ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

The growth of entire functions of genus zero

116   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Tuyen Truong
 تاريخ النشر 2006
  مجال البحث
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

In this paper we shall consider the assymptotic growth of $|P_n(z)|^{1/k_n}$ where $P_n(z)$ is a sequence of entire functions of genus zero. Our results extend a result of J. Muller and A. Yavrian. We shall prove that if the sequence of entire functions has a geometric growth at each point in a set $E$ being non-thin at $infty$ then it has a geometric growth in $CC$ also. Moreover, if $E$ has some more properties, a similar result also holds for a more general kind of growth. Even in the case where $P_n$ are polynomials, our results are new in the sense that it does not require $k_nsucceq deg(P_n)$ as usually required.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

In this paper we shall consider the growth at infinity of a sequence $(P_n)$ of entire functions of bounded orders. Our results extend the results in cite{trong-tuyen2} for the growth of entire functions of genus zero. Given a sequence of entire func tions of bounded orders $P_n(z)$, we found a nearly optimal condition, given in terms of zeros of $P_n$, for which $(k_n)$ that we have begin{eqnarray*} limsup_{ntoinfty}|P_n(z)|^{1/k_n}leq 1 end{eqnarray*} for all $zin mathbb C$ (see Theorem ref{theo5}). Exploring the growth of a sequence of entire functions of bounded orders lead naturally to an extremal function which is similar to the Siciaks extremal function (See Section 6).
If $f$ is an entire function and $a$ is a complex number, $a$ is said to be an asymptotic value of $f$ if there exists a path $gamma$ from $0$ to infinity such that $f(z) - a$ tends to $0$ as $z$ tends to infinity along $gamma$. The Denjoy--Carleman- -Ahlfors Theorem asserts that if $f$ has $n$ distinct asymptotic values, then the rate of growth of $f$ is at least order $n/2$, mean type. A long-standing problem asks whether this conclusion holds for entire functions having $n$ distinct asymptotic (entire) functions, each of growth at most order $1/2$, minimal type. In this paper conditions on the function $f$ and associated asymptotic paths are obtained that are sufficient to guarantee that $f$ satisfies the conclusion of the Denjoy--Carleman--Ahlfors Theorem. In addition, for each positive integer $n$, an example is given of an entire function of order $n$ having $n$ distinct, prescribed asymptotic functions, each of order less than $1/2$.
We extend two theorems of Krein concerning entire functions of Cartwright class, and give applications for the Bernstein weighted approximation problem.
180 - XiaoHuang Huang 2021
In this paper, we study the uniqueness of the difference of meromorphic functions. We give a new proof of the following result: Let $f$ be a transcendental meromorphic function of hyper-order less than $1$, let $eta$ be a non-zero complex number, $ng eq1$, an integer, and let $a,b,c$ be three distinct periodic small functions with period $eta$. If $f$ and $Delta_{eta}^{n}f$ share $a,b,c$ CM, then $fequivDelta_{eta}^{n}f$, which using a different method from cite{gkzz}.
The sharp growth and distortion theorems are established for slice monogenic extensions of univalent functions on the unit disc $mathbb Dsubset mathbb C$ in the setting of Clifford algebras, based on a new convex combination identity. The analogous r esults are also valid in the quaternionic setting for slice regular functions and we can even prove the Koebe type one-quarter theorem in this case. Our growth and distortion theorems for slice regular (slice monogenic) extensions to higher dimensions of univalent holomorphic functions hold without extra geometric assumptions, in contrast to the setting of several complex variables in which the growth and distortion theorems fail in general and hold only for some subclasses with the starlike or convex assumption.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا