Antiholomorphic function
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In mathematics, antiholomorphic functions (also called antianalytic functions[1]) are a family of functions closely related to but distinct from holomorphic functions.
A function of the complex variable z defined on an open set in the complex plane is said to be antiholomorphic if its derivative with respect to z exists in the neighbourhood of each and every point in that set, where z is the complex conjugate.
A definition of antiholomorphic function follows:[1]
"[a] function [math]\displaystyle{ f (z) = u + i v }[/math] of one or more complex variables [math]\displaystyle{ z = \left(z_1, \dots, z_n\right) \in \Complex^n }[/math] [is said to be anti-holomorphic if (and only if) it] is the complex conjugate of a holomorphic function [math]\displaystyle{ \overline{f \left(z\right)} = u - i v }[/math]."
One can show that if f(z) is a holomorphic function on an open set D, then f(z) is an antiholomorphic function on D, where D is the reflection against the x-axis of D, or in other words, D is the set of complex conjugates of elements of D. Moreover, any antiholomorphic function can be obtained in this manner from a holomorphic function. This implies that a function is antiholomorphic if and only if it can be expanded in a power series in z in a neighborhood of each point in its domain. Also, a function f(z) is antiholomorphic on an open set D if and only if the function f(z) is holomorphic on D.
If a function is both holomorphic and antiholomorphic, then it is constant on any connected component of its domain.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Encyclopedia of Mathematics, Springer and The European Mathematical Society, https://encyclopediaofmath.org/wiki/Anti-holomorphic_function, As of 11 September 2020, This article was adapted from an original article by E. D. Solomentsev (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics, ISBN:1402006098.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiholomorphic function.
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