Skip to main content

All Questions

17 questions with no upvoted or accepted answers
Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
8 votes
0 answers
178 views

Padé Approximants of Power Series with Natural Boundaries

Consider a power series $\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}c_{n}z^{n}$ for which $c_{n}\in\left\{ 0,1\right\}$ for all $n$. One can write this as: $$\varsigma_{V}\left(z\right)\overset{\textrm{def}}{=}\sum_{v\in V}...
MCS's user avatar
  • 1,284
6 votes
0 answers
200 views

Reference request: Automorphisms of $\mathbb C\{x,y\}$ which preserve the equation of the cusp, $x^3 - y^2$

In my research I encountered automorphisms of the ring of convergent power series $$\varphi: \mathbb C\{x,y\} \to \mathbb C\{x,y\},$$ which preserve $f = x^3 - y^2$, i.e. $\varphi(f) = f$. I'm ...
red_trumpet's user avatar
  • 1,286
6 votes
0 answers
219 views

Is the Taylor map continuous?

(Skip to the bolded theorem below for my question, if you'd like) Some context on asymptotic expansions and the Taylor map In the setting of irregular singularities of meromorphic connections on the ...
Brian Hepler's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
72 views

Asymptotics of a certain integral in singularity theory

Let $f:\mathbb{C}^2\to \mathbb{C}$ be an isolated plane curve singularity. Consider the versal deformation space $\mathbb{C}^\mu$ parameterizing deformations $f_\lambda$ for $\lambda \in \mathbb C^\mu$...
Nick Salter's user avatar
  • 2,830
4 votes
0 answers
86 views

Action of the monodromy on the cycle made of the real points

Let $f : \Bbb C^n \to \Bbb C$ be a polynomial function with real coefficients. Let $X_t = f^{-1}(t)$ denote the fiber above some $t \in \Bbb C$. Let assume that the set of real points of $X_t$, for $t ...
Lierre's user avatar
  • 1,044
3 votes
0 answers
324 views

Implicit function theorem for singularities

I am looking for an implicit function theorem which holds also on singular spaces, at least if the singularities are "mild". For example, let $0 = z^2 - x y + z w + w^2 + \epsilon w$ define a ...
Euler's little Phi's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
76 views

Equations needed to define a normal complex surface singularity

This questions is highly related with this other question of mine: Irreducible surface singularity that is not a local set-theoretical complete intersection I just thought that a different look at the ...
Paul's user avatar
  • 1,409
2 votes
0 answers
34 views

Smoothings over a real interval

I am asking if somebody knows if the following kind of objects are studied somewhere or if there is some kind of obvious obstruction for them to appear. Let $(X,0) \subset \mathbb{C}^n$ be a germ of ...
user131261's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
98 views

Is it obvious that the defining conditions to obtain a particular singularity are well-defined on the quotient space?

Let $~f:\mathbb{C}^2 \rightarrow \mathbb{C}$ be a holomorphic function vanishing at the origin, with the following properties: $$ f_{00}, ~f_{10}, ~f_{01}, ~f_{20}, ~f_{11} =0,~~f_{20} \neq 0 \...
Ritwik's user avatar
  • 3,245
1 vote
0 answers
42 views

Concerning the definition of a class of functions introduced by Nilsson

In the paper 'Some growth and ramification properties of certain integrals on algebraic manifolds' by Nilsson we find the following definitions: My question is how does one prove the remark "It ...
ResearchMath's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
116 views

Converse of transfer theorem : does asymptotic behaviour of coefficients describe the singularity?

I'm interested in Singularity Analysis after reading this Math.Stack post. In the "Analytic Combinatorics" book by P. Flajolet and R. Sedgewick, at p.390, the following transfer theorem (...
Desura's user avatar
  • 233
1 vote
0 answers
925 views

canonical divisor on singular curves with nodal point

What's the definition of canonical divisor(or whatever related concept) on singular curve with nodal point. More generally, what the definition of canonical divisor on a singular variety X, which is ...
xin fu's user avatar
  • 623
1 vote
0 answers
152 views

Is the normalized derivative of a holomorphic function Sobolev?

This question is a cross-post from MSE. it is also a special case of this question. Let $B=\{z\in \mathbb C \,|\,|z|\le 1\}$, and let $f:B \to \mathbb{C}$ be holomorphic on the interior $B^o$, and ...
Asaf Shachar's user avatar
  • 6,741
0 votes
0 answers
121 views

Is any singularity a subgerm of $(\mathbb{C}^n, 0)$?

I am studying singularity theory. I have often come across, in the literature, the sentence which says "let $(X,0) \subset (\mathbb{C}^n,0)$ be a singularity". Here a singularity is a ...
Math1016's user avatar
  • 369
0 votes
0 answers
74 views

When a strictly positive log pluriharmonic function $g$ is equal to the norm of holomorphic function?

Suppose $V$ is a local analytic variety (singular). Suppose $g$ a strictly positive log pluriharmonic function on $V$, i.e. $\log g$ is pluriharmonic. I wonder when $g=|f|^2$, where $f$ is a ...
xin fu's user avatar
  • 623
0 votes
0 answers
253 views

Singularity of inverse exponential integral function

The exponential integral function is defined by $$ Ei(z) = \int_{-\infty}^z dw \frac{e^w}{w} \,.$$ Away from the negative real axis the exponential integral function has a Taylor series about $z=0$: $$...
Samuel Crew's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
225 views

Generating function with essential singularities

I was recently introduced to analytic combinatorics, and found the method of removing poles astonishing. More precisely, I was reading the last chapter of the popular "generatingfunctionology", in ...
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230