On the Completeness of the System $\{z^{\lambda_k}\}$ on Curves in the Complex Plane
A. F. LEONT'EV
Submitted 1958-01-01 | SovietRxiv: ru-195801.77910 | Translated from Russian

Abstract Generated abstract

The paper studies completeness of systems of powers \(z^{\lambda_k}\), with nonnegative integer exponents, on unbounded curves in the complex plane under weighted \(L_2\) approximation. Extending earlier polynomial completeness results, it gives sufficient conditions in terms of the density of the omitted exponents, angular openings of the complementary domains, and growth of the weight function. The proof combines the Cauchy integral transform with infinite order differential operators to show that any weighted \(L_2\) function orthogonal to all powers in the system must vanish almost everywhere. The paper also derives a corresponding weighted uniform approximation result and presents examples showing that the strict angular hypotheses are essential.

Full Text

MATHEMATICS

A. F. LEONT'EV

ON THE COMPLETENESS OF THE SYSTEM \(\{z^{\lambda_k}\}\) ON CURVES IN THE COMPLEX PLANE

(Presented by Academician I. N. Vekua, 10 IV 1958)

Let \(L\) be an unbounded curve with a finite number of branches going off to infinity (\(L\) may consist of several (a finite number of) connected pieces), having no loops and dividing the plane into a finite number of simply connected infinite domains \(G_1, G_2,\ldots,G_m\). Let \(L\) be rectifiable in every finite part of the plane and, if \(\sigma(z)\) is the length of the arc of a connected piece, counted from some point of the piece to its point with affix \(z\) (far from the initial point we regard \(\sigma(z)\) as a single-valued function of \(|z|\)), then \(d\sigma(z)\le M\,d|z|\), where \(M\) is a constant. Suppose that on \(L\) a continuous real function \(p(z)\) is given such that, for large \(|z|\),

\[ p(z)\ge p_0(|z|)=p_0(a)+\int_a^{|z|}\frac{\omega(t)}{t}\,dt, \]

where \(\omega(t)\ge 0\) and \(\omega(t)\uparrow +\infty\). Assume, finally, that each domain \(G_i\) \((i=1,2,\ldots,m)\) contains within itself an angle \(\Delta_i\) of opening \(\pi/\alpha_i\), \(1/2<\alpha_i<\infty\) (with vertex not necessarily at the origin).

M. M. Dzhrbashian \((^{1,2})\) showed that if under these conditions

\[ \int^\infty \frac{p_0(r)\,dr}{r^{1+\omega}}=+\infty,\qquad \omega=(\alpha_1,\alpha_2,\ldots,\alpha_m), \]

then on \(L\), in the class \(L_2[p(z)]\) of functions \(f(z)\) defined and measurable on \(L\) and such that

\[ \int_L e^{-p(z)}|f(z)|^2\,d\sigma<\infty, \tag{1} \]

the system of polynomials is complete in the sense that

\[ \inf_{\{Q\}}\int_L e^{-p(z)}|f(z)-Q(z)|^2\,d\sigma=0, \tag{2} \]

where \(Q(z)\) are arbitrary polynomials.

In the present note we are concerned with deriving conditions under which (2) holds for functions \(f(z)\) from \(L_2[p(z)]\), if in (2) the functions \(Q(z)\) are not arbitrary polynomials, but arbitrary finite linear combinations of functions of the system \(\{z^{\lambda_k}\}\), where \(\lambda_1,\lambda_2,\ldots\) are given whole nonnegative numbers. In short, we are concerned with completeness, in the indicated sense, of the system \(\{z^{\lambda_k}\}\).

M. M. Dzhrbashian and I. O. Khachatryan \((^6)\) considered this question in the case when \(L\) is a pair of rays, \(\arg z=\pm \pi/2\alpha\), and the \(\lambda_n\) are not necessarily integers.

Theorem. Let \(\{\mu_n\}\) be the sequence of all positive integers not included in \(\{\lambda_k\}\), and let

\[ \lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{n}{\mu_n}=\sigma<1 . \tag{3} \]

Suppose further that each angle \(\Delta_i\) \((i=1,2,\ldots,m)\) has aperture \(\pi/\alpha_i>2\pi\sigma\), and one of the domains \(G_i\), for example \(G_1\), contains a curvilinear angle \(P\) (far from the origin the angles \(P\) and \(\Delta_1\) coincide) with vertex at the origin (the origin, in general, does not belong to the domain \(G_1\)), intersecting every circle \(|z|=r\), \(b<r<\infty\), in an arc of length \(>2\pi\sigma r\) (in this sense the aperture of the angle \(P\) is greater than \(2\pi\sigma\)). If, for some \(\varepsilon_0>0\),

\[ \int^\infty \frac{p_0(r)\,dr}{r^{1+\omega_1+\varepsilon_0}}=\infty,\qquad \omega_1=\max(\beta_1,\beta_2,\ldots,\beta_m),\qquad \frac{\pi}{\beta_j}=\frac{\pi}{\alpha_j}-2\pi\sigma, \tag{4} \]

then on \(L\) the system \(\{z^{\lambda_k}\}\) is complete in the sense of (2) (\(Q(z)\) being combinations of powers from \(\{z^{\lambda_k}\}\) (in the class \(L_2[p(z)]\)).

The proof of the theorem is based on the simultaneous application of the method of the Cauchy integral transform, used by Dzhrbashian in \((^2)\), and the method of using differential equations of infinite order.

To prove the theorem, it is necessary to prove that from the conditions

\[ \int_L e^{-p(z)}\overline{f(z)}z^{\lambda_k}\,d\sigma=0,\qquad f(z)\in L_2[p(z)] \quad (k=1,2,\ldots) \tag{5} \]

it follows that \(f(z)=0\) almost everywhere on \(L\).

Thus, suppose that (5) holds. As in \((^2)\), consider the function

\[ F(w)=\frac{1}{2\pi i}\int_L \frac{e^{-p(z)}\overline{f(z)}\,d\sigma}{z-w}. \tag{6} \]

In each domain \(G_j\) it represents some analytic function \(F_j(w)\). Since

\[ \frac{1}{z-w}=-\frac{1}{w}-\frac{z}{w^2}-\ldots-\frac{z^{\,n-1}}{w^n}-\frac{z^n}{w^n(z-w)}, \]

then, by virtue of (5), in \(G_j\)

\[ F_j(w)= \sum_{\mu_k<n}\frac{a_k}{w^{\mu_k+1}} -\frac{1}{w^n}\frac{1}{2\pi i}\int_L \frac{e^{-p(z)}\overline{f(z)}\,z^n\,d\sigma}{z-w} =\varphi_n(w)+r_n(w). \tag{7} \]

Let \(w=e^t\). In the \(t\)-plane the function \(F_j(e^t)\) is regular, in particular, in the domain \(D_j\) (it is obtained from the angle \(\Delta_j\)), which for large \(\operatorname{Re}(t)\) asymptotically approaches a horizontal strip of width \(\pi/\alpha_j>2\pi\sigma\). It should be noted that \(F_1(e^t)\) is regular in the domain \(Q\) (it is obtained from the angle \(P\)), which contains an entire curvilinear strip of width (in the vertical direction) \(>2\pi\sigma\). Put

\[ \prod_{n=1}^{\infty}\left(1-\frac{t^2}{(\mu_n+1)^2}\right) =\sum_0^\infty c_n t^n,\qquad M(y)=\sum_0^\infty c_n y^{(n)}(t). \]

By virtue of (3), the operator \(M(y)\) has the properties \((^3)\):

1) The operator \(M(y)\) is defined at every point \(t_0\) which is the center of a vertical segment of length \(>2\pi\sigma\), on which the function \(y(t)\) is regular; moreover, if \(y(t)\) is regular in the rectangle \(R:\ |\operatorname{Re}(t-t_0)|\leqslant \varepsilon\),

\(|\operatorname{Im}(t-t_0)| \leqslant \pi \omega+\varepsilon\), then there exists a constant \(N(\varepsilon)\), independent of \(y(t)\), such that at the point \(t_0\)

\[ |M(y)|<N(\varepsilon)\max_{t\in R}|y(t)|. \tag{8} \]

2) \(M\left(e^{\pm(\mu_n+1)t}\right)=0\), whence \(M[\varphi_n(e^t)]=0\).

3) If \(y(t)\) is regular in the rectangle \(R\) and \(M(y)=0\), then in a neighborhood of the point \(t_0\) the function \(y(t)\) is represented by the absolutely convergent series

\[ y(t)=\sum c_{\pm n}e^{\pm(\mu_n+1)t}; \]

under the additional assumption that \(y(t)\) is regular in a domain of type \(D_j\), it follows from this that \(y(t)\) is regular in some half-plane \(\operatorname{Re}(t)>\alpha\), and under the assumption that \(y(t)\) is regular in a domain of type \(Q\), it is regular in the whole plane.

Let \(E_j\) be the half-strip \(\operatorname{Re}(t)\geqslant\alpha,\ |\operatorname{Im}(t-t_0)|<\pi/2(\omega_1+\varepsilon_0)\) (the quantities \(\omega_1\) and \(\varepsilon_0\) occur in (4)), contained in \(D_j\). Since for large \(\operatorname{Re}(t)\) the domain \(D_j\) approaches a strip of width \(\pi/\alpha_j\), the distance from the boundary of \(E_j\) to the boundary of \(D_j\) (in the limit as \(\operatorname{Re}(t)\to+\infty\), equal to

\[ \frac{\pi}{2\alpha_j}-\frac{\pi}{2(\omega_1+\varepsilon_0)}>\pi\varepsilon \]

) may be regarded throughout as \(>\pi\omega+\varepsilon,\ \varepsilon>0\). Taking (7) into account, in \(E_j\) we obtain

\[ \Phi_j(t)\equiv M[F_j(e^t)]=M[r_n(e^t)], \]

whence, by virtue of (8), in \(E_j\)

\[ |\Phi_j(t)|<N(\varepsilon)\max |r_n(e^\xi)|,\qquad \xi\in D_j;\qquad \operatorname{Re}(t)-\varepsilon\leqslant \operatorname{Re}(\xi)\leqslant \operatorname{Re}(t)+\varepsilon. \]

Passing again from \(t\) to \(w\) and putting \(\Phi_j(t)=\psi_j(w)\), we obtain that in a certain angle \(P_j\) of opening \(\dfrac{\pi}{\omega_1+\varepsilon_0}\)

\[ |\psi_j(w)|<N(\varepsilon)\max |r_n(\eta)|,\qquad \eta\in\Delta_j;\qquad \frac{|w|}{a}\leqslant|\eta|\leqslant a|w|,\quad a=e^\varepsilon. \]

From this point, relying on (4), we can repeat verbatim the arguments on pp. 362–363 of the article \((^2)\) and become convinced that \(\psi_j(w)\equiv0\). Thus, \(M[F_j(e^t)]\equiv0\). Hence the function \(F_j(e^t)\) is regular in some half-plane \(\operatorname{Re}(t)>\alpha\) and is represented there by a series in the functions \(e^{\pm(\mu_n+1)t}\), while the function \(F_j(w)\) is regular for \(|w|>\mathrm{const}\) and is represented by a Laurent series in powers \(w^{\pm(\mu_n+1)}\). Since \(F_j(w)\) is bounded (this is clear from (6)) in an angle of opening \(>2\pi\sigma\) (for this angle one may take any angle internal to \(\Delta_j\) with sides parallel to the sides of \(\Delta_j\)), it follows, by virtue of (3), that the Laurent series for \(F_j(w)\) contains no positive powers and, consequently, the function \(F_j(w)\) is regular at \(\infty\). As for the function \(F_1(w)\), since \(F_1(e^t)\) is regular in \(Q\) and, consequently, is an entire function, it is regular everywhere for \(|w|>0\). We shall verify that \(F_1(w)=F_2(w)=\cdots=F_m(w)\).

Let \(\mu(z)\) be the angle formed by the tangent to \(L\) at the point \(z\) with the positive direction of the real axis. We have

\[ F(w)=\frac{1}{2\pi i}\int_L \frac{e^{-p(z)}\overline{f(z)}e^{-i\mu(z)}\,dz}{z-w}. \]

If \(\Gamma\) is a part of \(L\) to one side of which the domain \(G_k\) adjoins, and to the other side the domain \(G_s\), then, by a known property of the Cauchy-type integral, almost everywhere on \(\Gamma\)

\[ e^{-p(z)}\overline{f(z)}e^{-i\mu(z)}=\pm(F_k(z)-F_s(z)), \]

whence

\[ \overline{f(z)}=\pm(F_k(z)-F_s(z))e^{p(z)}e^{i\mu(z)}. \tag{9} \]

If it were the case that \(F_k(w)-F_s(w)\ne 0\) and, consequently, for large \(|w|\)

\[ F_k(w)-F_s(w)=\frac{\mathrm{const}}{w^p}, \]

then a function \(f(z)\) of the form (9) would not satisfy condition (1). Hence \(F_1(w)=\ldots=F_m(w)\) and, by virtue of (4), \(f(z)=0\) almost everywhere on \(L\), as was required to prove.

In \((^2)\), from completeness in the sense of (2), there is derived as a consequence (under the additional assumption that \(L\) consists of one connected piece) the completeness of polynomials on \(L\) in the sense

\[ \inf_{\{Q\}}\max_{z\in L} e^{-p(z)}|f(z)-Q(z)|=0 \tag{10} \]

in the class \(C[p(z)]\) of functions \(f(z)\) continuous on \(L\) with the property \(e^{-p(z)}f(z)\to 0\) as \(z\to\infty\), \(z\in L\). In exactly the same way, under the conditions of our theorem one can derive the completeness of \(\{1,z^{\lambda_k}\}\) on \(L\) in the class \(C[p(z)]\) in the sense of (10), where \(Q(z)\) denotes all possible linear combinations of the functions from \(\{1,z^{\lambda_k}\}\).

The completeness of the system \(\{1,z^{\lambda_k}\}\) in this sense in the cases when \(L\) is either the whole axis \((-\infty,\infty)\), or the half-axis \((0,+\infty)\) (in the latter case the \(\lambda_k\) are not necessarily integers) was considered by S. Mandelbrojt \((^5)\). M. M. Dzhrbashyan \((^4)\) considered the same question in the case when \(p(z)=|z|^p\) and \(L\) is topologically equivalent to the axis \((-\infty,\infty)\) and is situated between two angles of definite openings with vertices at the points \(0\) and \(\alpha>0\).

In conclusion we give an example indicating the essential nature in the theorem of the requirement that the domain \(G_j\) contain an angle of opening precisely \(>2\pi\sigma\), and the domain \(G_1\) a curvilinear angle of opening \(>2\pi\sigma\) with vertex precisely at the origin. Let \(\mu_k=kp+p-1\) \((k=1,2,\ldots)\), where \(p\) is an integer \(\ge 2\). Then \(\sigma=\frac1p\), and \(\lambda_k\) has the form \(mp+j\), \(j=0,1,\ldots,p-2\).

It is not difficult to see that if on the rays \(\arg z=\frac{2\pi}{p}s\) \((s=0,1,\ldots,p-1)\) one takes points \(\alpha_s\) at equal distances from the origin, then the function \(z^{p-1}\) cannot be approximated simultaneously at all the points \(\alpha_s\) \((s=0,1,\ldots,p-1)\), with arbitrary accuracy, by linear combinations of the functions \(z^{\lambda_k}\) with the indicated \(\lambda_k\). Hence it follows that:

1) The theorem is not true if, as \(L\), one takes a system (connected with one another in some way) of rays \(\arg z=\frac{2\pi}{p}s\), \(|z|\ge r_s\), with arbitrary \(r_s\). This shows the essential nature of the requirement that the angle \(\Delta_j\) have opening \(>2\pi\sigma\), since in our case \(\Delta_j\) has opening \(\frac{2\pi}{p}=2\pi\sigma\).

2) The theorem is not true if \(L\) consists of the ray \(\arg z=0\) and an arc of the circle \(|z|=r\), \(0\le \arg z\le \frac{2\pi}{p}(p-1)\). This shows the essential nature of the requirement that \(G_1\) contain an angle \(P\) of opening \(>2\pi\sigma\), since in our case the angle \(P\) has opening \(2\pi\sigma\).

Moscow Power Engineering
Institute

Received
7 IV 1958

CITED LITERATURE

\(^1\) M. M. Dzhrbashyan, Dokl. AN ArmSSR, 7, No. 2 (1947).
\(^2\) M. M. Dzhrbashyan, Matem. sborn., 36 (78), 3 (1955).
\(^3\) A. F. Leont’ev, Tr. Matem. inst. im. V. A. Steklova AN SSSR, 39 (1951).
\(^4\) M. M. Dzhrbashyan, DAN, 67, No. 1 (1949).
\(^5\) S. Mandelbrojt, Contiguous series, regularization of sequences, applications, 1955.
\(^6\) M. M. Dzhrbashyan, I. O. Khachatryan, DAN, 110, No. 6 (1956).

Submission history

On the Completeness of the System $\{z^{\lambda_k}\}$ on Curves in the Complex Plane