about the possibility of extending such a function. What they say is that you can extend an analytic function in, at most a single way. So, they are about uniqueness of extensions, not about their existence.

To be more precise, they say that if $Omega_1$ and $Omega_2$ are domains, with $Omega_1subsetOmega_2$, and if $fcolonOmega_1longrightarrowBbb C$ is an analytic function, then there is at most an analytic function $FcolonOmega_2longrightarrowBbb C$ whose restriction to $Omega_1$ is $f$. But it is perfectly possible that there is none! That's the case if, for instance, $Omega_1=D(0,1)$, $Omega_2=Bbb C$ and $fcolonOmega_1longrightarrowBbb C$ is defined by $f(z)=frac1{z-2}$.

Answered by José Carlos Santos on January 29, 2021

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP