- #1
Dustinsfl
- 2,281
- 5
I am trying to understand a problem in my book (for reference pr 167 Serge Lang Complex Analysis).
$$
f(z) = \frac{1}{z} + \sum_{n = 1}^{\infty}\frac{z}{z^2-n^2}
$$
Let R>0 (is this R representing the radius of convergence?) and let N>2R (where did this come from and why?).
Write $f(z) = g(z)+h(z)$ where
$$
g(z) = \frac{1}{z}+\sum_{n = 1}^{N}\frac{z}{z^2-n^2} \quad\text{and}\quad
h(z) = \sum_{N+1}^{\infty}\frac{z}{z^2-n^2}
$$
g is a rational function and is meromorphic on C (why are rational functions automatically meromorphic?).
We see that g has simple poles at the integers n such that $|n|\leq N$ (why are we looking at the absolute value of n?)
For $|z|<R$ we have the estimate
$$
\left|\frac{z}{z^2-n^2}\right|\leq\frac{R}{n^2-R^2}=\frac{1}{n^2}\frac{R}{1-\left(R/n)\right)^2}
$$
(\frac{R}{n^2-R^2} why is that?)
The denominator satisfies $1-\left(R/n\right)^2\geq 3/4$ for $n>N>2R$ (Why is this?).
$$
f(z) = \frac{1}{z} + \sum_{n = 1}^{\infty}\frac{z}{z^2-n^2}
$$
Let R>0 (is this R representing the radius of convergence?) and let N>2R (where did this come from and why?).
Write $f(z) = g(z)+h(z)$ where
$$
g(z) = \frac{1}{z}+\sum_{n = 1}^{N}\frac{z}{z^2-n^2} \quad\text{and}\quad
h(z) = \sum_{N+1}^{\infty}\frac{z}{z^2-n^2}
$$
g is a rational function and is meromorphic on C (why are rational functions automatically meromorphic?).
We see that g has simple poles at the integers n such that $|n|\leq N$ (why are we looking at the absolute value of n?)
For $|z|<R$ we have the estimate
$$
\left|\frac{z}{z^2-n^2}\right|\leq\frac{R}{n^2-R^2}=\frac{1}{n^2}\frac{R}{1-\left(R/n)\right)^2}
$$
(\frac{R}{n^2-R^2} why is that?)
The denominator satisfies $1-\left(R/n\right)^2\geq 3/4$ for $n>N>2R$ (Why is this?).
Last edited: