I'm looking for a proof of the analytic implicit function theorem (IFT). The only related proof I could find was the holomorphic inverse function theorem (by Henri Cartan). On Wikipedia, the analytic IFT is mentioned casually in the general article "Implicit function theorem", saying that "Similarly, if f is analytic inside U×V, then the same holds true for the explicit function g inside U. This generalization is called the analytic implicit function theorem." Mmmh, that's fast...
A sketch of the proof may be the following :
- use analytic continuation to transform f into a holomorphic function
- use the holomorphic inverse function theorem (Cartan) to prove a holomorphic IFT
- restriction : g is holomorphic on $\mathbb{C}$, therefore analytic on $\mathbb{R}$.
But it seems weird and I don't think it would work (I have no idea whether a so-called holomorphic IFT exists or not). What would be an efficient proof of the theorem ? Thanks a lot by advance.