Abstract Generated abstract
This note gives structural representations for classes of harmonic and analytic functions in the unit disk associated with the operator defined by a system of weight functions. It defines harmonic functions whose transformed boundary integrals are uniformly bounded, analytic functions whose transformed real parts are nonnegative, and a related bounded real-part class. The main results identify these classes with Poisson-type and Stieltjes integral representations involving kernels previously introduced by the author: finite-variation measures for the harmonic and real-part bounded classes, and nondecreasing bounded measures for the positive classes. The paper also describes how the representing function can be recovered by radial limits of the transformed harmonic function.
Full Text
UDC 517.53
MATHEMATICS
I. I. BAVRIN
STRUCTURAL REPRESENTATION OF CERTAIN CLASSES OF HARMONIC AND ANALYTIC FUNCTIONS
(Presented by Academician M. A. Lavrent'ev on 19 I 1970)
M. M. Dzhrbashyan \((^1)\) gave a complete structural representation for the classes of harmonic and analytic functions associated with the operator \(L^{(\omega)}\) constructed by him \((^1)\). In the present note a complete structural representation is given for the classes of harmonic and analytic functions introduced here and associated with the operator \(L^{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}\) \((^2)\).
Let \(U_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}\) denote the set of functions \(u(z)\) harmonic in the disk \(|z|<1\) and satisfying the condition
\[ \sup_{0<r<1}\left\{\int_0^{2\pi}\left|u_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}(re^{i\varphi})\right|\,d\varphi\right\}<+\infty, \]
where \(\omega_j(x)\in\Omega\) \((j=1,\ldots,m)\)* and
\[ u_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}(re^{i\varphi}) = L^{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}[u(re^{i\varphi})]. \]
Let \(C_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}\) denote the class of functions \(f(z)\) analytic in the disk \(|z|<1\) and satisfying the condition
\[ \operatorname{Re} f_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}(z)\ge 0 \qquad (|z|<1), \]
where \(\omega_j(x)\in\Omega\) and
\[
f_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}(re^{i\varphi})
=
L^{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}[f(re^{i\varphi})].
\]
Let \(R_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}\) denote the class of functions \(f(z)\) analytic in the disk \(|z|<1\) for which the condition
\[ \sup_{0<r<1}\left\{\int_0^{2\pi} \left|\operatorname{Re} f_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}(re^{i\varphi})\right|\,d\varphi \right\}<+\infty. \]
is satisfied. Since, for \(f(z)\in C_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}\), the integrals
\[ \int_0^{2\pi} \left|\operatorname{Re} f_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}(re^{i\varphi})\right|\,d\varphi = \int_0^{2\pi} \operatorname{Re} f_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}(re^{i\varphi})\,d\varphi = 2\pi \operatorname{Re} f_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}(0) \]
are bounded by a number independent of \(r<1\), we obviously have
\[ C_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)} \subset R_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}. \]
Let \(P(\theta,r;\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)\), \(S(z;\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)\) be the functions introduced by the author in \((^2)\).
* It is said (see \((^1)\), p. 1078) that a function \(\omega(x)\in\Omega\) if it is nonnegative and continuous on \([0,1)\), with
\[
\omega(0)=1,\qquad \int_0^1 \omega(x)\,dx<+\infty
\]
and, for every \(r\) \((0\le r<1)\),
\[
\int_r^1 \omega(x)\,dx>0.
\]
Theorem 1. a) The class \(U_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}\) coincides with the set of functions \(u(z)\) representable in the form of the integral
\[ u\left(re^{i\varphi}\right) = \frac{1}{2\pi} \int_{0}^{2\pi} P(\varphi-\theta,\ r;\ \omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)\,d\psi(\theta) \tag{1} \]
\[
(0\le r<1,\ 0\le \varphi\le 2\pi),
\]
where \(\psi(\theta)\) is an arbitrary real function with finite total variation on \([0,2\pi]\).
b) In representation (1) of a given function
\[
u(z)\in U_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}
\]
the corresponding function \(\psi(\theta)\) can be determined by means of the limit
\[ \psi(\theta)= \lim_{n\to+\infty} \int_{0}^{\theta} u_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}\left(\rho_n e^{i\varphi}\right)\,d\varphi, \]
where \(\{\rho_n\}\), \(0<\rho_1<\rho_2<\cdots<\rho_n<\cdots\), \(\rho_n\uparrow 1\), is some increasing sequence.
c) The class
\[
U^{*}_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}
\subset
U_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}
\]
of functions harmonic in the disk \(|z|<1\), for which
\[ u_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}(z)\ge 0 \qquad (|z|<1), \]
coincides with the set of functions representable in the form (1), where the function \(\psi(\theta)\) is nondecreasing on \([0,2\pi]\).
Theorem 2. a) The class \(C_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}\) coincides with the set of functions \(f(z)\) representable in the form
\[ f(z) = iC+ \frac{1}{2\pi} \int_{0}^{2\pi} S\left(e^{-i\theta}z;\ \omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m\right)\,d\psi(\theta) \tag{2} \]
\[
(|z|<1),
\]
where \(\operatorname{Im} C=0\), and \(\psi(\theta)\) is an arbitrary nondecreasing bounded function on \([0,2\pi]\).
b) The class \(R_{(\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_m)}\) coincides with the set of functions representable in the form (2), where \(\psi(\theta)\) is a real function of finite variation on \([0,2\pi]\).
In the proof of Theorem 1, Theorem 2 of the author from \({}^{(2)}\) is used essentially, and in the proof of Theorem 2—the author’s Theorem 1 from \({}^{(2)}\) and Theorem 1 of the present note.
Moscow Regional Pedagogical Institute
named after N. K. Krupskaya
Received
6 I 1970
References
\({}^{1}\) M. M. Dzhrbashyan, Izv. AN SSSR, Ser. Mat., 32, No. 5, 1075 (1968).
\({}^{2}\) I. I. Bavrin, DAN, 187, No. 3 (1969).