Define f:D(0,1)−>C to be holomorphic such thatf(0)=0. I want to extend (f(z))/z to be continuous on overline(D)(0,r) for arbitrary 0<r<1.

Alexandra Richardson

Alexandra Richardson

Answered question

2022-07-17

Define f : D ( 0 , 1 ) > C to be holomorphic such that f ( 0 ) = 0. I want to extend f ( z ) z to be continuous on D ¯ ( 0 , r ) for arbitrary 0 < r < 1.
My initial guess was to define:
g ( z ) = f ( z ) z for non-zero z but extend g ( z ) to be 0 for z = 0.
But if I take lim z 0 f ( z ) z = f ( 0 ) using L'Hopital's rule. So I think this should be the expression for g ( 0 )? I wonder if:
i) L'hopital's rule is applicable to complex functions, and,
ii)Am I taking the limit incorrectly? I also do not see a use for f ( 0 ) = 0 in my deduction so I'm rather perplexed.
Any help would be appreciated!

Answer & Explanation

yelashwag8

yelashwag8

Beginner2022-07-18Added 17 answers

If f ( 0 ) 0, then the limit lim z 0 f ( z ) z does not exist (in C ). On the other hand, if f ( 0 ) = 0, then lim z 0 f ( z ) z = f ( 0 ) byt the definition of f . So, extend f to
F : D ( 0 , 1 ) C z { f ( z ) z  if  z 0 f ( 0 )  if  z = 0 ,
and then F is continuous. In particular, if r ( 0 , 1 ), the restriction of F to D ( 0 , r ) ¯ is continuous.

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?