Complex Analysis/Isolated singularity

Definition

edit

Let   be a domain and  . If   is a holomorphic function, then   is called an isolated singularity of  .

Classification

edit

Depending on the behavior of   in the neighborhood of  , one distinguishes three different types of isolated singularities of  .

Removable Singularities

edit

If   can be holomorphically extended to the entire domain  , then we say that   is a removable singularity. According to the Riemann Removability Theorem, this is the case if   is bounded in a neighborhood of  .

Poles

edit

If   is not a removable singularity, but there exists an   such that   has a removable singularity at  , then we say that   has a pole at  . The smallest such   is called the order of the pole.

Essential Singularities

edit

If   is neither removable nor a pole, then   is called an essential singularity of  .

Examples

edit
  • Since  , the function   has a removable singularity at  .
  • The function   does not have   a removable singularity at, since  is unbounded at  , but   has a first-order pole at  , because   and  , which has a removable singularity at 0 .
  • The function   has an essential singularity at  , since for every  , the function   is unbounded in any neighborhood of  . To see this, consider .For   with   is also  ,which diverges as   .

Laurent Expansions

edit

The type of isolated singularity can also be inferred from the Laurent Expansion of   around  . Let

 

be the Laurent Series of   around  . We define

 .

Then,   has the following singularities:If  , i.e., all negative coefficients vanish, the main part of the series is zero, and the singularity is removable.

If  , i.e., only finitely many negative coefficients are nonzero, there is a pole of order  . If  , i.e., infinitely many negative coefficients are nonzero, the singularity is essential.

Examples

edit

Let us consider our three examples again:

It is  , so  , a removable singularity.

It is

 

so  , a pole of first order.

It is  , so  , an essential singularity.

Page information

edit

Translation and Version Control

edit

This page was translated based on the following Singularität Wikiversity source page and uses the concept of Translation and Version Control for a transparent language fork in a Wikiversity:

  • Source: [[v:de:Kurs:Funktionentheorie/isolierte Singularität

|Kurs:Funktionentheorie/isolierte Singularität]] - URL:https://de.wikiversity.org/wiki/Kurs:Funktionentheorie/isolierte Singularität

  • Date: 11/20/2024