For a complex number z. How to evaluate int_0^infty dx/(x^2+(1-z^2x^2)^2)

Laila Murphy

Laila Murphy

Answered question

2022-11-05

For a complex number z, How to evaluate
0 d x x 2 + ( 1 z 2 x 2 ) 2

Answer & Explanation

boursecasa2je

boursecasa2je

Beginner2022-11-06Added 15 answers

By the quadratic formula, the denominator of the integrand has roots
r 1 , r 2 , r 3 , r 4 = ± 2 z 2 1 ± 1 4 z 2 2 z 4 = ± 1 2 z 2 ( i ± 4 z 2 1 )
and since the integrand is an even function,
0 d x x 2 + ( 1 z 2 x 2 ) 2 = 1 2 d x x 2 + ( 1 z 2 x 2 ) 2 = 1 2 1 / z 4 x 4 + ( 1 2 z 2 ) x 2 / z 4 + 1 / z 4 d x = 1 2 z 4 f ( x ) d x
where
f ( x ) = 1 ( x r 1 ) ( x r 2 ) ( x r 3 ) ( x r 4 ) .
Since f(z) is analytic in the upper half complex plane (except for a finite number of poles), and since f(z) vanishes faster than 1 / z 2 for | z | , the residue theorem gives
1 2 z 4 f ( x ) d x = π i z 4 r e s f
where ∑resf is the sum of the residues in the upper-half plane. The trick then is to determine which of the four poles are on the upper half plane. We define the roots as
r 1 = 1 2 z 2 ( i + 4 z 2 1 ) r 2 = r 1 r 3 = 1 2 z 2 ( i 4 z 2 1 ) r 4 = r 3
If z is purely real, then r 1 and r 3 are in the upper half plane. Thus
r e s f = 1 ( r 1 r 2 ) ( r 1 r 3 ) ( r 1 r 4 ) + 1 ( r 3 r 1 ) ( r 3 r 2 ) ( r 3 r 4 ) = i z 4 2
after much algebra. Therefore we have
0 d x x 2 + ( 1 z 2 x 2 ) 2 = π i z 4 i z 4 2 = π 2
which is independent of z (if z is purely real)! In the general case, however, compute the residues of the poles that are in the upper half plane, to be determined by the value of z.

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