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Complex analysis, holomorphic functions, automorphic group actions and forms, pseudoconvexity, complex geometry, analytic spaces, analytic sheaves.
3
votes
0
answers
119
views
Basic obstruction to anything like holomophic symmetric functions of infinitely many variables?
The totality of all holomorphic functions on the unit disk forms some sort of infinite-dimensional complex manifold, where the coefficients of the Taylor expansion might serve as coordinates for the s …
2
votes
0
answers
69
views
Zero sets of integral power series that converge on disks
Fix a radius $r \leq 1$. I'm interested in any necessary conditions, or any sufficient conditions, for a subset $S$ of $B(0,r)$, the origin-centered open disk of radius $r$, for $S$ to be the set of …
5
votes
1
answer
837
views
Hurwitz's automorphisms theorem with deformations
Hurwitz's automorphisms theorem bounds the order of the automorphism group of a negatively curved Riemann in terms of the genus.
Now suppose a finite group $G$ acts faithfully on a Riemann surface …
3
votes
1
answer
243
views
$\sum \frac{n^2-1}{(n^2+1)^2}=\frac{1}{2}(1-\frac{\pi^2}{\sinh(\pi)^2})$
The following series evaluation
$\sum \frac{n^2-1}{(n^2+1)^2}=\frac{1}{2}(1-\frac{\pi^2}{\sinh(\pi)^2})$
seems attractive to me, and has a proof related to the evaluation of $\zeta(2)$.
Does this i …
3
votes
0
answers
239
views
Cauchy integral theorem and natural boundaries
Suppose one has function $f(z)$ analytic in the unit disk. Suppose closed loop $L$ lies in the disk except for one point $P$ on the boundary. Then the Cauchy integral theorem generally does not appl …
7
votes
2
answers
694
views
What monsters does the "growth condition" required of holomorphic modular functions bar?
Even though the title of this question pretty much captures what I'd like to know, I'll add
two side questions:
1) Is it difficult to get a handle on the totality of functions that arise if one drop …
6
votes
1
answer
535
views
The identity $\sum_n \ln(n) x^n = \sum_p ln(p)(\sum_k\frac{x^{p^k}}{1-x^{p^k}})$
As in the famous Euler product identity, the primes occur on
only one side of the following:
$\sum_n \ln(n) x^n = \sum_p ln(p)(\sum_k\frac{x^{p^k}}{1-x^{p^k}})\ .$
My basic question: Does this ident …
9
votes
1
answer
957
views
Non-standard enlargements, $\zeta(s)$ and analytic continuation
Consider an extension of the Riemann zeta function $\zeta(s)$ where $s$ now runs over a non-standard enlargement of the complex plane.
Observe that if $s=\sigma + it$ with $\sigma>1$ real and finit …
3
votes
3
answers
1k
views
Pedagogical question concerning $\Gamma(z)$
Pedagogically speaking, I see two problems with defining
$\Gamma(z)$ (at least for real $z$) by the limit
$$\Gamma(z)=\lim_{m\to\infty}\frac{m! m^z}{\prod_{i=0}^m (z+i)}$$
as compared with the formula …
5
votes
0
answers
573
views
Studying primes via the gamma function alone: $(x+1)\prod_n \Gamma(\frac{x}{n}+1)^{\mu(n)}$
Various questions on MO concerning the "surprise" occurrence of the gamma function in the functional equation of the Riemann zeta function got me wondering whether the Gamma function alone suffice for …
8
votes
2
answers
466
views
Analytic functions with isotopic x-rays
Following Arias-De-Reyna, the x-ray of an analytic function $f$ means markings on the complex plane, with one color showing the real locus of $f$ and another color the purely imaginary locus.
Suppo …
49
votes
4
answers
6k
views
If the Riemann Hypothesis fails, must it fail infinitely often?
That is must there either be no non-trivial zeros off the critical line or
infinitely many?
I'm sure that no one believes otherwise, but I've never seen a theorem in the
literature addressing this. …