6.1 KiB
lecture, date
lecture | date |
---|---|
18 | 2025-03-20 |
Overview of Complex Analysis of the Course
- Will do analysis using complex numbers.
- Concrete Goal: compute integrals such as
\int_{-\infty}^{+\infty} \frac{e^{i \omega t}}{t^2 + a^2} \, dt = \frac{\pi}{a}e^{-a\mid \omega \mid}
(a \gt 0
) using complex techniques.
Complex Numbers
The definition of a Complex Numbers as defined in the lecture.
All algebraic properties follow from the definition. For instance
(x_{1}+iy_{1})(x_{2}+iy_{2}) = (x_{1}x_{2} -y_{1}y_{2}) + i(x_{1}y_{2} + y_{1}x_{2}).
This operation is commutative, that is z_{1}z_{2} = z_{2}z_{1}
.
Proposition
Let z = x+iy
, and it should be non-zero. Then there exists another complex number z^{-1} \in \mathbb{C}
such that zz^{-1} = 1
. It is given by
z^{-1} = \frac{x-iy}{x^2 + y^2}
Proof
We compute
(x + iy)(x-iy) = x^2 + y^2.
This is non-zero. Then
zz^{-1} = (x+iy) \frac{x-iy}{x^2 + y^2} = 1
[!info] Remark This means that
\mathbb{C}
is a field like\mathbb{R}
.
Definition - Absolute Value
Let z = x+iy
. Its absolute value (or Norm) is defined by
\mid z \mid \sqrt{ x^2 + y^2 }.
An argument for z
is a real number \phi \in \mathbb{R}
such that
x = \mid z \mid \cos \phi, \; y = \mid z \mid \sin \phi.
This allows us to identify complex numbers with points in the plane \mathbb{R}^2
:
!
%%Drawing 2025-03-20 10.50.15.excalidraw.md, and the Drawing 2025-03-20 10.50.15.excalidraw.light.svg%%
(note that angles are only defined up to multiples of
2\pi
).
You could multiply pairs in \mathbb{R}^2
by
(x_{1},y_{1}) \times (x_{2}, y_{2}) = (x_{1}x_{2}, y_{1}y_{2}).
But this does not correspond to the multiplication of complex numbers.
Polar Form
- Using the previous definitions, we can write any
z \in \mathbb{C}
as:
z = x + iy = \mid z \mid (\cos \phi + i \sin \phi).
Definition
We introduce the following notations:
r := \mid z \mid,
e^{i\phi} := \cos \phi + i \sin \phi.
Then we have that z = r e^{i\phi}
, which we call the polar form of z
.
[!info] Remark For now,
e^{i\phi}
is just a symbol. Later we will identify it with the Complex Exponential Function
We have that e^{i\phi}
shares many properties with e^{x}
.
Proposition
Let \phi, \; \theta \in \mathbb{R}
. Then:
e^{i \phi} e^{i \theta} = e^{i (\phi + \theta)}
,e^{i 0} = 1
,\frac{1}{e^{i \phi}} = e^{-i \phi}
,e^{i(\phi + 2 \pi k)} = e^{i \phi}
, fork \in \mathbb{Z}
,\mid e^{i \phi} \mid = 1
,\frac{d e^{i \phi}}{d \phi} = i e^{i \phi}
.
Proof (only for 3.)
According to a previous result, we have:
(\cos \phi + i \sin \phi)^{-1} = \frac{\cos \phi - i \sin \phi}{\overbrace{(\cos \phi)^2 + (\sin \phi)^2}^{=1}}
= \cos \phi - i \sin \phi
= e^{- i \phi},
using \cos(-\phi) = \cos \phi
and \sin(-\phi) = -\sin \phi
.
Complex Conjugation
Definition of Complex Conjugation, as defined in the lecture.
Triangle Inequality
Definition of Triangle Inequality, as defined in the lecture.
But we want to show a similar result for \mathbb{C}
.
Lemma
Let z \in \mathbb{C}
, then we can take a look at the \mathrm{Re}
and \mathrm{Im}
:
- \mid z \mid \leq Re z \leq \mid z \mid
- \mid z \mid \leq Im z \leq \mid z \mid.
Proof
Recall that for z = x + iy
we have \mid z \mid = \sqrt{ x^2 + y^2 }
. Then the results follow from the following inequalities (a, b \in \mathbb{R}
):
-\sqrt{ a^2 + b^2 } \leq - \sqrt{ a^2 } \leq \; \mid a \mid \; \leq \sqrt{ e^2 } \leq \sqrt{ a^2 + b^2 }.
This gives the result.
We use this to prove the triangle inequality for \mathbb{C}
.
Proposition
Let z_{1}, z_{2} \in \mathbb{C}
we have
\mid z_{1} + z_{2} \mid \; \leq \; \mid z_{1} \mid + \mid z_{2} \mid.
Proof
We compute:
\mid z_{1} + z_{2} \mid^2 \; = (z_{1} + z_{2})(\overline{z_{1}} + \overline{z_{2}})
= z_{1}\overline{z_{1}} + z_{1} \overline{z_{2}} + z_{2} \overline{z_{1}} + z_{2} \overline{z_{2}} = \; \mid z_{1} \mid^{2} + 2 \mathrm{Re} (z_{1} \overline{z_{2}}) \mid z_{2} \mid^2
(Noting that z_{2}\overline{z_{1}} = \overline{z_{1}\overline{z_{2}}}
).
Next we use the property that \mathrm{Re} z \leq \; \mid z \mid
. Then
\mid z_{1} + z_{2} \mid^2 \; \leq \; \mid z_{1} \mid^2 + 2 \mid z_{1} \overline{z_{2}} \mid + \mid z_{2} \mid^2
= \; \mid z_{1} \mid^2 + \; 2 \mid z_{1} \mid \times \mid \overline{z_{2}} \mid + \mid z_{2} \mid^2
= \; \mid z_{1} \mid^2 + \; 2 \mid z_{1} \mid \mid z_{2} \mid + \mid z_{2} \mid^2
= (\mid z_{1} \mid + \mid z_{2} \mid)^2.
Taking square roots of both (non-negative) sides, we get the result.
This means that \mathbb{C}
is a Norm space.
Limits
Before being able to define a limit, we need to define a Complex Functions, from the lecture.
Definition
Complex Limits as defined in the lecture
Proposition
Let f
and g
be Complex Functions.
Suppose that \lim_{ z \to z_{0} } f(z)
and \lim_{ z \to z_{0} } g(z)
exist. Then:
- For
a, b \in \mathbb{C}
we have\lim_{ z \to z_{0} } (af(z) + bg(z)) = a \lim_{ z \to z_{0} } f(z) + b \lim_{ z \to z_{0} } g(z)
, - We have
\lim_{ z \to z_{0} } (f(z) \times g(z)) = \left(\lim_{ z \to z_{0} } f(z) \right) \times \left(\lim_{ z \to z_{0} } g(z) \right)
.
Example
(Computing the Complex Limits, but will not happen again, just for understanding)
Let f(z) = z^2
. We want to show that \lim_{ z \to 2 } f(z) = 4
. Fix \varepsilon \gt 0
and observe that
f(z) - 4 = z^2 - 4 = (z - 2)^2 + 4(z - 2).
Write \mid z - 2 \mid \; \lt \delta
for some \delta
. Then using the Triangle Inequality, we get
\mid f(z) - 4 \mid \; = \; \mid(z-2)^2 + 4 (z-2) \mid
\leq \; \mid z - 2 \mid^2 + \; 4 \mid z - 2 \mid
\lt \delta^2 + 4 \delta.
It suffices to pick \delta
such that \delta^2 + 4 \delta \leq \varepsilon
(which is possible).
A much easier way to compute the following:
First \lim_{ z \to z_{0} } z = z_{0}
, then
\lim_{ z \to 2 } z^2 = \left( \lim_{ z \to 2 } z \right) \times \left( \lim_{ z \to 2 } z \right) = 2 \times 2 = 4