Abstract Generated abstract
This paper studies when classes of infinitely differentiable functions, analytic in an angle on the complex plane or on the Riemann surface of the logarithm, are nontrivial under prescribed uniform bounds on all derivatives. It gives necessary and sufficient conditions on the bounding sequence for angles of opening parameter at most one, for larger angles in terms of an integral involving the associated function T(r), and for corresponding boundary classes. The argument connects these nontriviality criteria with Watson type problems, Laplace transforms, and classical quasianalyticity, showing in particular that quasianalyticity at the vertex for one angle is equivalent to triviality of a related class in an angle larger by two units.
Full Text
UDC 517.531 + 517.51
MATHEMATICS
B. I. Korenblum
NONTRIVIALITY CONDITIONS FOR CERTAIN CLASSES OF FUNCTIONS ANALYTIC IN AN ANGLE, AND QUASIANALYTICITY PROBLEMS
(Presented by Academician A. Yu. Ishlinskii, June 2, 1965)
1°. Let \(G\) be a connected set of points of the complex plane or, more generally, of some Riemann surface, and let \(\{A_0=1, A_1, A_2,\ldots\}\) be a given sequence of nonnegative numbers (some of which may be equal to \(+\infty\)). We shall denote by \(D\{G; A_n\}\) the class of functions \(f(z)\) \((z\in G)\), infinitely differentiable on \(G\), for which
\[ \sup_{z\in G} |f^{(n)}(z)| \leq C A_n \quad (n=0,1,2,\ldots) \tag{1} \]
(the constant \(C\) depends on \(f\)). Obviously, the functions \(f(z)\equiv \mathrm{const}\) belong to any class \(D\{G; A_n\}\); if, apart from them, the given class contains not a single function, we shall call it trivial. We pose the following problem:
A. Given a set \(G\); find necessary and sufficient conditions which the sequence \(\{A_n\}_0^\infty\) must satisfy in order that the class \(D\{G; A_n\}\) be nontrivial.
As an example, we point out that if \(G\) is the entire complex plane \(K\) (without the point at infinity), then any class \(D\{K; A_n\}\) is trivial (Liouville’s theorem); an analogous result holds when \(G\) is the Riemann surface of the function \(\log z\). At the other extreme, when \(G\) is a bounded set, the necessary and sufficient condition for nontriviality of the class \(D\{G; A_n\}\) is \(A_1>0\).
In the present paper, problem A is solved for the case in which \(G\) is an angle in the complex plane or, more generally, on the Riemann surface of the function \(\log z\). In doing so, a connection is revealed between problem A and the classical problem of quasianalyticity, and with an analogous problem in the complex domain.
2°. Definitions.
1) \(I_\alpha\) \((0\leq \alpha<\infty)\) denotes the angle on the Riemann surface of the function \(\log z\) defined by the inequalities \(0\leq |z|<\infty\), \(-\pi\alpha/2\leq \arg z\leq \pi\alpha/2\) (for \(\alpha<2\), instead of the Riemann surface one may consider the ordinary complex plane); \(\gamma_\alpha\) denotes the boundary of \(I_\alpha\). Thus \(I_0=\gamma_0=[0,\infty]\), and \(\gamma_1\) is the imaginary axis.
2) The classes \(D\{I_\alpha; A_n\}\) are denoted by \(D_\alpha\{A_n\}\) \((0\leq \alpha<\infty)\); the classes \(D\{\gamma_\alpha; A_n\}\) are denoted by \(\widetilde D_\alpha\{A_n\}\) \((0<\alpha\leq 1)\).
3) The class \(D_\alpha\{A_n\}\) \((0\leq \alpha<\infty)\) is called quasianalytic at the point \(0\) if there does not exist a function \(f(z)\not\equiv 0\) belonging to this class and such that \(f^{(n)}(0)=0\) \((n=0,1,\ldots)\).
Theorem 1. Let \(0\leq \alpha\leq 1\). For the nontriviality of the class \(D_\alpha\{A_n\}\) it is necessary and sufficient that
\[ \inf_{n>0}\left(n^{1-\alpha} A_n^{1/n}\right)>0. \tag{2} \]
This same condition is necessary and sufficient also for the nontriviality of the class \(\widetilde D_\alpha\{A_n\}\).
Theorem 2. Let \(\alpha>1\). For the nontriviality of the class \(D_\alpha\{A_n\}\) it is necessary and sufficient that
\[ \int^\infty r^{-\alpha/(\alpha-1)}\log T(r)\,dr<\infty, \tag{3} \]
where \(T(r)=\sup_{n>0}(r^n/A_n)\).
Theorem 3. In order that the class \(D_\alpha\{A_n\}\) \((0\leq \alpha<\infty)\) be quasi-analytic at the point \(0\), it is necessary and sufficient that the class \(D_{\alpha+2}\{A_n\}\) be trivial, i.e. (by virtue of Theorem 2) that
\[ \int^\infty r^{-(\alpha+2)/(\alpha+1)}\log T(r)\,dr=\infty. \tag{4} \]
Remarks.
1) As is known \(((1),\) p. 55), condition (3) is equivalent to the inequality
\[ \sum^\infty \beta_n^{-1/(\alpha-1)}<\infty, \]
and condition (4) is equivalent to the equality
\[ \sum^\infty \beta_n^{-1/(\alpha+1)}=\infty,\qquad \text{where }\ \beta_n=\inf_{k\geq n} A_k^{1/k}. \]
2) For \(\alpha>1\) condition (2) remains necessary for the nontriviality of the class \(D_\alpha\{A_n\}\), but ceases to be sufficient.
3) For \(\alpha=0\) Theorem 3 gives the known classical condition of quasi-analyticity on a line. For \(\alpha=1\) we obtain the condition of quasi-analyticity in a half-plane, established earlier \((^2)\)*.
4) For \(\alpha=1\) and \(\alpha=0\) Theorem 1 is essentially known, since it follows easily from the more precise results of A. N. Kolmogorov \((^3)\) and A. Gorny \((^4)\), who established inequalities for upper bounds of successive derivatives of a function on an axis and a half-axis.
\(3^\circ\). We proceed to the proof of Theorem 1. Let \(0<\alpha\leq 1\) and
\[ \inf_{n>0}\left(n^{1-\alpha}A_n^{1/n}\right)=0. \tag{5} \]
We shall show that the class \(D_\alpha\{A_n\}\) is trivial. Obviously, we may assume that the infimum in (5) is not attained, i.e. that \(A_n>0\), \((n>0)\).
Lemma. Under condition (5) there exists a function \(F(z)\), analytic inside the angle \(K\setminus I_\alpha\) (the complement of \(I_\alpha\) to \(K\)) and continuous on its boundary, as well as a sequence of positive numbers \(\{B_n\}_0^\infty\), such that
\[ F(0)=1,\qquad |F(z)|\leq B_n|z|^{-n}\quad (z\in K\setminus I_\alpha;\ n=0,1,\ldots), \tag{6} \]
\[ \inf_{n>0}\left[\frac1n(A_nB_n)^{1/n}\right]=0. \tag{7} \]
Proof of the lemma. From the classical Watson problem it follows \(((^1),\) pp. 55—56) that, for the possibility of constructing a function \(F(z)\) satisfying in the angle \(K\setminus I_\alpha\) the inequalities (6), it is sufficient that the numbers \(B_n\) satisfy the conditions
\[ B_1\leq B_2^{1/2}\leq B_3^{1/3}\leq\cdots;\qquad \sum_{n=1}^\infty B_n^{-1/n(2-\alpha)}<\infty. \]
We shall show that it is possible to satisfy simultaneously these conditions and condition (7). By virtue of (5), one can indicate a sequence of indices
\(n_0=0<n_1<n_2<\cdots\) such that
\(A_{n_k}\leq [k^3(2-\alpha)n_k^{1-\alpha}]^{-n_k}\) \((k=1,2,\ldots)\).
Put \(B_n=(k^2n_k)^{n(2-\alpha)}\) \((n_{k-1}<n\leq n_k;\ k=1,2,\ldots)\).
* In paper \((^2)\) the problem of quasi-analyticity for a disk is solved; it is not difficult, however, to show that for a half-plane the conditions of quasi-analyticity are the same as for a disk.
Obviously,
\[ \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} B_n^{-1/n(2-\alpha)} = \sum_{k=1}^{\infty}\sum_{n=n_{k-1}+1}^{n_k}\frac{1}{k^2 n_k} < \sum_{k=1}^{\infty}\frac{1}{k^2}<\infty . \]
On the other hand,
\[ \frac{1}{n_k}(A_{n_k}B_{n_k})^{1/n_k}\le k^{-(2-\alpha)}\to 0. \]
The lemma is proved.
Now let \(f(z)\in D_\alpha\{A_n\}\) \((0<\alpha\le 1)\). Consider the integral
\[ \int_{\gamma_\alpha}\frac{F(\varepsilon \zeta)f(\zeta)\,d\zeta}{(\zeta-z)^2} \qquad (\varepsilon>0), \]
where \(z\) is an interior point of \(I_\alpha\), and the boundary \(\gamma_\alpha\) is traversed in the positive direction. Since
\[ f(\zeta)=f(0)+f'(0)\zeta+\cdots+ \frac{f^{(n-1)}(0)}{(n-1)!}\zeta^{n-1}+R_n(\zeta), \]
\[ |R_n(\zeta)|\le \frac{C A_n}{n!}|\zeta|^n \qquad (\zeta\in I_\alpha), \]
it follows that
\[ \left| \int_{\gamma_\alpha}\frac{F(\varepsilon\zeta)f(\zeta)\,d\zeta}{(\zeta-z)^2} \right| = \left| \int_{\gamma_\alpha}\frac{F(\varepsilon\zeta)R_n(\zeta)\,d\zeta}{(\zeta-z)^2} \right| \le \frac{C A_nB_n}{\varepsilon^n n!} \int_{\gamma_\alpha}\frac{|d\zeta|}{|\zeta-z|^2}, \]
because integrals of the form
\[ \int_{\gamma_\alpha}\frac{F(\varepsilon\zeta)p(\zeta)\,d\zeta}{(\zeta-z)^2}, \]
where \(p(\zeta)\) is an arbitrary polynomial, are equal to zero. Taking the infimum over \(n\) and using (7), we obtain
\[ \left| \int_{\gamma_\alpha}\frac{F(\varepsilon\zeta)f(\zeta)\,d\zeta}{(\zeta-z)^2} \right| \le C\int_{\gamma_\alpha}\frac{|d\zeta|}{|\zeta-z|^2} \inf_{n>0}\left( \frac{1}{\varepsilon}\sqrt[n]{\frac{A_nB_n}{n!}} \right)^n =0. \]
Passing to the limit as \(\varepsilon\to 0\), we find
\[ \int_{\gamma_\alpha}\frac{f(\zeta)\,d\zeta}{(\zeta-z)^2}=0 \quad \text{or} \quad f'(z)=0 \qquad (z\in I_\alpha). \]
With a slight modification of this argument, one can also cover the case \(\alpha=0\).
Thus, the necessity of condition (3) is proved. Its sufficiency follows from the fact that for \(0\le \alpha\le 1\) there exist functions \(g(z)\) such that
\[ \sup_{z\in I_\alpha}|g^{(n)}(z)|\le Ca^n/n^{n(1-\alpha)} \qquad (n=0,1,2,\ldots), \tag{8} \]
where \(C,a\) are certain constants. Obviously, \(g(\varepsilon z)\), for sufficiently small \(\varepsilon>0\), will belong to the class \(D_\alpha\{A_n\}\), if inequality (2) is satisfied. An example of such a function may be the Mittag-Leffler function ([5], p. 265)
\[ E_{2-\alpha}(-z)= \sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\frac{(-1)^n z^n}{\Gamma[1+(2-\alpha)n]}. \]
This is an entire function of order \((2-\alpha)^{-1}\), bounded in the angle \(I_\alpha\). In an additional angle \(K\setminus I_\alpha\) it satisfies the estimate
\[ \left| E_{2-\alpha}(-z)- \frac{1}{2-\alpha}e^{(-z)^{1/(2-\alpha)}} \right| < \frac{M}{|z|}. \]
Using these properties, it is easy to prove, by applying Cauchy’s integral over a circle of suitable radius to estimate derivatives, that \(E_{2-\alpha}(-z)\) satisfies inequalities (8).
The second assertion of Theorem 1 is easily reduced to the first. For this purpose one considers the Cauchy-type integral
\[ \int_{\gamma_\alpha}\frac{f(\zeta)\,d\zeta}{(\zeta-z)^2} \]
separately in the domain \(I_\alpha-\gamma_\alpha\) and in the domain \(K\setminus I_\alpha\).
4°. To prove Theorems 2 and 3, suppose that \(f(z)\in D_{\alpha}\{A_n\}\), \(0\leq \alpha<\infty\), and consider the Laplace transform of the function \(f(z)=g(re^{i\varphi})\), \((l_{\varphi}\) is the ray \(\varphi=\mathrm{const},\ 0\leq r<\infty)\):
\[ F(\zeta)=F(\rho e^{i\theta}) =\int_{l_\varphi} f(z)e^{-z\zeta}\,dz =e^{i\varphi}\int_{0}^{\infty} f(re^{i\varphi})e^{-r\rho e^{i(\varphi+\theta)}}\,dr . \tag{9} \]
Obviously, for each fixed \(\varphi\) \((-\alpha\pi/2\leq \varphi\leq \alpha\pi/2)\), this integral converges in the angle
\(-\pi/2-\varphi<\theta<\pi/2-\varphi,\ 0<\rho<\infty\), of the Riemann surface of the function \(\log \zeta\). Integrating (9) by parts, we obtain
\[ |F(\zeta)|\leq \frac{CA_0}{\rho\cos(\varphi+\theta)}; \quad \left|F(\zeta)-\frac{f(0)}{\zeta}\right| \leq \frac{CA_1}{\rho^2\cos(\varphi+\theta)}; \ldots \]
\[ \ldots;\quad \left|F(\zeta)-\frac{f(0)}{\zeta}-\ldots-\frac{f^{(n-1)}(0)}{\zeta^n}\right| \leq \frac{CA_n}{\rho^{n+1}\cos(\varphi+\theta)} . \]
Denoting by \(P_\varphi\) the half-plane on the Riemann surface of the function \(\log\zeta\), defined by the inequalities
\(-\pi/2-\varphi<\theta<\pi/2-\varphi,\ \rho\cos(\varphi+\theta)\geq 1\), we obtain
\[ |F(\zeta)|\leq CA_0;\quad \left|F(\zeta)-\frac{f(0)}{\zeta}\right| \leq \frac{CA_1}{\rho};\ldots \]
\[ \ldots;\quad \left|F(\zeta)-\frac{f(0)}{\zeta}-\ldots-\frac{f^{(n-1)}(0)}{\zeta^n}\right| \leq \frac{CA_n}{\rho^n}\quad (\zeta\in P_\varphi). \tag{10} \]
Rotating the line \(l_\varphi\) in (9), we find, by virtue of the analyticity of \(f(z)\), that \(F(\zeta)\) can be analytically continued to the angle
\(-(\alpha+1)\pi/2<\theta<(\alpha+1)\pi/2\), and in the domain
\[
S_\alpha=\bigcup_{|\varphi|\leq \alpha\pi/2} P_\varphi
\]
the estimates (10) are preserved.
It is now easy to prove the necessity in Theorem 2 and the sufficiency in Theorem 3. Indeed, if \(f(0)=f'(0)=\ldots=0\), then \(F(\zeta)\), by (10), satisfies the conditions of Watson’s problem in the domain \(S_\alpha\). It is easy to show that the conditions for the solvability of Watson’s problem for the domain \(S_\alpha\) and for the angle \(I_{\alpha+1}\) are the same; consequently, when condition (4) is fulfilled, one must have \(F(\zeta)\equiv 0,\ f(z)\equiv 0\).
Under the conditions of Theorem 2 one must consider the function
\[
F_1(\zeta)=F_1(\rho e^{i\theta})
=F(\rho e^{i\theta})-F(\rho e^{i(\theta+2\pi)})
\]
(\(\theta+2\pi\) denotes passage to the next sheet of the Riemann surface). Denoting by \(\widetilde S_\alpha\) the domain consisting of the points \(\zeta=\rho e^{i\theta}\) for which \(\rho e^{i\theta}\in S_\alpha,\ \rho e^{i(\theta+2\pi)}\in S_\alpha\), we obtain, by virtue of (10),
\[ |F_1(\zeta)|\leq 2CA_n/|\zeta|^n \quad (n=0,1,2,\ldots;\ \zeta\in \widetilde S_\alpha). \]
Using Watson’s problem once again, we obtain (3).
The sufficiency in Theorem 2 follows from the fact that, when inequality (3) is fulfilled, one can construct in the angle
\(-(\alpha-1)\pi/2\leq \theta\leq (\alpha-1)\pi/2\)
an analytic function \(F(\zeta)=F(\rho e^{i\theta})\) satisfying the conditions
\[ \int_{0}^{\infty} |F(\rho e^{i\theta})|\rho^n\,d\rho \leq A_n \quad (|\theta|\leq (\alpha-1)\pi/2;\ n=0,1,2,\ldots). \]
Then the Laplace transform
\[ f(z)=f(re^{i\varphi}) =e^{i\theta}\int_{0}^{\infty} F(\rho e^{i\theta})e^{-r\rho e^{i(\theta+\varphi)}}\,d\rho \]
will satisfy the estimates (1) in a certain angle of opening \(\alpha\pi\). If \(\alpha\geq 2\), then the function
\[
f_1(re^{i\varphi})=f(re^{i\varphi})-f(re^{i(\varphi+2\pi)})
\]
will satisfy the estimates (1) in an angle of opening \((\alpha-2)\pi\), but for it, in addition,
\[
f_1(0)=f_1'(0)=f_1''(0)=\ldots=0.
\]
This completes the proof of Theorems 2 and 3.
Kiev Civil Engineering Institute
Received
29 V 1965
REFERENCES
\(^{1}\) S. Mandelbrojt, Adjacent Series. Regularization of Sequences. Applications, Moscow, 1955.
\(^{2}\) B. I. Korenblum, DAN, 164, No. 1 (1965).
\(^{3}\) A. N. Kolmogorov, Uch. zap. Mosk. univ., 30 (mathematics), 3 (1939).
\(^{4}\) A. Gorny, Acta Math., 71, 317 (1939).
\(^{5}\) L. Bieberbach, Lehrbuch d. Funktionentheorie, 2, Leipzig—Berlin, 1927.