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Exercise Sheet 1 MTH403

This document contains exercises on basic properties of complex numbers and power series. It includes problems about the triangle inequality for complex numbers, compactness properties of sets defined using complex numbers, properties of polynomials with complex coefficients, radius of convergence and uniform convergence of power series, and manipulating terms in power series.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views3 pages

Exercise Sheet 1 MTH403

This document contains exercises on basic properties of complex numbers and power series. It includes problems about the triangle inequality for complex numbers, compactness properties of sets defined using complex numbers, properties of polynomials with complex coefficients, radius of convergence and uniform convergence of power series, and manipulating terms in power series.

Uploaded by

sagar2025kumar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur

Department of Mathematics and Statistics


Complex Analysis (MTH 403)
Exercise Sheet 1

1. Basic properties of C
1.1. Let z1 , z2 , . . . , zn ∈ C. Show that
|z1 + · · · + zn | ≤ |z1 | + · · · + |zn |. (1.1)
Find a necessary and sufficient condition so that equality holds in (1.1).

1.2.∗ Let U ⊆open C. For each n ∈ N, define


( )
1
Kn = D(0; n) ∩ z ∈ U : |w − z| ≥ , ∀w ∈ C \ U . (1.2)
n

(a) Show that Kn is compact, for all n ∈ N.


(b) Show that, for all n ∈ N, Kn is contained in the interior of Kn+1 .
(c) Show that, for every compact subset K of U, there exists n ∈ N such that K ⊆ Kn . In particular,
[∞
conclude that U = Kn .
n=1

def
1.3.∗ Let P(z) = an zn + · · · + a1 z + a0 , where n ∈ N, be a polynomial with complex coefficients. Assume
that 0 < an ≤ · · · ≤ a1 ≤ a0 .
(a) Show that no zero of P(z) can lie in D(0; 1). (Hint: Consider (1 − z)P(z).)
(b) Find all zeros of P(z) inside the closed unit disk D(0; 1), provided a j+1 < a j , for all j =
0, 1, . . . , n − 1.

2. Power series
X∞
Throughout this section, we always assume an (z − z0 )n is a complex power series, i.e., z0 ∈ C and
n=0
an ∈ C, for all n ∈ N.


X ∞
X
n
2.1. Suppose that an (z1 − z0 ) converges for a complex number z1 , z0 . Then show that an (z − z0 )n
n=0 n=0
whenever |z − z0 | < |z1 − z0 |.

(Hint: Note that an (z1 − z0 )n −−−→ 0, hence one obtains M > 0 such that |an (z1 − z0 )n | ≤ M, for all
n→∞ !n !n
n |z − z0 | |z − z0 |
n ≥ 0. Now observe that, for any n, |an ||z − z0 | = |an ||z1 − z0 |
n
≤M .)
|z1 − z0 | |z1 − z0 |

2.2. Let  
 ∞
X 
def
R = sup  .
 n

|z − z | : a (z − z ) converges (2.1)
 
 0 n 0 

 
n=0
Show the following:

X
(a) |z − z0 | < R =⇒ |an ||z − z0 |n < ∞.
n=0
1
2


X
(b) |z − z0 | > R =⇒ an (z − z0 )n diverges.
n=0
Conclude from (2.2.a) and (2.2.b) that R, defined as above in (2.1), is the only number in [0, ∞] for
which (2.2.a) and (2.2.b) hold together. We call R the radius of convergence of the power series
X∞
an (z − z0 )n . The disc D(z0 ; R) is called the disc of convergence of the power series.
n=0

2.3. Let n ≥ 2 and a1 , . . . , an and b1 , . . . , bn are complex numbers. Show the following:
n
X n−1
X
ak bk = an Bn + (ak − ak+1 )Bk ,
k=1 k=1
n
X n
X
def def
where Bk = b1 + · · · + bk , for all k = 1, . . . , n. (Hint: Write ak bk = ak (Bk − Bk−1 ), B0 = 0.)
k=1 k=1

2.4. Find all points of convergence for each of the following power series:

∞ ∞ ∞
X X zn X zn
(a) zn (b) (c) 2
.
n=0 n=1
n n=1
n

For 2.5. and 2.6., we let R be as above in 2.2.


X
2.5. (a) Show that the convergence of an (z − z0 )n is uniform on every compact subset of D(z0 ; R).
n=0

X
(b) Give an example where an (z − z0 )n does not converge uniformly on D(z0 ; R).
n=0

1
2.6. (a) Show that R = 1
.
lim sup |an | n
n→∞
(b) If an , 0, for all n ∈ N, then show that
an an
lim inf ≤ R ≤ lim sup . (2.2)
n→∞ an+1 n→∞ an+1
an
(c) Conclude from (2.2) that, if lim exists in [0, ∞] then it must be equal to R.
an+1 n→∞
X∞
(d) Conclude from 2.6.a that the radius of convergence of the power series nan (z − z0 )n−1 is R.
n=1


X
2.7. Let an zn be a power series in C with radius of convergence R > 0.
n=0

X an
(a) Find the radius of convergence of the power series zn .
n=0
n!

X an
(b) Let h be the function represented by the power series zn on its disc of convergence, say
n=0
n!
|z|
D. Show that, for any 0 < r < R, there exists M > 0 such that |h(z)| ≤ Me r , for all z ∈ D.
3


X
2.8.∗ Let an (z − z0 )n be a power series in C with radius of convergence R > 0 and f be the function it
n=0

X
represents on D(z0 ; R). For N ≥ 0, denote by S N the N-th partial sum of an (z − z0 )n . Show that
n=0

X
| f (z) − S N (z)| < ∞,
N=0
for each z ∈ D(z0 ; R).

X
2.9.∗ Suppose that an (z − z0 )n converges for every z ∈ D(z0 ; r), where r > 0. Let z1 ∈ D(z0 ; r). Show
n=0
that there exists a sequence {cn }n≥0 in C such that
X ∞ ∞
X
an (z − z0 ) =
n
cn (z − z1 )n whenever |z − z1 | < r − |z1 − z0 |.
n=0 n=0

X
2.10.∗ Fix a ∈ C. Show that, for every z0 ∈ C \ {a}, there exists a power series cn (z − z0 )n in C having
n=0
radius of convergence at least |z0 − a| such that

1 X
= cn (z − z0 )n whenever |z − z0 | < |z0 − a|.
z − a n=0

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